Moreen v. Estate of Carlson

6 N.E.2d 871, 365 Ill. 482
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1937
DocketNo. 23878. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 6 N.E.2d 871 (Moreen v. Estate of Carlson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moreen v. Estate of Carlson, 6 N.E.2d 871, 365 Ill. 482 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

Alice H. Moreen filed a claim in the probate court of Cook county against the estate of Carl August Carlson, deceased, by which she sought the allowance of $30,000 for damages resulting from the breach of an alleged agreement between the decedent and her. The probate court allowed the claim in full as a claim of the sixth class. After a hearing de novo the circuit court found that the plaintiff had failed to establish an express contract, but fixed the value of her services on a quantum meruit basis at $728 and allowed this amount as a claim of the sixth class, payable in due course of administration. Upon appeal, the Appellate Court for the First District reversed the order of the circuit court and remanded the cause to that court with directions to disallow the claim in its entirety. (In re Estate of Carlson, 286 Ill. App. 81.) This court has granted the plaintiff’s petition for leave to appeal, and the record is submitted for further review.

The contract upon which the claim in controversy is predicated is an oral agreement asserted to have been entered into on or about February 1, 1932. By her claim the plaintiff charged that Carlson agreed to bequeath his entire estate to her in consideration of services previously rendered and of her promise to care for, nurse and attend him during the remainder of his life. The contract, it was stated, had been fully performed by the plaintiff.

From the evidence it appears that Carlson and his wife came to this country from Sweden, and settled in Minnesota. Subsequently, they moved to Chicago. Shortly thereafter their only child, a son twenty-one years of age, died. In October, 1931, Carlson rented two rooms in the basement of a rooming house at 1310 North LaSalle street for which he paid $7 per week. He lived frugally, if not parsimoniously. Plaintiff, a niece of Carlson’s wife, was present when the latter died in January, 1932, and assumed charge of the arrangements for her aunt’s funeral. Carlson, who was between sixty-five and seventy years of age, was ill at this time and the funeral was delayed several days in order that he might recover sufficiently to be present. He was suffering from a gangrenous infection of his foot which ultimately caused his death on January 19, 1933. He died without descendants but left surviving three sisters, a brother, and the children of a deceased brother, his heirs-at-law, none of whom were residents of this country. Carlson’s estate consisted entirely of personal property stipulated to be worth approximately $35,000. On January 20, 1933, the public administrator of Cook county was appointed administrator of the estate. Six months later, on July 19, the plaintiff filed a petition in the probate court asking to have the appointment set aside and to have letters of administration issue to her as administratrix. This petition alleged that plaintiff had rendered valuable services to Carlson and his wife over a period of about three years preceding January 30, 1933, at the instance and request of Carlson; that in the performance of these services she had expended various sums of money and devoted much time toward the care and comfort of Carlson and his wife, at great inconvenience and sacrifice on her part, and that the decedent was indebted to her in a large sum of money for her services. Plaintiff accordingly asserted that the appointment of the public administrator deprived her of her statutory right of preference as a creditor to nominate an administrator. No reference to the contract is contained in this petition. Later, it was withdrawn by the plaintiff without a hearing on the merits. On January 19, 1934, the last day for filing claims against the estate, and one year after Carlson’s death, the plaintiff filed her claim based upon the contract.

Plaintiff resided with her mother in Chicago five or six miles from Carlson’s residence. At the time of the hearing she had been employed by the Postal Telegraph Company for nearly fourteen years as a Morse-Teletype operator. On completing her duties about 5 :oo P. M. she usually proceeded to Carlson’s rooms, located several miles from the telegraph office. Sometimes the plaintiff went directly to Carlson’s apartment and at other times she went home first and then returned to Carlson’s quarters. So far as the record shows the only time she visited Carlson during the day was on Sundays. The attending physician testified that he occasionally saw the plaintiff on Sunday mornings, by appointment, when he instructed her concerning his patient’s care and, in particular, how to change the dressings on Carlson’s infected foot. He expressed the opinion that five or ten minutes would suffice for changing the bandage. The plaintiff’s mother testified that after putting a fresh dressing on his foot Carlson no longer desired her daughter’s presence and that she arrived home about 8 :oo P. M. Other witnesses testified concerning the services rendered by the plaintiff. The wife of the janitor of the building where Carlson resided stated that after the death of Mrs. Carlson the plaintiff called regularly every day, cleaned up the apartment, prepared Carlson’s evening meal, dressed his foot and remained until about eleven o’clock. According to the testimony of Flora Hansen, proprietress of the rooming-house, she saw the plaintiff at Carlson’s home every day after Mrs. Carlson’s death. Mrs. Hansen said that the plaintiff arrived about 5 :oo P. M. and remained until 11 :oo P. M. during which time she cooked, washed, scrubbed, ironed, bought the groceries, and dressed the decedent’s sore foot. The witness declared that Carlson had no brothers and sisters and then made the contradictory observation, “But there are reasons for them not getting anything.”

The testimony of the foregoing witnesses also tends to show that the relationship which obtained between the plaintiff and the decedent was friendly and that they were kindly disposed towards each other. From Mrs. Moreen’s testimony it appears that she and her family had no business relations with Carlson and, further, that their social relations were unfriendly. According to the witness both Carlson and his wife (her sister) expressed affection, however, for the plaintiff. Although it affirmatively appears that Carlson was uncommunicative and did not even confide in his physician who attended him for nearly a year, the testimony adduced by the plaintiff shows that he was unusually voluble with the janitor, the latter’s wife, and his landlady. The doctor said that he made no inquiries of the decedent with respect to the status of the plaintiff in his home, and that decedent merely declared she was assisting him with what he needed. Shelby Hunter, the janitor, testified that he saw Carlson practically every day during 1932; that he visited him in his living quarters at least once a week; that Carlson talked to him about the plaintiff stating that she had been very good to him and announced, “I am going to see that she is taken care of if anything happens to me.” Hunter’s wife added that Carlson frequently mentioned the plaintiff in her presence. “Every month,” the witness continued, “he told me how much he thought of Alice, and said he would see that Alice was taken care of.” Mrs. Hansen, the landlady, testified that she visited with him many times late in the evening; that she, the witness, often referred to the plaintiff as “Poor Alice,” and that Carlson praised her fidelity to him and said that she would be well paid for it.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.E.2d 871, 365 Ill. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moreen-v-estate-of-carlson-ill-1937.