Morrison v. Beers

158 N.E. 371, 327 Ill. 139
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1927
DocketNo. 18258. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 N.E. 371 (Morrison v. Beers) 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
Morrison v. Beers, 158 N.E. 371, 327 Ill. 139 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Cook county having entered a decree for the registration of title in fee to certain real estate in Cook county in Edward W. Morrison upon his application, Archie J. Beers and Louise N. Beers, who were defendants to the application and cross-petitioners for the registration of the title in fee in them, have appealed.

The evidence- shows that the appellee was the owner of the premises in fee on March 8, 1919, and on that date executed a quit-claim' deed of them to the appellants for an expressed consideration of valuable services and $2000. On January 11, 1917, a verdict of a jury in the probate court of Cook county was rendered finding the appellee to be a spendthrift, upon which he was adjudicated a spendthrift, and on appeal from this judgment a like adjudication was made by the circuit court on September 14, 1918. No letters of conservatorship were issued, and on October 21, 1921, the probate court entered a judgment finding the appellee no longer a spendthrift. The court, in affirming the report of the examiner to whom the cause was referred, found that the appellants occupied a part of the premises under claim of title by virtue of the quit-claim deed to them; that before the execution of the deed the appellee had on January 11, 1917, been adjudicated a spendthrift by the probate court and by the circuit court on appeal on September 14, 1918; that the deed was void and the apr pellants were not entitled to reimbursement for any money claimed to have been paid to or for Morrison or on his behalf as a consideration for the deed; that they failed to show any payment for or on behalf of Morrison, or in consideration for the deed, to entitle them to reimbursement; that the deed was a cloud on the title of the appellee, and that the cross-application of the appellants ought to be dismissed for want of equity; that Morrison was duly adjudicated no longer a spendthrift on October 21, 1921; that the equities were with the appellee and that he was entitled to the relief prayed for. The decree set aside the deed to the appellants as a cloud on the title of the appellee and directed the registration of the title to the premises in Morrison.

The appellants have made twenty-four assignments of error, which, in substance, resolve themselves into two: that the decree is contrary to the evidence, and that the court erred in decreeing the deed to the appellants was void and setting it aside without reimbursement to them.

Section 14 of the act to revise the law in relation to idiots, lunatics, drunkards and spendthrifts (chapter 86 of the Revised Statutes) provides that every note, bill, bond or other contract by an idiot, lunatic, distracted person or spendthrift, made after the finding- of the jury, shall be void as against the idiot, lunatic, distracted person, drunkard or spendthrift and his .estate.

The appellants contend that the adjudication that the appellee was a spendthrift is of no effect, for the reason that no conservator of his estate was appointed. This is immaterial. The statute does not make the invalidity of the contract of the idiot, lunatic, distracted person, drunkard or spendthrift dependent upon the appointment of a conservator of his estate but does make such invalidity dependent upon the finding of the jury, and all contracts made after such finding are declared to be void. The deed of March 8, 1919, was void, and the appellants were not entitled to the re-payment of money expended by them for the benefit of the appellee as a condition precedent to setting aside the deed. Ure v. Ure, 223 Ill. 454.

The appellants in their cross-application claim to be the owners in fee simple and the relief sought was the registration of the title in them. On the hearing of evidence before the examiner Archie Beers testified to his connection with the appellee as an employee from the year 1886; that from August, 1916, when proceedings in bankruptcy were begun against the appellee and his property was taken under the control of a receiver, to November, 1919, the appellee was without means. Beers testified that during this time he was paid no part of his salary, which was $70 a month, but he advanced to the appellee, as his needs required, for his support various sums of money, amounting to about $3000. The payments so testified to are claimed to have been the consideration for the deed to the appellants. Beers produced three envelopes upon which he had written numerous items, - which he testified were made at the time the payments were made to Morrison- during this three-year period. The master in his report stated that from the demeanor and attitude of Beers he was unable to attach any weight to his testimony and that the payments were not made as the witness testified. The original papers on which these entries appear are not before us. He says he was employed in 1886 at $40 a month, that his wages were increased to $50 a month, and his total income in 1898 was about $100 a month, his salary being supplemented by earnings of his wife and their three boys, the oldest of whom was then about twelve years of age. He received about $500 from his father’s estate, and about 1898, when the Dime Bank failed, he had $1500 on deposit there and other money hidden in his home. After the failure of the Dime Bank he rented a safety deposit box and afterwards kept his money in such a box. He usually had from $5000 to $8000. From August, 1916, Morrison promised to pay him $70 a month. During the bankruptcy proceedings Beers was followed by a detective because the people prosecuting that proceeding had learned he was supplying Morrison with money, and at Morrison’s suggestion he rented other boxes at different times under assumed names. Every time Morrison wanted money Beers went to a box and got it. Morrison gave him three notes at different times to evidence his indebtedness — one for $300 and each of the others for $1000. These notes, with other papers, he gave to Max M. Grossman, the attorney who represented the appellants at the beginning of these proceedings. Beers testified that Grossman had lost or mislaid the papers and they could not be found. Grossman did not testify.

The testimony of the witness was unreasonable and improbable. He is an interested witness. The appellee was eighty-nine years old at the time of taking the evidence before the examiner, was suffering from a stroke of apoplexy, and his physical and mental condition was such as to make his appearance as a witness to rebut Beers’ testimony impracticable. While the testimony of a witness who is uncontradicted and unimpeached by other witnesses or by circumstances cannot be disregarded, there may be such inherent improbability in his testimony that the court may refuse to credit it even in the absence of conflicting testimony. He may be contradicted by the facts he states as completely as by direct adverse testimony and there may be so many omissions or discrepancies in his testimony as to discredit him. (Stephens v. Hoffman, 275 Ill. 497.) Courts are not required to believe an unreasonable story, even though it is not contradicted, merely because it has been sworn to by a witness on the trial of a case. (People v. LeMorte, 289 Ill. 11.) Beers’ testimony, unreasonable in itself, becomes more unsatisfactory by reason of the failure of the appellants to introduce corroborative evidence, which might have been easily produced if his statements were true.

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Bluebook (online)
158 N.E. 371, 327 Ill. 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-beers-ill-1927.