Morton v. Robinson

169 Ill. App. 294, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1003
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 12, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 Ill. App. 294 (Morton v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton v. Robinson, 169 Ill. App. 294, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1003 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shirley

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Circuit Court of Marion county oh appeal from the Probate Court, allowed a claim in favor of appellee against the estate of J. S. Morton, deceased, for the sum of $12,854.32, and rendered a judgment that the same be paid as a claim of the seventh class. The administrator has appealed to this court. The claim was allowed on a note which reads as follows:

“$10,000.00 Vernon, Illinois, Jan. 3, 1907.

One year after date, we, or either of ns, promise to pay tó the order of Ansa Morton, Ten Thousand.... ......1-00 Dollars for value received, with interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, payable annually from date.

In case default is made in the payment of this note, or the interest thereon, according to tenor and effect thereof, the whole amount shall become due, and if suit is brought on this note, then an attorney’s fee of ten dollars, when said payment is one hundred dollars or less, or of ten per cent, on the whole of said amount, when the said amount exceeds one hundred dollars shall be taxed as a part of the costs in the court where said suit may be brought.

Signed J. S. Morton. (L. S.)

This, I consider is her part for the help she has given me during twenty years of assistance.

J. S. Morton.”

The maker of the note, J. S. Morton, died May 18, 1910, and appellant qualified as the administrator of his estate. The main contention of appellant is that the finding and judgment was contrary to the law and the evidence, and also that the court erred in including an attorney’s fee of $1,239.

The execution of the note by the deceased is not disputed, but it is insisted the evidence in the case shows that the note was executed without any consideration to support it; that it was a gift and to be paid after the death of the maker, and was intended as a testamentary gift and not enforcible. If there was any consideration for the note, it was for services.

There was no conflict in the evidence. Anna Morton, the payee in the note, was the sister of the intestate, J. S. Morton. At the time of the date of the note Anna was about thirty-four years of age. The age of J. S. does not appear but he was a bachelor until December, 1907, when he married, and at the time of his death in May, 1910, left his widow surviving him. He was a physician and had been practicing medicine a number of years. The father of Anna and J. S. was also a physician and lived at Vernon many years. He died there in 1906. His first wife, the mother of Anna and J. S., died many years ago and the father remarried in 1877 and had by his second wife two children, one of whom, a daughter Daisy, still survives. The second wife separate^ and went away from the father in 1901, and she and the daughter afterwards lived away. There were two other children by the first wife: Lyda, who married one Binnion and left the family home in 1891, and Bryant who left soon after. During all their lives and up to the execution of the note, Anna and J. S. lived in the family home of the father in no different relation from the ordinary family living together, the father, stepmother, stepsister, Anna and J. S. living as members of one. family usually live, each doing his or her part in the family relation. For a number of years before his death, the father was afflicted with rheumatism and chronic diarrhea and the stepmother while she lived there and Anna cared for, and waited upon him. After his death Anna and J. S. were the remnant of the family, and they continued in the same relation to reside there. Anna looked after and cared for the household and answered the telephone calls for J. S., looked after his office, and no doubt was greatly interested in him and in his professional labors. She did all she could to promote his welfare and happiness, and the evidence shows that J. S. was appreciative of her kindness, and sincerely attached to her. Anna did not live there at any time in any capacity except that of a kind and affectionate daughter and sister in the family in which she did her part well. No inference can he drawn from the testimony of this family relationship alone, that tends to show any contract either expressed or implied between Anna and her brother to pay Anna for services. The presumption of law arising out of such relationship is that the services are gratuitous and rendered because of the relation. Scully v. Scully, 28 Iowa, 548; Ayres v. Hull, 5 Kan. 251; Sherman v. Whiteside, 190 Ill. 576; Chapman v. Chapman, 87 Ill. App. 427.

In this case the note itself imports or presumes a consideration and the burden of proof was cast on appellant to overcome this presumption. This was done when it was shown the consideration if any was for alleged services, and that the relationship was such that there could be no liability for such services in the absence of an express or implied agreement to pay for them. This showing was sufficient to meet the prima facie case made by the note, and to entitle appellant to judgment if no more evidence had been heard, and the burden shifted to appellee to prove there was such agreement to pay for services.

“The question as to the onus of proof is only a rule for deciding on whom the obligation rests of going further if he wishes to win.” Jones on Ev., par. 174; see also Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2nd ed., vol. 5, p. 22, entitled “Burden of Proof.”

There was no evidence of any express agreement to pay appellee for services, and it was incumbent on her to prove facts from which an inference of such an agreement arose, and such facts must be sufficient to justify the conclusion that the parties were dealing on the footing of a contract, and that both parties expected the services to he paid for. Sherman v. Whiteside, supra; Switzer v. Kee, 146 Ill. 577. We have already said no promise could be implied in this case from the relationship. The relation of the parties excludes the inference they were dealing with each other on the footing of contract, and in such case the evidence must show that when the services were rendered both parties expected them to be paid for. Byers, Jr. v. Thompson, 66 Ill. 421; Heffron v. Brown, 155 id. 322. “The implied contract may be proven by facts and circumstances which show that both parties at the time the services were performed contemplated or intended pecuniary recompense other than such as naturally arises out of the relation.” Neish v. Gannon, 198 Ill. 219; Sherman v. Whiteside, supra.

It is earnestly contended by appellee that an express contract is established by the note, and that the evidence overcomes the presumption that the services of appellee were rendered gratuitously, and show an implied contract entitling her to recompense even without the note. As already said there is no evidence of an express contract and we think the recital in the note tends rather to show there was not, and it remains to determine whether all the facts show that at the time the services were rendered both parties contemplated or intended they should be paid for.

The note itself is for a very large sum and out of all proportion to the value of appellee’s services. At the time it was given it represented in amount a. greater part of all her brother’s property.

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Related

Morton v. Robinson
183 Ill. App. 452 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
169 Ill. App. 294, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-robinson-illappct-1912.