Mosby v. Chapin

217 Ill. App. 442, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 79
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 27, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 Ill. App. 442 (Mosby v. Chapin) 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
Mosby v. Chapin, 217 Ill. App. 442, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 79 (Ill. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Graves

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ellen E. Chapin died August 27, 1916, leaving a will dated January 26, 1916, by the terms of which she gave all her property to her daughter, Helen E. Mosby. Besides her daughter, Helen E. Mosby, Ellen E. Chapin left surviving her at "her death a son, Harry E. Mosby, and a husband, Quartus H. Chapin, who died March 3, 1917. He left no child or children or descendants of any deceased child or children surviving him. He left a will dated February 19, 1916, in which he named one Charles O. Chapin as executor and by which he gave his property, excepting a few keepsakes, to two nieces. Neither Ellen E. nor Quartus H. Chapin had any considerable property. He earned wages in the mail service of the United States and she kept boarders, and their joint earnings seem to have gone into the support of the family. On January 12, 1916, one William H. Mosby, .a son of Ellen E. Chapin by a former marriage, died and left all his property to his mother and his sister, Helen "E. Mosby, in equal parts. The mother made over to her daughter Helen the life insurance that was payable to her on the life of her deceased son, William H. Mosby, amounting to $23,0,00. The fund left for distribution of the estate of Ellen E. Chapin amounted to $12,233.32 and was chiefly, if not entirely, derived by her under the will and from the estate of her deceased son, William H. Mosby. On' the same day upon which he made his will, Quartus H. Chapin made, executed and acknowledged and caused to be delivered to his wife, Ellen E. Chapin, the following instrument:

‘ ‘ To whom it may concern:

T hereby waive all rights that I may be entitled to by Law in the estate of my wife Ellen Chapin.

This is done of my free will in order that it may enable my wife to make such disposition of her property as she may desire.

(Signed) Q. H. Chapin (Seal)

Witnesses :

Gael F. Bank,

CoUETLAND A. GrUTHBIE.

(Notarial Seal)

Subscribed and sworn to before me, a Notary Public, in and for the County of Cook, State of Illinois, this 18th day of February, 1916.

Ed. M. Hodgetts, Notary Public.”

On June 1, 1916, in the lifetime of his wife, Ellen E. Chapin, Quartus H. Chapin caused, apparently with the consent of his wife, his life insurance policy to be changed so as to make a niece his beneficiary in place of his wife who had formerly been named as such beneficiary. At the time of the death of William H. Mosby in January, 1916, preparations had been made for the removal of Ellen E. Chapin and her children, including the said William H. Mosby, .from Chicago, where they were then residing, to Jacksonville, Illinois, and shortly after that time the said Ellen E. Chapin and her remaining children did remove to Jacksonville and Quartus H. Chapin, the husband, apparently voluntarily entered an Old Men’s Home in Chicago, where he afterwards died. No claim was ever made by Quartus H. Chapin for any part of his wife’s property, although he survived her approximately six months. The testimony shows that he stated that the property his wife left at her death all came from her son, William H. Mosby; that he had waived all claim to it and did not intend to contest her will or claim any of her property. After his death and the probate of his will, his executor, by objection to the final report of the executrix of the will of Ellen E. Chapin, claimed that one-third of the personal property left by her belonged to the estate of Quartus H. Chapin. These objections were sustained in the circuit court where the case was heard on appeal from the county court. The question presented by this appeal from the circuit court is whether the written waiver quoted above is effectual as a waiver of the husband’s expectancy in the property of his wife.

There can be no doubt that it was the deliberate purpose of Quartus H. Chapin to waive all his rights in the property of his wife, or that up to the time of his death he intended to carry out that purpose. Neither is there any doubt that if the waiver in question was fairly made and was based on a valuable consideration, it was binding not only on Quartus H. Chapin but also on his executors and devisees. Crum v. Sawyer, 132 Ill. 443; Ridgeway v. Underwood, 67 Ill. 419; Collins v. Phillips, 259 Ill. 405; Edwards v. Edwards, 267 Ill. 111; Mires v. Laubenheimer, 271 Ill. 296; Donough v. Garland, 269 Ill. 565.

This written waiver is under seal, and although there is no consideration mentioned in it, it would in a court of law be binding. The seal is said to import a consideration and to estop the party from denying it. Bishop on Contracts, sec. 119. A court of equity holds to this same doctrine to the extent that a consideration will there be presumed from a seal. Bishop on Contracts, sec. 120. There, however, this presumption is not conclusive, and proof of want of consideration will be admitted to overcome the presumption created by the seal. In Crandall v. Willig, 166 Ill. 233, the court on page 239 says: “True, the contract was under seal, and purported to be based upon the nominal consideration of one dollar; but the evidence showed that there was in fact no consideration whatever, and it is well settled that in equity the seal consideration may be inquired into, and the parties are not concluded by the recitals in the contract, though under SEAL. * * * Disregarding mere forms and looking at the realty, it requires an actual-valuable consideration as essential in any such agreement, and allows the want of it to be shown, notwithstanding the seal.” In Corbett v. Cronkhite, 239 Ill. 9, the court cites with approval, quotes from and follows Bishop on Contracts, sec. 120, and Crandall v. Willig, 163 Ill. 233, 239, and says on page 15 of that opinion: “We think this rule is supported by the great weight of authority, and may now be considered the settled law of this State.”

It follows that, as this waiver is under seal, it will be presumed even in a court of equity to be based on a valuable consideration, unless there is proof in this record to overcome that presumption. We have been referred to no such proof, and a careful examination of the record- has failed to reveal any. On the contrary, a consideration of all the facts disclosed in this recórd is strongly convincing that what was done by both Quartus H. Chapin and his wife, Ellen E. Chapin, in and about the disposition of their several estates was done pursuant to a mutual plan, understanding and agreement, by which the property of each should go to their respective heirs. It shows that these two people had come to the parting of the ways, he to enter an Old Men’s Home in Chicago, she to remove with her children to Jacksonville; that.the heirs of neither had any claims upon the bounty of the other; that both apparently with the knowledge and consent of the other made wills in which the rights of the other were ignored; that the life insurance derived by Mrs. Chapii\ from policies on the life of her son William, deceased, in which she was named as Beneficiary, was made over to her daughter Helen, and that she was about also to make over the balance of her estate to her said daughter when the waiver in question was executed and*delivered; that the beneficiary named in the life insurance policy on the life of Quartus H.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lawrence v. Muter Co.
171 F.2d 380 (Seventh Circuit, 1948)
In re the Estate of Moore
165 Misc. 683 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1937)
H. G. Wolff Co. v. Gwynne
246 Ill. App. 86 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 Ill. App. 442, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosby-v-chapin-illappct-1920.