O'Bannon v. Vigus

32 Ill. App. 473, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 173
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 14, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 Ill. App. 473 (O'Bannon v. Vigus) 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
O'Bannon v. Vigus, 32 Ill. App. 473, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 173 (Ill. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

This case has been before this court and the Supreme Court on the record of a former trial, and their respective opinions are reported in 19 Ill. App. 241, and 118 Ill. 334. Although quite fully stated in each of them, a restatement of it here seems necessary to an intelligible presentation of our views upon the record as it now stands.

It was a c’aim tiled June 30, 1884, in the County Court of Montgomery County against the estate of appellant’s testator for §3,000, charged to have been collected by him in 1875, for appellee, on a policy of insurance upon his mother’s life; and to avoid the bar of the statute of limitations, it was further charged that the fact of such collection was fraudulently-concealed—that appellee did not discover his alleged cause of action until late in 1883, and could not, by reasonable diligence, have discovered it sooner. The policy was issued by the Protection Life Insurance Company of Chicago, May 22, 1872, for §5,000, payable to appellee within ninety days after proof of death received. The insured died October 12th, proof thereof was submitted November 28th, an 1 approved December 16th, all in 1874. Early in January, 1875, O’Ban-non, at the request of appellee, took the policy to Chicago to settle and collect the claim thereon. Upon his return a few days thereafter, he delivered to appellee the company’s check on the Fidelity Savings Bank and Safe Depository of Chicago, dated January 5, 1875, and payable to appellee, for §1,000, and its note of the same date at sixty days, for the further sum of §1,000. He then told appellee that this was all he could get; that the company resisted the claim on the ground of alleged misrepresentations of the heal th of the insured, and that only through the personal friendship of his old acquaintance, A. W. Edwards, the secretary and manager of the company, he had been able to get the §2,000 as a compromise. Appellee was then but a little past his majority, had lost his father many years before, and his relations to O’Bannon had long been as nearly as possible those of a son. On his advice lie accepted the check and note as payment in full, and signed a receipt to that effect, which was immediately sent to the company, and was received by it on the 9th. It was expressed to be a receipt of payment “ in full of all demands under the policy’’ therein specified, without stating any amount; was dated, like the check and note, on the 5th, and had been drawn up by the secretary himself, in the company’s office at Chicago.

Appellee never received anything more on the claim. But on the 4th of March following, a check of the company was drawn on the same bank, payable to him and on account of said insurance, for $3,000, which check was returned by the bank paid, late in June, and was then placed by Mr. Ter penny? the company’s bookkeeper, in its vault with the other papers relating to the case. And that was the last that was shown, or so far as appears, is known of that check. In August, 1877, the company failed and its affairs went into the hands of a receiver. All the other papers relating to this claim were in their proper place, but this check, carefully searched for, was never found. Edwards had control of the vault, though others in the office also had access to it until the failure. He removed to Fargo, Dakota, in 1879. There his deposition was taken in behalf of appellee, but was read in evidence by appellant. In that remarkable statement he denies all recollection of any settlement or even of the existence of this claim. Checks of the company were always signed by the president, if he was there, but the president remembers nothing of this one. By whom it was signed, how and by whom indorsed, when and to whom paid, and when, how, why or by whom abstracted, are all matters about which there is not a syllable of direct proof. But it was drawn by the bookkeeper by direction of the secretary, and delivered to him on the day of its date, and he, so far as is shown, was last in possession of it before its presentation for payment. On the 4th of March, the day of its date, as on the 5th and 6th, and generally before and for some months afterward, O’Bannon was at Baymond, in Montgomery county, as appears by entries in his handwriting on the books of the store there, though there were some days, and in some instances several consecutive days, on which no such entries were made, and nothing was shown to fix his whereabouts at those times. There was evidence tending to prove he was at Chicago in April or May, or early in June, but none that he ever, after he returned the receipt from appellee—which was probably on the 8th of January—-had any communication, direct or indirect, with the insurance company or the bank mentioned, or with any officer or agent of either, excepting only his alleged admission to the witness, Miller, to be considered hereafter. In the summer following he removed from Raymond to Litchfield, in the same county, where he had formerly resided and still owned a large amount of property.

For some time after the failure of the company, the management of its affairs by Edwards was the subject of much and severe animadversion. Among the incidents growing out of it was a suit brought by him against a Fargo newspaper company for libel. In that suit the deposition of appellee was taken on behalf of the defendant, at Chicago, in October, 1883, and while there on that occasion, he was informed by Mr. Terpenny that the company had actually paid $5,000 on his policy, and that a receipt for that amount, indorsed thereon, was signed by O’Bannon for him. This information seemed to surprise him greatly, but he could not then believe his old friend had so wronged him. In the deposition just referred to, he testified with emphasis to his unblemished reputation, and to his own implicit faith, founded on personal knowledge and experience, in his integrity and friendship. O’Bannon was then on his death-bed, and died on the 15th of the next month, in the county of Montgomery, at the age of about seventy-five years. During the last thirty years he had resided and done business in that county, and had accumulated thereby an independent fortune

Appellee first brought a suit against Edwards for the recovery of this $3,000 and interest; but afterward, whether because he then saw no way to avoid the effect of this receipt as a defense for him, or for what other reason, if any, does not appear, dismissed it, and filed the claim herein as above stated. If it had any foundation in fact, then this old man, of established reputation for honesty, who had no need of the money, who had contributed to the proof of appellee’s title to it, who as a friend had undertaken to collect it for him, and who through so many years had been unfailingly faithful and generous to him, had at last betrayed his trust and by the basest of frauds robbed him of $3,000, sacred as the insurance upon his mother’s life; had lived for nearly nine years thereafter with the burden of this crime upon his conscience and its fruit in his pocket, on terms of unbroken intimacy with his victim and his family and in the unabated esteem of his neighbors, and died without a sign of remorse or guilt. The County Court disallowed it, the Circuit Court, on appeal, trying the case without a jury, also disallowed it; and this court, on further appeal, affirmed that judgment, as well supported by the evidence, notwithstanding certain rulings which were recognized as erroneous, but for reasons stated deemed immaterial.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ill. App. 473, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obannon-v-vigus-illappct-1890.