Rawson v. Corbett

37 N.E. 994, 150 Ill. 466
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 994 (Rawson v. Corbett) 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
Rawson v. Corbett, 37 N.E. 994, 150 Ill. 466 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The proceeding embodied in this record was commenced in the county court of Madison county, and is the final settlement of Andrew Bawson, late guardian of William T. Ground, Bichie B. Ground and Brittania S. Ground, in respect to his care and management of their property and estate. Clarence C. Corbett, the now guardian of said William T. Ground and Bichie B. Ground, minors, and the said Brittania S. Ground, who had arrived at full age, appeared and filed exceptions to the report made by and accounts presented by said Bawson. From the findings made and orders entered in the county court an appeal was taken to the circuit court of the same county. There was a hearing or trial de novo in this latter court, and certain findings and final orders made and entered of record, and thereupon Bawson sued out a writ of error from the Appellate Court for’the Fourth District, alleging that in such findings and orders and record there was manifest' error. The Appellate Court in part affirmed and in part reversed the findings of the circuit court, and remanded the cause for further proceedings in conformity with the opinion of the Appellate Court then delivered. (See Rawson v. Corbett et al. 43 Ill. App. 127.) Bawson, plaintiff in error, then sued out this writ of error to the Appellate Court, and brought the record here.

There is a preliminary question to dispose of. It is suggested by defendants in error that the orders and judgment of the Appellate Court are final as to all questions of fact. Such is not the law. County courts in this State (of course excluding counties in which probate courts have been established under the act in force July 1, 1877,) have equitable jurisdiction in the adjustment of the accounts of guardians, and in such cases may adopt the forms of procedure in equity. (In re Steele et al. 65 Ill. 322.) And in the late case of Kingsbury v. Powers, 131 Ill. 182, this court held, by necessary implication, that it had power to adjudicate in respect to controverted questions of fact.

Nine errors here have been assigned by plaintiff in error upon the record of the Appellate Court, and three of these it will not be necessary to formally notice. No cross-errors have been assigned thereon by defendants in error.

The first assignment of error is, that the Appellate Court held that plaintiff in error was liable for $1470 interest on what is called in the record the Siedler loan; and the second assignment is, that said court erred in holding plaintiff in error entitled to no credits on account of said loan. These assignments, as we understand counsel, refer to the same ■■subject matter, and may be considered together.

The above mentioned sum of $1470 is made up by three items of interest, supposed to have been paid on the Siedler loan and mortgage, — i. e., amount paid out of the Schmidt rent, $1013.20, amount paid through John Gr. Irwin, $106.80, and interest from February 12, 1885, to January 12, 1888, $350.

It is admitted by defendants in error, in their brief and argument filed in this court, that the Appellate Court erroneously charged plaintiff in error with “interest on Siedler mortgage paid out of Schmidt rent, $1013.20.” The occasion for this admission is, that said court also charged plaintiff in error with the full amount of the Schmidt rent. Eawson, very clearly, should not be required to pay this $1013.20 twice.

The $106.80 was paid by Irwin, acting as attorney and agent of plaintiff in error, out' of the Taylor fund, hereinafter mentioned, as interest on the Siedler note and mortgage. Said note was the note of plaintiff in error and his brother, Samuel Eawson, given by them for their own debt of $2000, but secured by a mortgage executed by Sylvania E. Eawson, wife of plaintiff in error, and mother, by a former husband, of the three wards of plaintiff in error, upon lands which were her own separate property. Irwin paid in settlement of said debt and mortgage $2106.80, the $2000 being the principal, and $106.80 the interest. This was all paid out of the Taylor fund, which belonged to the wards. At the trial de novo in the circuit court, plaintiff in error presented amended accounts, in which he charged himself- with the whole of the principal of the Taylor fund, $6833, and if he is charged with interest upon the whole of the Taylor fund, as was done by the order and judgment of the Appellate Court, then, if he is also charged with the item in question of $106.80, he is forced to pay the same interest twice.

The charge of $350 interest must have arisen from a misapprehension of the record on the part of the court, for if Irwin, by paying the $2106.80, paid up in full the amount of both principal and interest due on the note and mortgage, then, manifestly, no interest could thereafter accrue thereon.

We think that the two assignments of error in question are well assigned, and that the three items of interest based on the Siedler transaction, and amounting in the aggregate of $1470, should be stricken from the debit side of the accounts of plaintiff in error.

The third assignment of error is, that the Appellate Court erred in holding plaintiff in error liable for interest upon the whole of the Taylor fund, and the fourth is, that it was error not to hold him liable only for interest upon annual balances; and these two assignments are also so connected with each other that they can be disposed of together.

That which is called the Taylor fund amounted in the aggregate, as already stated, to $6833. It was inherited by the three wards from the estate of their grandmother, and was received by plaintiff in error, their guardian, as follows: $4863.69 on February 11, 1882, and $1969.32" on March 12, 1883, both amounts being received in the form of checks drawn by the master in chancery. These checks were not collected by plaintiff in error until January 1,1885, when they were cashed and the money handed over to Irwin to loan. Irwin loaned this money and collected interest to the amount of $1071.49, as found by the Appellate Court. We understand it to be conceded, and plainly it could not well be controverted, that plaintiff in error is liable for this item of interest. The total amount of interest on the Taylor fund charged by the Appellate Court to the debit side of the guardian’s accounts was $2059.37. In making up this latter amount, the-court charged the guardian with $987.88 of interest that he never received. This arose from the fact that through neglect of statutory duty on the part of the guardian, (Guardians and Wards act, sec. 22,) the sum of $4863.69 lay idle, not loaned or invested, and earning nothing, from February 11, 1882, until January 1, 1885, and the further sum of $1969.32, by like neglect of duty,-was left in like condition from March 12, 1883, until January 1, 1885.

Plaintiff in error concedes that he, as guardian, should have been charged with interest on money in his hands which he failed to loan when he might have done so, hut he insists that the Appellate Court, in charging him with $987.88 interest not collected, assumed that the whole of each of the aforesaid installments of the Taylor fund were the moneys of his wards from the times they were respectively received, and so remained, continuously, thenceforward, and until January 1, 1885.

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37 N.E. 994, 150 Ill. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawson-v-corbett-ill-1894.