Reed v. Peterson

91 Ill. 288
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 91 Ill. 288 (Reed v. Peterson) 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
Reed v. Peterson, 91 Ill. 288 (Ill. 1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This suit in chancery grows out of one of a series of transactions extending over a period of some twenty-five years, all having some reference to the same subject matter. Various of these have, from time to time, been before this court for investigation, and several of their developments are still pending for solution. We will seek to avoid all reference to these former controversies, and to all matters not involved in the present proceeding, and even to those matters involved therein which did not form the basis of any of the relief granted by the circuit court in the decree herein appealed from. This will free the case from complications not now necessary to discuss, and eliminate from the record questions passed upon by the court below, that may now be regarded as res judicata.

The present bill was filed by Georgie H. Peterson, the. appellee, against appellants, the Illinois Land and Loan Company and William K. Reed, to set aside a sale and recover the value of certain personal property, bequeathed to her by her stepson, Percy W. Bonner, deceased, on account of the alleged fraud of appellants, and for gross inadequacy of consideration.

In the fall of 1869, the testator, a mulatto boy nineteen years of age, was thé owner of an undivided half of a valuable property, situate on the corner of La Salle and Monroe streets, in the city of Chicago. He was consumptive, and had started to go south for his health, and stopped, temporarily, at Kankakee. The appellant corporation, which held certain tax claims against the property, thereupon dispatched Mr. Scoville, its solicitor, the appellant Peed, who was its cashier and general manager, and a third person, to Kankakee, and they induced the boy to return to Chicago. Shortly thereafter, through the endeavors of these same persons, the old guardian of the boy was removed from his office, and one P. W. Gates was appointed in his place. Gates had been the client of Mr. Scoville for some twenty years, and he states, in his testimony, he consented to take the guardianship, but that Mr. Scoville agreed to do the work. Mr. Scoville states, on cross-examination, it was understood between Mr. Gates and himself that he should act as Gates’ attorney, and render all the assistance he could, if Gates was appointed guardian. And it impresses us, from an examination of the evidence in the record, that in all the subsequent transactions the attorney and not the client was, for all practical purposes, though not nominally, the guardian of the boy.

Soon after the appointment of the new guardian, he borrowed $8000 for his ward, and executed a mortgage upon the real estate to secure the same.' The loan was effected through the appellant Eeed. The petition to the court, the order of court, and the mortgage, were all drawn up by Mr. Scoville.

On the 20th day of January, following, 1870, Percy W. Bonner made a conveyance of his interest in said land to said Land and Loan Company, but this conveyance was not placed upon record until the day of his death. There was also a contract executed by the boy and the company, on the day of the date of the deed, in which the real consideration of the deed was stated. It is only necessary, here, to refer to these two instruments for the purpose of showing the status of affairs at the time of Percy’s decease. The question of the validity of the deed was passed upon by this court in Illinois Land and Loan Co. v. Bonner, 75 Ill. 315; and the claim of appellee, based upon the concurrent contract, was not allowed by the court below, and a discussion of its provisions is now unnecessary.

Percy W. Bonner died on the 26th day of July, 1870. Prior to his death he made a will, in which he gave and bequeathed to appellee all his personal property and estate, of every kind, whether in possession, suit or expectancy, consisting, in part, of a gold watch and chain and of a claim for money pending against Daniels and others, and in part of certain city bonds of Chicago, in the hands of C. A. Gregory, and to recover which legal proceedings had been had and were to be prosecuted,—and in which will he constituted said P. W. Gates his executor.

The amount of cash that came to the hands of Gates, as executor, after the payment by the guardian of all funeral expenses, costs of court, guardian’s commissions and attorney’s fees, was $3702.29. This money was the remainder of the $8000 raised, by mortgage, for the support of the minor and for the payment of taxes and costs of litigation. There is no merit in the claim, now made by appellants, that it was a part of the realty, and went to the heirs, and not to the legatee under the will. The heirs have never claimed it as such. It was paid to the executor as a part of the personal estate, and was inventoried by him as such, and appellants received it from him as such, on the written order of’appellee, and under a sale from her, and they are now, in equity and good conscience, estopped from averring that it was not personalty.

There was, also, in the hands of one Gregory a city bond of Chicago, of the value, with accumulated interest, of about $1600, that he, Gregory, had received and held as the attorney of young Bonner. It is true, the delivery of this bond to the guardian had been, for years, enjoined; but it clearly appears that this injunction had been dissolved, and the suit in which it issued dismissed, months before the decease of Bonner, through the endeavors of Mr. Scoville. There is no claim Gregory was not perfectly responsible, pecuniarily. The demand was inventoried by the executor as a good and valid claim, and we are wholly unable to appreciate the position assumed, that this bond and accrued interest was not a part of the personal estate of the deceased.

Disregarding various other claims of property from which appellants seem to have derived benefit, but for which no relief was granted appellee, we have here a personal estate of the cash value of over $5300, and it appears the total indebtedness of the estate, including executor’s commissions, costs of county court, and attorney’s fees paid, amounted to only $1039.72, leaving a net value to said estate of over $4300.

The condition and value of the property bequeathed to appellee were fully known to Mr. Scoville. He had managed the affairs of the estate, and attended to all its litigation, for nearly a year past, and had received from the guardian therefor fees, for himself and firm, amounting to over $1500. And appellants were equally well advised. Mr. Scoville had been the attorney for each of them for many years, and only became connected with the matter of this Bonner estate in furtherance of their interests, and it is evident, from the circumstances and details in proof, that whatever knowledge the attorney had material to the interests of the clients, was also known to them, and that Scoville and appellants were acting in concert in the whole transaction we are now considering.

At the time of her step-son’s death, appellee, who is a mulatto woman, was head chambermaid on a steamer running on Long Island Sound. On hearing of his death, she wrote to Mr. Gates, his guardian, requesting that one or two articles belonging to her, that had been in the possession of the stepson, should be forwarded to her. She states, in her testimony, this letter was responded to by Mr. Scoville in person, represeating Mr. Gates, a few weeks after Percy’s death. .

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ill. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-peterson-ill-1878.