Schreiner v. Smith

38 F. 897, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2229
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois
DecidedMay 13, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 F. 897 (Schreiner v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schreiner v. Smith, 38 F. 897, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2229 (circtndil 1889).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

This is a bill filed by complainant as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of the estate of Dr. Jehiel H. Hyde, to compel an accounting from defendants for certain moneys alleged to belong to said estate now in the possession or control of the defendants.

The material facts, as they appear from the pleadings and proofs, are: Dr.Hyde died at Lancaster in Grant county, Wis., on the 7th of December, 1869, leaving a will executed-November 20, 1869, by which he devised all his real and personal estate, after payment of his debts, to his wife, Sarah Hyde, to have and to hold during her natural life, naming Addison Burr as executor. The will was duly probated in Grant county, Wis., which was the domicile of the testator, by the executor named therein, and letters testamentary issued to him in January, 1870; and on the final settlement of the accounts of the executor on the 12th of August, 1872, there remained in his hands, after payment of debts and legacies, the sum of $7,313.61 in money or securities, which he, by the order of the court, turned oyer to the possession of Mrs. Sarah Hyde, the widow of the testator, pursuant to the provisions of the will. The only real estate belonging to the testator seems to have "been his homestead, situated in the town of Lancaster, and this the widow occupied, either by leasing it and receiving the rents, or by residing therein, and no question arises in this case in reference to the real estate. Dr. Hyde left no child or children, but he and his wife had taken into their family, when quite young, a niece of Mrs. Hyde, who was supported and educated by them as a foster’-child, and who is one of the defendants in this case, she having married the other defendant, C. Stoddard Smith, a few months prior to Dr. Hyde’s dea'th; and after the death of the-testator, Mrs. Hyde lived, most of the time until her own death, with the Smiths. After the death of Dr. Hyde, Mrs. Hyde gave to the defendant Mrs. Julia Smith the sum of $1,000 to aid her in buying a lot on which to build a house in Springfield, Ill. The proofs also show that Mrs. Smith received from Mrs. Hyde, from1 time to time, after Dr. Hyde’s death, various small surhs of money, amounting in all to about $500, or between four and five hundred dollars. Some time about the middle of August, 1879, the money received by Mrs. Hyde from her husband’s estate had been reduced to-the sum of $5,000, which had been loaned to one T. M. Barber, for which she had received as security the deed of a farm in Grant county,. [899]*899Wis., but Barber became insolvent, and failed to pay tbe interest, and Mrs. Hyde expected to be obliged to take the farm in satisfaction of her loan. She was very anxious to return to Lancaster to reside there the rest of her life, and that the Smiths, who at that time were living in Orange, New Jersey, should go there with her, so that she could live with them, and be among her old friends and neighbors; and to induce Dr. Smith to change his business plans and return to Lancaster she proposed to deed to him the Barber farm, for Avhich the Smiths wore to pay her the sum of $400 per annum, and allow her to have her home in their family, if she chose to do so. This proposition ivas accepted by the Smiths, and an agreement in writing to that effect executed between the parties, and a deed made by Mrs. Hyde to Mrs. Smith of the Barber farm, and soon afterwards the Smiths and Mrs. Hyde returned to Lancaster, where they lived in the old homestead until after the death of Mrs. Hyde, they paying her the $400 each year, and she living in their family. Soon after the return 1o Lancaster some disposition was made of the Barber farm so that the $5,000 loan was paid, and Mrs. Hyde, as the deed to Mrs. Smith had never been put on record, reconveyed the farm to Barber, or his assigns, and the $5,000 went into the hands of the Smiths, and has from that time forward been treated as their own. The proof also shows that after the return to Lancaster, and after the payment of the money loaned to Barber by Mrs. Hyde, the first agreement between Mrs. Hyde and the Smiths was canceled and a new agreement made at about the time this Barber loan was paid, which, as I gather from the testimony, substantially embodied the terms of the old agreement, though, perhaps, with less minuteness of recital of circumstances. Complainant now claims that he is entitled, as administrator de bmmnon of Dr. Hyde, to receive from the defendants all the money they have received from Mrs. Hyde since Dr. Hyde’s death; that is, the $500 given Mrs. Smith by Mrs. Hyde in small sums from time to time, the $1,000 given her to help buy the lot for a house in Springfield, and the $5,000 received from the Barber loan; while on the part of the defendants it is contended that the will of Dr. .Hyde gave Mrs. Hyde lull power of disposition of the personal property belonging to the estate, and that her disposition of these sums of money is final, and cannot in any way be challenged by the complainant.

As to this $500 item, the proof shows that $225 of it was the proceeds of a piano which Dr. Hyde had in his life-time given to Mrs. Smith before her marriage, and which he had, however, sold, tolling her at the time he sold it that she should either have the money or a new piano, and Mrs. Hyde, in recognition of the claim of Mrs. Smith to the proceeds of the piano, had paid her the sum of $225 on that account. The balance of this $500 item, T have no doubt from the proof, ivas a part of the income which Mrs. Hyde received from the money which she had loaned out, and was given undoubtedly as presents to Mrs. Smith, who stood in the relation of a daughter to her. She was making her home with the Smiths, and these presents seem to have been the only attempt at' remuneration for their kindness and hospitality to her. If paid from [900]*900the income of the money paid over to Mrs. Hyde by the executor, I have ho doubt that it was rightfully paid by Mrs. Hyde, and can in no sense be considered any part of the residuary estate. As to the $1,000 given to buy the lot in Springfield, the proof shows that it was given Mrs. Smith in 1874. 'No note or writing of any kind obligating Mrs. Smith or her husband to repay it was ever taken, and I think it clear from the proof that Mrs. Smith considered it a gift from her aunt and foster-niother, and both parties so treated it; but, whether a gift or not, all right of action in regard to this item is, I think, barred by the statute of limitations, as it was received over 11 years before Mrs. Hyde’s death.

' The main contention, however, in the case is in regard to the $5,000 constituting the Barber loan, and which Mrs. Hyde gave to the Smiths, in consideration of their paying her $400 per annum during her nat-hral life.- The complainant’s right to this, and also to the other sums claimed, depends upon the construction to be given to the will of Dr. Hyde. Complainant contends that the will only gave Mrs. Hyde a life-estate in the money and personal property of the testator, while, as I have said before, it is contended on the part of defendants that the will clothed Mrs. Hyde with full power to dispose of the personalty, and that the will does not give Mrs. Hyde a mere life-estate in the personalty, with the remainder over to the residuary legatees.

The clauses of the will material to the question are:

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Related

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58 F. 768 (N.D. California, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
38 F. 897, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schreiner-v-smith-circtndil-1889.