Staggers v. Estate of Staggers

155 Ill. App. 133, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 499
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 30, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 155 Ill. App. 133 (Staggers v. Estate of Staggers) 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
Staggers v. Estate of Staggers, 155 Ill. App. 133, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 499 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Philbrick

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was a nephew of Hester J. Staggers, deceased. During her lifetime he acted as her agent in the transaction of her business and the management of her property. For this purpose she executed to him a power of attorney. After he had been acting under this power of attorney for some time he claims that his relation as attorney in fact in the transaction of her business was changed by reason of a contract of agreement alleged to have been entered into, in and by which he claims she gave him certain amounts of money in consideration of which he was to take care of her during her lifetime and pay certain of her outstanding indebtedness.

Upon the death of her husband, Hester J. Staggers, became involved in considerable litigation over her interest in her husband’s estate. This was finally determined by a partition suit and upon the payment to her of the proceeds of her husband’s estate, checks were made by the master in chancery payable to her order and endorsed by her to appellant and deposited by him in the First National Bank of Danville to his own credit, and this is the time when he claims the relation before that time existing, was changed.

On her death he was appointed executor of her last will and testament and qualified as such; appellant filed a claim in the county court against the estate of Hester J. Staggers for certain sums of money claimed to have been paid out for her use and for services in attending to her business. In this claim was originally included certain amounts which were paid out of the fund which he had received and deposited in the First National Bank. Before the hearing on this claim, he amended his claim by striking from it the items claimed to have been paid from this fund or paid for her use after the alleged relations which had existed between deceased and appellant were changed by the agreement alleged to have been made. Upon the claim as thus amended, a hearing was had in the county court and for the purpose of defending the estate against this alleged claim, Lawrence Allen was appointed administrator fro tern; upon the hearing of this claim appellant was allowed by the county court a judgment for $2,982.89. From this judgment the administrator pro tern appealed to the circuit court.

After appellant had amended his claim in the county court by striking out these items, he then filed in the county court another or additional claim, setting forth the items which had been stricken from his first claim and included therein others which he claimed were proper charges against the estate, if he failed to maintain the alleged contract and gift .of the proceeds of the checks, Upon the filing of this claim, upon his motion, it was stricken from the claim docket by the county court with leave to reinstate. This was done because the items, which composed this additional claim, were inconsistent with his contention of a gift or contract, and it was done to postpone a hearing upon this additional claim until the question of gift and contract were finally determined.

Upon the trial the administrator pro tem claimed as a set-off against appellant’s claim the proceeds of the checks received by appellant from Hester J. Staggers. The total of the sums so received by him was $7,123.86, and this amount being in excess of appellant’s claim, the administrator asked for judgment against appellant for whatever amount should be found to be due the estate, if any.

Neither on the trial in the county court nor upon the hearing of the appeal in the circuit court was any evidence offered concerning any of the items which were stricken from appellant’s claim as originally filed. The hearing was upon the claim as amended and upon this hearing the jury returned a verdict against appellant and in favor of appellee for $6,132.12. Appellee remitted from that amount $2,000 and the court rendered a judgment for $4,132.12 against appellant.

Pending the appeal in the circuit court, no action was taken upon the items of the additional claim filed in the county court and which had been stricken from the docket with leave to reinstate.

After the judgment rendered in the circuit court upon that appeal, appellant then caused to be reinstated in the county court his additional claim and upon a hearing on that claim in the county court, a judgment was rendered in his favor for $914.59. From that judgment an appeal was prosecuted by the pro tern representative of the estate of Hester J. Staggers. Upon this appeal a jury was waived and hearing had before the court; the trial court made no finding on the merits of the various items in this claim but held the claims to be res adjudicata of the former claim and rendered judgment against appellant.

Appellant submitted to the court the following proposition of law:

“The court holds it to be the law that where one person pays the debts or obligations of another, by request of such other person, the law raises an implied promise by said person to repay the one so paying such debts or obligations. And that in this case if it is shown by a preponderance of the evidence that «claimant paid any debts or outstanding obligations of Hester J. Staggers, at her request, and that he has not been repaid, then he is entitled to recover any such ■sum or sums so paid, laid out, and expended at her request.”

The court added to this proposition of law the following :

“But the court holds that under the evidence in this case the claimant is barred from a recovery because said claims are res adjudicata.”

Appellant assigns as errors the action of the court in adding to this proposition of law and then holding it as the law as modified.

Appellant also submitted to the court the following propositions of law:

“The court holds it to be the law that in a proceeding in a court of record the plaintiff or claimant is not required to join all his claims or demands in one claim or suit; but that he may present such claims separ•ately in county court against the estate or sue them separately, as he sees fit.
“The court holds it to be the law that although the plaintiff, H. H. Staggers, may have presented a claim in the county court previous to the claim in question, which included some of the items included in the original and amended claim in this case, yet if previous to judgment on such original claim and before, or at the time of trial thereon, such item or items were withdrawn and dismissed by the plaintiff, that such representation and adjudication in such former case would not bar or prevent plaintiff presenting a claim for the items so withdrawn, and litigating the same in this case, or recovering thereon, if said items are proven and established by a preponderance of the evidence.”

Both of which the court refused to hold as the law, and marked them refused.

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Equitable Trust Co. v. Fisher
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10 N.E. 387 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1887)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 Ill. App. 133, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staggers-v-estate-of-staggers-illappct-1910.