State Bank v. Barnett

95 N.E. 178, 250 Ill. 312
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 95 N.E. 178 (State Bank v. Barnett) 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
State Bank v. Barnett, 95 N.E. 178, 250 Ill. 312 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, the State Bank of Clinton, on September 30, 1907, filed its creditor’s bill in the" circuit court of DeWitt county against Sylvia Barnett, the appellant here, Lucy J. Barnett, and others, alleging that on December 30, 1902, Lucy J. Barnett and W. A. Barnett, her husband, (now deceased,) executed and delivered to the appellee their two promissory notes for the sums of $1000 and $1394.89, respectively, to each of which notes was attached a power of attorney authorizing the confession of judgment thereon; that at the time of his death W. A. Barnett held a benefit certificate in the Modern Woodmen of America for the sum of $3000," payable to his wife; that his wife collected the amount of the benefit certificate and made a pretended gift of the same, without consideration, to her daughter, Sylvia Barnett, the appellant; that upon receiving the money Sylvia loaned the same to one B. C. Sprague, taking his promissory notes therefor; that she thereafter recovered judgments against Sprague aggregating $3125, upon which executions were issued, which were levied upon lands of Sprague; that on- July 29, 1907, judgment by confession was entered upon the said notes given to appellee, in the circuit court of DeWitt county, against Lucy J. Barnett for the sum of $3236.93; that execution was issued thereon and returned nulla bona; that appellant, aside from the judgments against Sprague, was insolvent, and if permitted to collect said judgments she would appropriate the money to her own use and appellee would be left without remedy, and that the money represented by said judgments was the property of Lucy J. Barnett and not that of the appellant. Upon the filing of the bill a temporary injunction was issued restraining the sheriff, who was made a defendant, from delivering to Sylvia Barnett a certificate of sale without receiving the money therefor, and commanding him to retain the proceeds of sale subject to the further order of the court. Lucy J. Barnett and appellant filed separate answers, by which they each admitted that upon the death of W. A. Barnett the proceeds of his benefit certificate were paid to Mrs. Barnett and by her transferred to appellant, who loaned the same to Sprague. The answers each deny that Mrs. Barnett had any interest in the proceeds of the benefit certificate, or in the notes given by Sprague to appellant, or in the judgments obtained against Sprague, and aver that although Mrs. Barnett was named in the benefit certificate as beneficiary the insurance was procured by W. A. Barnett for the sole benefit of appellant, and that the proceeds of the benefit certificate were the property of appellant and not that of Mrs. Barnett. The cause was referred to a special master in chancery to take the evidence and report the same, without his conclusions, to the court. Upon the hearing the court found the issues for appellee, and a decree was entered finding the facts substantially as alleged in the bill, ordering that the sheriff of DeWitt county be perpetually enjoined from paying the money which had been secured on the execution against Sprague, to appellant, and directing him to pay to appellee the money in his hands, to -be applied on the judgment ini its favor against Lucy J. Barnett. Upon an appeal to the Appellate Court for the Third District this decree was affirmed. The cause is now brought to this court by appeal, upon a certificate of importance.

All the evidence in the case, with the exception of a small portion which is not material to this decision, was taken before the master and reported by him without any conclusions as to the facts. " The chancellor had therefore no better means of judging the relative candor, fairness and credibility of the respective witnesses than we have, so the appeal may be regarded substantially as presenting the case to us for a hearing de novo upon the same evidence. Baker v. Rockabrand, 118 Ill. 365; McGinnis v. Jacobs, 147 id. 24.

Barnett died October 14, 1904. The proceeds of the benefit certificate were paid to Mrs. Barnett December 23, 1904, and the amount was immediately turned over to appellant. The notes given appellee, and upon which judgment was secured by confession against Mrs. Barnett on July 29, 1907, were dated December 30, 1902, and were due on demand and six months after date, respectively, with powers of attorney attached authorizing confession of judgment at any time. The fund in question was loaned to Sprague by appellant February 11, 1905.

The contention of appellant in the trial court, and one of her contentions here, is, that her mother, Mrs. Barnett, by parol agreement with her father, had been constituted a trustee to receive the proceeds of the benefit certificate and pay the same, upon his death, to appellant. To support her contention and to establish the existence of such parol trust, witnesses, including Mrs. Barnett, were called, who testified to statements made by W. A. Barnett, in his lifetime, that appellant was the real beneficiary in his benefit certificate, that arrangement had been made whereby his wife was to receive the money, in case of his death, for appellant, and as to his reasons for having made his wife the nominal beneficiary instead of having the money paid directly to his daughter. All of this testimony was objected to on the ground that it was hearsay. Mrs. Barnett was not a competent witness to testify to any conversations with her husband during coverture. All of the testimony in regard to statements made by W. A.. Barnett in reference to his purpose in carrying a benefit certificate in the Modern Woodmen and in reference to who his real beneficiary was is clearly incompetent. It does riot come within any of the well known exceptions to the rule against hearsay evidence. Had appellant been able to establish by compe-' tent evidence the situation disclosed by the pretended statements of W. A. Barnett, she would have established the existence of a parol trust, as claimed. Mrs. Barnett was the beneficiary named in the benefit certificate, and the proceeds of that certificate were paid to her by the society of Modern Woodmen and were turned over by her to appellant. It is not claimed by the appellant' that this fund was turned over to her for any other reason than that it belonged to her and did not belong to her mother. The burden was upon appellant to prove this contention, and there is no competent evidence in the record to sustain it.

Unless there was actual fraud in the transaction the transfer of-this fund from Mrs. Barnett must be held to be a voluntary gift. Appellee insists that this transaction was fraudulent in fact. In support of this contention it produced two witnesses, B. C. Sprague and an attorney who had represented Sprague and who had also represented appellee. Sprague testified that on February 11, 1905, when he executed the notes to appellant, Mrs. Barnett and appellant both treated this riioney as the property of Mrs. Barnett, and that Mrs. Barnett on that occasion told him she was indebted to the appellee bank and desired to loan the money in the'name of her daughter, as she did not want appellee to know where the money was. This testimony is contradicted by appellant, Mrs. Barnett and F. Y. Hamilton, an attorney of Bloomington, who was present assisting appellant in making the loan. Sprague’s testimony is so contradictory and inconsistent that it is unworthy of consideration. His story is also improbable for the reason that he was then, and had been for years, a stockholder and a director of the appellee bank, which fact was a matter of public knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.E. 178, 250 Ill. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bank-v-barnett-ill-1911.