Teeter v. Poe

48 Ill. App. 158, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 574
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 31, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 Ill. App. 158 (Teeter v. Poe) 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
Teeter v. Poe, 48 Ill. App. 158, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 574 (Ill. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court, the

Honorable George W. Pleasants, Judge.

The original declaration in this case consisted of a special count on a promissory note and the common counts, Avith Avhich Avas filed the folloAving as a copy of the instrument sued on:

“ Doavns, III., August 27, 1885.
On the 10th day of June, 1886, Ave promise to pay Isabella A. Poe or order five hundred dollars Avith interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from date.
Charles Teeter,
Benjamin Teeter.”
The note intended Avas then in possession of the defendant, Benjamin Teeter. Plaintiff obtained a rule on him to produce it, and on its production, by leave of court, filed an additional count in Avhich it Avas set out in haee verba, as follows :
“ Doavns, August 27, 1885.
On the 10th day of June, 1886, we or either of us agree to pay to Mrs. Isabella A. Poe the sum of five hundred dollars and such interest as she may be liable to pay on a loan made by her of five hundred dollars for us. This note is given in lieu of former note given to her by us, and by her lost. And this note is in full discharge of that nóte, and the said Isabella A. Poe, by her acceptance of this note, guarantees that the former note, which is said to have been lost or stolen, was not and has not been by her assigned or in any manner transferred to any person or persons.
Charles Teeter,
Beh.tamih Teeter.”

On the same day, October 5, 189.1, the folloiving steps were taken in the canse, which are set out in the abstract in the following order:

(1.) Plaintiff filed the additional count referred to.

(2.) Defendants filed, in addition to the plea of payment previously filed, two others in bar—one, that after the making of the note sued on, the plaintiff accepted another in full payment and discharge thereof; and the other, that Benjamin Teeter was only a surety on the note, and plaintiff knew it, and that she is indebted to Charles for goods, chattels, board, lodging, etc. (under the common counts).

(3.) Plaintiff nol pros'd the first count of her declaration.

(4.) Defendants entered a motion for continuance, on the ground that a copy of the instrument sued on was not filed with the declaration ten days before the term; which was overruled. The trial was begun October 13, 1891, and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $160. A motion for a new trial was denied, and judgment entered on the verdict.

It appears that in April, 1881, appellant, Charles Teeter, married a grand-daughter of appellee, then living with her, as she had been from early childhood, on a forty-acre tract which she owned near Leroy. He rented a small farm in the neighborhood, and upon the marriage they moved on it. Appellee went with them, taking along some household furniture. She was then about seventy-three years of age, and from that time until the death of Mrs. Teeter, in the spring of 1891, she continued -to live with the family and to appear as a member of it. During that time they moved to and resided for awhile in De Witt County, Ill., then again in McLean, then in Kansas, then in Nebraska, and finally returned to McLean, in February, 1891. Teeter Was a farmer, with but little means and an increasing family. His wife bore him five children, of whom four survived her. With the duties, cares and disabilities to which she ivas necessarily subjected by these conditions, it is not to be believed, without clear and strong evidence, that her grandmother was either a boarder or a servant for wages in that family. No such evidence is found in the record.

Shortly after they left the farm near Leroy, appellee mortgaged her land for money to loan and which she did loan to Charles Teeter, taking therefor a note signed by his father as surety for him, which was lost, and in lieu of which the one in suit was given. Her mortgage debt bore interest at eight per cent. She afterward sold her equity of redemption, and loaned most of the proceeds to him, amounting together to $900, which she still holds, taking his note therefor.

It is said that the note here sued on was paid in cash by Benjamin oTeeter. Upon that question the evidence was in substance as follows: In the fall of 1890, his crops having failed and his stock and implements being under chattel mortgage, Charles Teeter came to McLean County in an effort to raise means with which to pay his debts and get his- family back. Appellee had previously sent this note to an attorney in Bloomington for collection. She also had some other small claims due from parties in McLean. While Charles was so there she sent him, unsolicited, the following: “Benedict, Neb., November 11,1890. I hereby authorize Charles Teeter to collect my notes and accounts due me. Isabella A. Poe.” Upon this as his authority he obtained the note from the attorney. He made no attempt to collect it of his father, but took it back to Nebraska, and retained it until he delivered it to his brother David as hereinafter stated, though he says she might have had it at any time if she 'had asked for it. In February, 1891, Benjamin Teeter sent David to Nebraska with something over $500 with instructions, as he says, to lift the note and not to pay out a dollar until he got it. The amount then due upon it was over $700, and how or why he expected to get it for less he did not state. David went to Nebraska, and without one word from appellee, except as represented by Charles, paid out all the money on Charles’ mortgage debts and for transportation of the family to McLean, and thereupon Charles delivered to him the note, which he on his return delivered to his father without any statement of the manner in which or the means by which he got it. Charles testified that she consented to the arrangement he made with David before any of the money was paid and to his delivery of the note at the time he delivered it. David testified that she and Charles’ wife were in the room with them when it was delivered; that Charles said something to her about the note, but did not remember what it was, or that she said anything. He did not testify that she saw him deliver it. Appellee positively denied that she told Charles to deliver it, or knew that he did deliver it to David.

She was about eighty-three years of age at that time, and this note represented all the means she had—these notes against Charles, which were produced in evidence, being understood to be worthless. It is not pretended that a dollar of the money in David’s hands was paid to her. There was a plea of accord and satisfaction interposed. "Why the jury found for her and yet found only $460, we are at a loss to understand; but she does not complain of it.

The alleged errors are the overruling of the motion for continuance, the giving of the second instruction for the plaintiff, and the refusal of several asked by defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Ill. App. 158, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teeter-v-poe-illappct-1892.