The People v. Forman

153 N.E. 376, 322 Ill. 223
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1926
DocketNo. 17032. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 376 (The People v. Forman) 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
The People v. Forman, 153 N.E. 376, 322 Ill. 223 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Lewis Forman, a resident and citizen of McLean county, Illinois, died intestate at Bloomington on October 31, 1924, leaving appellant, the only child he ever had, as his only heir-at-law. He had in January, 1924, 739 acres of land, which is valued at $174,425. On January 23, 1924, nine months arid eight days before his death, he executed and delivered to appellant, Louie Forman, a deed to that tract of land as a gift, reserving a life estate in eighty acres thereof, on which was situated his residence, all of which land is in McLean county, Illinois. He died seized of $1000 worth of land in Dallas county, Iowa, which is not in dispute in this case as to the court’s jurisdiction to include it as taxable herein; and also died seized of two lots in Bloomington, Illinois, on which is situated a two-story frame building, remodeled and used as an apartment building, and which is valued at $4000. He also died possessed of $4000 of McLean county bank stock, on which was due a declared dividend of $80, $18,707.55 cash in the McLean County Bank, and $71,433.58 of promissory notes, including accrued interest, making a total value of real estate and personal property in Illinois of which he died seized and possessed, $98,221.13, which added to the total value of the land deeded to his son makes a total of $272,646.13. Appellant was appointed administrator of the estate of the deceased. The debts probated against the estate of the deceased amounted to $1709.59, including $665 for funeral expenses and $290.10 for nurse, doctor’s bill and hospital charges in last illness and for grave and vault for deceased. The administrator’s costs and attorney’s fees paid and to be paid in the estate matters, including the expenses of a trip to Iowa to look after the estate’s matters there, amounted to $10,079.05, making the total debts and costs in the estate $11,768.64. An appraiser was appointed by the county judge to appraise and report the value of the estate, the iridebtedness and costs and expenses, and the amount of inheritance tax that should be paid by appellant on the estate. The appraiser made report of the value of the property, of the debts, costs, etc., and the inheritance tax to be paid and reported such matters to the court, in which he found that the 739 acres of land deeded to appellant, the $4000 of real estate in Illinois of which the deceased died seized, and the $94,221.13 of bank stock, cash, notes, etc., amounting to a total value of $272,646.13, was taxable under the inheritance tax laws of Illinois after deducting a total amount of the debts of the deceased, costs of administration, etc., of $11,768.64, and the allowance of $20,000 in addition thereto for appellant’s statutory exemption, making the net taxable value $240,877.49 and the inheritance tax thereon $10,452.65. Appellant prosecuted his appeal to the county court from that report and decision. The county court approved the report, findings and decision of the arbitrator in all matters and entered judgment for the amount aforesaid as the amount to be paid by appellant as inheritance tax, and appellant has prosecuted this appeal to review the judgment of the county court.

Two contentions are made by appellant on this appeal. First, that as to 659 acres of the 739 acres conveyed to him by his father the deed was not made in contemplation of death and was not subject to an inheritance tax. This tract of land was valued at $154,425 and was all farm land. The land reserved from the deed for life was the home farm or part of the home farm. The Inheritance Tax act cannot apply to this conveyance unless it is testamentary in its nature or was made in contemplation of death. The Inheritance Tax act was not intended to prevent a parent from giving the whole or any part of his estate to his children as long as the gift is made simply with that view and not with a purpose of evading the act by disposition of his property just before or in anticipation of his death. The words “in contemplation of death,” used in the statute, have reference to that apprehension of death which arises from some existing disease or infirmity of such a character as prompts one to make a disposition of his property. They do not mean or refer to the general expectation that is common to all rational mortals that they will die some time. (People v. Carpenter, 264 Ill. 400; People v..Danks, 289 id. 542; Rosenthal v. People, 211 id. 306.) It was said in the last case cited, that a gift made at a time when the donor is looking forward to his death as impending, and in view of that event, is within the language of the statute and subject to the tax. In the foregoing cases it is also held that in determining whether a disposition of property is made in contemplation of death, the donor’s age, his physical condition, any action contemplated to be taken with respect to his health, the length of time he survives after the making of the transfer, and all declarations of the parties at and before the time the instrument was executed, should be taken into consideration.

In this case the donor was a little over eighty-nine years of age when he made the conveyance and was over ninety years of age when he died. His physical condition is described by the physician who had attended him eight or ten years previous to his death as unusually good for a man of his age. He was fully dressed in his every-day and usual apparel when the notary came to his house to take the acknowledgment of the deed. He had not previously made any arrangements to have any operation performed or take any particular step to arrest any affliction or condition of his body or to put himself in anyone’s care for treatment of a serious malady that would tend to hasten his death or result in his death suddenly or before the treatment ended. He had at the time he made the deed a slight prostatic condition, or had had previous to the making of the deed, and he also had, according to the testimony of his physician, an “old man’s heart.” The physician expressly testified that he did not have any organic trouble of the heart and that his condition and physical health was unusually good for a man of his age. The immediate cause of his death was an enlarged prostate gland. This was the trouble that put him to bed two or three months before he died. He also was troubled with constipation. The physician also stated that he naturally would have hardening of the arteries and the general physical condition that attends advanced age, but he did not say that he had hardening of the arteries. Before he .went to bed with prostatic trouble his physician states that he only visited him five or six times a year for five or six years or more, and then only for some trivial thing.

It appears from the testimony of the notary public and other witnesses that at the time the deed was acknowledged, or January 23, 1924, the deed signed and acknowledged had been previously drawn at the request of the deceased July 14, 1914, or about ten years before it was finally executed. The donor expressly told the notary that the land already belonged to his son and that he had. previously turned it over to him as his, and he thought that he had already fixed up the deed and turned it over to his son. It appears from the evidence that this was the occasion for his having the notary come out on that day, — that is, the ascertainment of the fact that the deed had not been signed and acknowledged at the time it was written; and that he had discovered this by an inquiry of his son if he had had the deed recorded and just a short time before the final acknowledgment was taken.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 376, 322 Ill. 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-forman-ill-1926.