Todd v. Todd

42 N.E. 849, 159 Ill. 408
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 849 (Todd v. Todd) 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
Todd v. Todd, 42 N.E. 849, 159 Ill. 408 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This controversy arose on a bill of interpleader filed by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, against appellant and appellee, alleging that it had in its possession $3500, the whole of which was claimed by each of the defendants, and asking that they be required to interplead and litigate the matter between themselves. The company paid the money into court, and appellant and appellee went to a hearing of their respective claims to the fund upon their respective answers to the bill. The cause was referred to the master to take and report the evidence and his conclusions to the court. The master found that appellee was entitled to the fund, and the chancellor, after overruling appellant’s exceptions to the report, decreed according to the recommendations of the master. This decree was affirmed by the Appellate Court, and the cause is brought here by further appeal.

Appellant and appellee are brothers, and are nephews of James T. Bonham, deceased. Bonham died testate, leaving property, real and personal, valued at upwards of $75,000. By his will he gave the bulk of his estate to appellant. The will then provides: “I give and bequeath to my nephew, Benjamin Todd, (appellee) my railroad stock; also, all my other personal estate I give to my two nephews, James F. Todd (appellant) and Benjamin Todd.” The testator owned at his death $2800, at its face value, of the complainant company’s stock, $800 of the Quincy Railroad Bridge Company’s stock, and a $1000 railroad bond made by the Kansas City and Cameron Railroad Company, dated January 1, 1867, due January 1, 1892, bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum. But he never had the bond in his possession. A. T. Hall, connected with the complainant company as treasurer, had purchased it for him, and it remained in the hands of this company until it was paid to it when due, in 1892,— about twenty years after the testator’s death. The principal and interest aggregated $3500, and constituted the fund in litigation. Bonham was a bachelor, and had he made no will appellant and appellee would have each received one-eighth of the estate. Appellant was apprehensive that appellee and the other heirs would contest the validity of the will, and agreed with appellee that if he would not join in such contest he would make his share equal to one-eigbth. Thereupon appellee abode by the will, but there was considerable controversy as well as negotiation between the parties as to the amount which appellee should receive. The evidence is not very clear as to the value of the estate received by appellant.

It is contended in the argument by appellee, that the deceased spoke of the $1000 invested by Hall for him as railroad stock, and that appellant and appellee always supposed it was railroad stock, and that it would pass to appellee under the clause of the will above quoted. It appears that neither the parties in interest nor the executor could get any trace of this item of the personal estate, although they had some information that the testator had made such an investment, but the estate was settled by the executor without any inventory or account of it ever having been made. Appellee contends that he is entitled to the proceeds of this bond by the will and the construction put upon it by both appellant and himself in their dealings with each other; that it was known that this $1000 was invested in railroad securities of some kind, and that it, as well as the railroad bridge stock, is comprehended under the general term “railroad stock,” mentioned in the will, as interpreted and acted upon by the parties.

It appears from the evidence that when the executor, raised the question as to whether or not appellee was entitled to the bridge stock under the will, appellant said that he knew that it was the intention of the testator to give it to him and directed the executor to turn it over to appellee, and he joined with appellee in a bond to protect the executor. The executor testified also that appellant directed him to turn over to appellee the $1000 of stock, or whatever it was, when found. This is not denied by appellant, but he insists that he then thought it was railroad stock and that appellee was entitled to it under the will, but that when he found that it was a bond he knew it did not pass by the will to appellee, but passed to both in equal parts, subject to the payment of debts, and that the debts being in excess of the rest of the personal property not specifically devised, he was compelled to pay upward of $2300 in liquidation of such debts, and for that reason he claims the whole. He claims it also under a written release which appellee executed to him. In the settlement in pursuance of the arrangement between them, appellant deeded to appellee’s wife fifty-one and one-half acres of land, of the value of about $2500, and in addition to the railroad and bridge stock which he directed the executor to turn over to appellee, he also paid appellee, as he claims, $2000 in cash and in the surrender of appellee’s own notes which had theretofore been given for borrowed money. This payment of $2000 is denied by appellee, but appellant is corroborated to some extent by letters from appellee.

The release recited that in consideration of the conveyance of the fifty-one and one-half acres of land appellee released and conveyed to appellant all his interest, as heir or leg'atee under the will, in the personal property of deceased, except all the railroad stock owned by deceased at his death and which had been specifically bequeathed to him. It will be noticed that the will and release used, in substantially the same terms, the words /‘railroad stock,” and it is contended by appellant that as the will did not carry the railroad bond to appellee, neither did the exception in the release reserve it to him. We do not find it necessary to determine, by construction of the will and reservation in the release, whether the term “railroad stock" gave the bond in question to appellee or not, notwithstanding we think the evidence clearly shows .that both parties so understood it. The decision of the case must turn upon the question of contract between the parties, independently of the release. And in this connection we do not regard the point well taken by appellant that what was said and done antecedent to this release rested in negotiation and treaty only, and that the release and deed must alone be looked to to ascertain the contract between the parties. The release was drawn by appellant and sent to appellee for execution. At that time the railroad and bridge stock had already, in part execution of the verbal contract between them, been turned over to appellee, and we think the evidence shows it had been agreed that the $1000 railroad investment should also belong to appellee, and that appellant had instructed the executor to turn it over to appellee when the written paper should be found. The verbal contract between them had to this extent been executed. Appellant agreed, also, that appellee should have the fifty-one and one-half acres of land. The deed to this land remained to be executed. There was also some controversy about some stock subscribed for, but not issued, of another company, not here in dispute, and some questions of money payment, which, though discussed in argument, we think need not be further considered.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 849, 159 Ill. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-todd-ill-1896.