Vigus v. O'Bannon

19 Ill. App. 241, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 192
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 25, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Ill. App. 241 (Vigus v. O'Bannon) 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
Vigus v. O'Bannon, 19 Ill. App. 241, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 192 (Ill. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

Mrs. Eliza Vigus, mother of appellant, held a policy on her life in the Protection Life Ins. Co. of Chicago, payable to him at its office within ninety days from the receipt of proof of her death. She died at Raymond October 12th, and proof was submitted Nov. 28th and approved Dec. 16th, all in 1874. Early in January, 1875, Richard W. O’Bannon, at the request of appellant, took the policy to Chicago to settle and collect the insurance. Upon his return he reported that the company disputed the claim on the ground of misrepresentation as to her health when insured, but that he had succeeded with difficulty and only through the personal friendship of the secretary, in getting an allowance of §2,000, and no more. He presented to appellant its check on the Fidelity Savings Bank and Safe Depository of Chicago and its note at sixty days, each for §1,000, dated Jan. 5, 1875, and payable to appellant, together with a receipt to it in full, but not specifying the amount, which was in the handwriting of A. W. Edwards, said secretary ; and upon his statement and advice appellant accepted the note and check, and signed the receipt which was returned to the company and by it received on Jan. '9, 1875.

O’Bannon was then between sixty-five and seventy years of age. His son had married a sister of appellant, and his own personal re1 at ion with him and his family had been intimate, and so continued to the time of his death. He died Nov. 15, 1883, after a residence in the county of thirty years.

About that time appellant was informed that O’Bannon had receipted to the insurance company for §5,000, and on June 30, 1884 filed in the county court the claim here in controversy, which is for $3,000 and interest thereon from March 14, 1875, alleging that the cause of action had been fraudulently concealed from him.

Appellee contested, denying the alleged collection by her testator and setting up the Statute of Limitations. The cause was tried without a jury and the claim disallowed. The claimant appealed to the circuit court, where it was again tried without a jury, and the issues were found and judgment rendered for defendant. Exception thereto was duly taken and the record is brought here by further appeal.

If O’Bannon collected on this policy, directly or indirectly, anything more or else than the check and note he delivered to appellant, either before he delivered them or afterward, if in pursuance of a purpose formed before, it must be conceded upon the evidence that he fraudulently concealed this cause of action, and that appellant was actually ignorant of it until a time within five years before the filing of his claim. The main questions of fact, then, are whether he did collect more, and if so, whether appellant’s ignorance was due to a want of reasonable diligence to discover it.

It sufficiently appears that the company actually paid §5,000, so that if appellant received only §2,000, either he or the company must have been defrauded of the difference by O’Bannon or some other person or by both; but the narrowed range of our inquiry is whether the fraud was committed by O’Bannon and upon appellant.

The receipt indorsed on the policy is as follows: “Received of the Protection Life Insurance Company five thousand dollars, being the amount in full on the within policy. D. Yigus, by R. W. O’Bannon,” and the signature is admitted to be in the handwriting of the latter, which unexplained would doubtless be conclusive against him.

Some evidence was introduced which tended to show that the word “five” was originally written “two,” and other, perhaps of greater weight, that there had been no alteration.

But it was fully proved that the body of this receipt, excepting the amount therein stated, was written by the head book-keeper of the company, who also wrote the check and the note mentioned; that though without date, it was in fact written and delivered to the secretary, with a blank space left for the insertion of the amount, on the 5th day of January, 1875 — the date of said check and note — while O’Bannon was in the office, and nothing further is shown respecting the policy or this receipt until the fall of 1883. It further appears without dispute that the company paid no money directly, at any time, on account of this policy, but always and only by check on its bank; that all it gave on that account to O’Bannon or any other person on January 5th was the check and note mentioned; that the note was entered at the time on its books, introduced in evidence by appellant, as given u for balance due on policy 4266, on death of Eliza Vigus,” thus apparently showing the whole amount to be $2,000; that the other $3,000 was paid by check which was not issued until two months afterward, March 4th, nor paid by the bank until June, and that it was tilled out by the book-keeper, made payable to appellant, and delivered to Edwards, the secretary. O’Bannon was not in Chicago on March 4th, nor is there any evidence that after he left in January he ever had any dealing or correspondence, directly or indirectly, with the insurance company or any of its officers, or with the bank on which these checks were drawn. He resided at Raymond until the latter part of May, 1875, when he removed to Litchfield, some twelve miles distant, where he had formerly lived, and there remained until his death. The $3,000 check was returned by the bank to the insurance company after its payment, about the last of June, and properly filed by the book-keeper; but whether it had been indorsed or not h 3 could not remember, and no later or further account is given of it except that it was mysteriously missing. Of all the papers relating to the claim, this alone could not be found. In 1877 the company failed, its affairs went into the hands of a receiver, and its secretary removed to Dakota, where his deposition was taken by appellee; but he disclaimed all recollection of the particulars of the claim or of its settlement or even of the fact that he settled it.

From these circumstances, which are undisputed, it is not unreasonable to infer that the receipt was signed on the-5th day of January, 1875; that if not afterward altered as to the amount, it was without any statement of it when signed; that nothing had been or then was received by O’Bannon except the check and note amounting to' $2,000, and that these were received to be, so far as he could make it, a settlement in full of the claim on the policy. And the facts so inferred fully explain the receipt and overcome its grima facie effect as evidence in this case.

Counsel are forced to admit the probability that it was signed at the- time and in the condition stated, but argue that if O’Bannon afterward collected the $3,000, or by signing it in blank enabled the secretary, by inserting the full amount, to collect the $3,000, his estate is liable therefor to appellant. As already intimated we apprehend not, unless such collection was in pursuance of an intention formed before his settlement with appellant; for otherwise the fraud would be wholly upon the company or its policy holders who contributed to make up the amount, and not at all upon him.

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Related

O'Bannon v. Vigus
32 Ill. App. 473 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ill. App. 241, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vigus-v-obannon-illappct-1886.