Way v. Harriman

18 N.E. 206, 126 Ill. 132
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 N.E. 206 (Way v. Harriman) 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
Way v. Harriman, 18 N.E. 206, 126 Ill. 132 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a bill filed January 6, 1885, in the Circuit Court of Bureau County by Malvina Harriman, Pearley Townsend and William Watts against Jane B. Way, and also against Carlos Sampson, Helen Way, Albert Watts and Eobert Harwell. All the parties, except Harwell, are thechildren of Sarah B. Watts, deceased, three by her first husband, named Sampson, and four by her second husband named Watts. Farwell is administrator of the estate of Mrs. Watts.. This appeal from the Appellate Court is taken by Jane B. Way alone'.

.On May 28, 18-84, Sarah B. Watts, then a widow nearly eighty years old, went to the home of her son-in-law Benj amin Way and of her daughter, Jane B. Way, the appellant in this case, who lived on a farm in the State of Kansas. Mrs. Watts lived with the appellant and with the appellant’s husband, Benjamin Way, upon the Kansas farm from May 28, 1884, to August 14, 1884, on which latter day she died intestate. The three complainants and Albert Watts and Farwell live in Bureau County, Illinois, Sampson in Iowa, Helen Way in Dakota and appellant in Kansas, as already stated.

Mrs. Watts owned in her lifetime $680.00 in money, and two notes, one against Henry Harriman, husband of the appellee, Malvina Harriman, and the other against Charles B. Townsend, husband of the appellee, Pearley Townsend. She had the money and the Townsend note in her possession, when she arrived at the Way farm in Kansas. At that time the Harriman note was in the hands of a lawyer, named Emerson, in Bureau County, Illinois, with whom it had been left for collection. Emerson was written to for the note and forwarded it on July 1, 1884, to Mrs. Watts, who received it in Kansas about July 3, 1884. After the death of Mrs. Watts, the notes and money were in the hands of appellant, who claimed to be the exclusive owner of them under a contract alleged to have been made with her mother, as hereinafter set forth. Appellant sent the notes to the said Farwell, an attorney in Bureau County in this State, for collection. Farwell as administrator, for the use of Jane B. Way, brought suits and obtained judgments upon both notes, and has collected $1252.05 upon the Harriman judgment and $1125.00 upon the Townsend judgment.

The bill sets up the foregoing facts in substance and also alleges, that the notes and money were the property of Mrs. Watts at the time of her death; that the money and notes, or the proceeds of the collection of the notes, belong to the heirs at law of Mrs. Watts, including appellant, after payment of debts, and should be distributed, as required by law; that appellant fraudulently obtained possession of said notes and money before the death of Mrs. Watts, or took possession of them after her death with the fraudulent intent to deprive the other heirs-at-la'w of their interests therein. The bill prays that the money collected on the judgments may be declared to be the property of the estate of Mrs. Watts and that it may be distributed to her heirs, and that Farwell be enjoined from paying to appellant, etc.

Appellant in her answer denies that Mrs. Watts owned the notes and money at the time of her death, but alleges that Mrs. Watts before her death gave and delivered the notes and money to the appellant for the purpose of vesting the exclusive ownership thereof in appellant, and that this was done in pursuance of a contract between appellant and Mrs. Watts, made at the latter’s suggestion soon after coming to Kansas, “to which respondent’s husband assented and was a party, to the effect that Mrs. Watts was to give to this respondent the money and promissory notes * * * in consideration of which respondent and her husband were to furnish a home for Mrs. Watts with them, were to board and lodge her, furnish such clothing as she needed, to nurse and take care of her in sickness, to furnish medical treatment and attention, to make her as comfortable as circumstances would permit during the balance of her life, and when she died to have her body decently buried. ' Further, respondent says that she and her husband furnished Mrs. Watts a home with them as long as she lived, and did all that could be done to make her comfortable, supplied all her wants, carefully and tenderly nursed her during her sickness, employed for her the best medical attendance and treatment obtainable in the county, and when she died, decently buried her body and did all that could be done or was to be done on their part in the performance of said arrangement.”

The Appellate Court has reversed the decree of the Circuit Court which dismissed the bill for want of equity. The question presented by the record is, whether the money on hand at the death of Mrs. Watts and that realized from the notes since her decease, belong to appellant or to the estate of Mrs. Watts. Before appellant can be held to be the exclusive owner of the funds in question, the contract set up in her answer must be clearly established by the evidence.

The contract, upon which appellant relies, is admitted.to have been a verbal one. The only witnesses, by which it is sought to prove it, are the appellant herself, her husband Benjamin Way, and her two sons, Elbert Way and Newton Way.

The appellant is clearly an incompetent witness under the second section of chapter 51 of Bev. Stat., entitled “Evidence and Depositions.” She is a party defendant to the suit and the adverse parties suing are the heirs of her deceased mother. (Freeman v. Easly, 117 Ill. 317).

We also think that Benjamin Way, the husband of appellant, is an incompetent witness. The fifth section of the 51st chapter of the Bevised Statutes provides, that, in certain cases therein mentioned, “the husband and wife may testify for or against each other in the same manner as other pwties may under the provisions of this act.” In Treleaven v. Dixon, 119 Ill. 548, we held that the word, “party,” as here used, means, “party to a suit or party in interest in the suit,” and we there said: “Giving it that meaning, other parties can not testify in any civil action, suit or proceeding of their own motion, or in their own behalf, when any adverse party sues or defends as the executor of a deceased person, and therefore husband and wife can not testify for or against each other in those instances.” Of course, under se.ction 2, the-same is true as well where the adverse party-is the heir of a deceased person as where he is the executor of a deceased person.

It makes no difference that the testimony of appellant and her husband is in the record. This being a chancery proceeding, we are required to assume that all the incompetent evidence was rejected on the final hearing. If there is not competent evidence in the record sufficient to sustain the decree, it must be reversed. (Treleaven v. Dixon, supra).

The testimony of appellant and her husband being disposed of, there remains only the evidence of the two sons, which is not sufficient to establish the contract contended for. • An attempt is here made, under cover of a parol contract, to effect a distribution different from that which the law makes. Under such circumstances the proof must be clear and the testimony must be direct and positive. (Wallace v. Rappleye, 103 Ill. 229).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.E. 206, 126 Ill. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/way-v-harriman-ill-1888.