Weaver v. Weaver

73 Ill. App. 301, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 325
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 27, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Ill. App. 301 (Weaver v. Weaver) 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
Weaver v. Weaver, 73 Ill. App. 301, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 325 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

December 20, 1882, the Aetna Life"Insurance Co. issued to Edward L. Weaver its policy of insurance for $2,000.00 on his life, and payable to his estate.

October 8, 1892, Weaver went with his brother-in-law, Edgar M. Snow, to the office of the agent of the company in Chicago, for the purpose, as he stated to Snow, of assigning said policy to his mother, the appellant. While Snow and Weaver were there together in this office, the latter having taken the policy with him, Snow also being present by appointment with Weaver, an assignment was written out in duplicate at his request, partly by a clerk and partly by a bookkeeper in the employment of the company’s agent, and signed by Weaver and acknowledged by him before a notary public. One duplicate was left by Weaver to be forwarded to the company’s office, and it was produced on the trial from the possession of the company, by the attorney of the company. The other duplicate and the policy were taken by Weaver to tahe care of for Ms mother. What became of this latter duplicate assignment does not appear from the evidence, but the policy was kept by Weaver in his tin box where he kept his papers locked in his trunk, the key of which he carried himself. It was taken from the tin box in the trunk by Weaver’s wife the day of his death, on May 9, 1896. What then occurred is told by the witness, Patrick I. Creedon, who testified as follows: “Went to see Ed. Weaver the evening of May 8, 1896. He requested me to get an assignment blank; I brought it to him the next day. He asked me to make them out to his wife Fannie; I did so, and he was raised up and wrote his name. I brought them to him; ‘he was sinking bad.’ He says, ‘Give them to my wife,’ so I gave the policy and the assignment blanks to his wife. I attached the assignment to the policy. Not the way it is now. I pinned it to the policy. The delivery to Mrs. Weaver was in Mr. Weaver’s bedroom.

“His wife obtained the policy before the assignment was made from a tin box which was in the trunk. He had the policy in his possession. He died the same day. There were two of the assignments. I requested them to take one down to the company and, notify them that Mr. Weaver was dead.”

Weaver lived about fifteen or twenty minutes after this assignment to his wife was made.

He was married to appellee, Fannie F. Weaver, December 16, 1891. His mother, the appellant, was sixty-four years of age in 1897. His father died October 2, 1882, a short time before the policy was issued. A suit at law was begun by appellee against the company, whereupon the company filed its bill of inter-pleader against appellant and appellee, setting up both said assignments, the respective claims of Weaver’s wife and mother for the amount of the policy, admitting its liability on the policy to the beneficiary thereof, and praying that the claimants interplead. The amount of the policy, $2,000, was paid into court, and the answers of the defendants, by which they each claimed the fund, were decreed to be had and considered as interpleas, and the complainant was dismissed out of the case. After a-hearing the court decreed that the assignment to appellant was null and void, that the assignment to appellee was valid, and that the clerk pay the money in court to appellee. From this decree appellant has appealed.

On the trial the court, on objection of appellee, ruled out all evidence as to what deceased said to the witness, Edgar M. Snow, at the office of the agent of the company when the assignment to appellant was made, con-corning what he, deceased, was going to do with the policy and assignment to his mother.

On the trial, during the examination of the witness, Edgar M. Snow, on behalf of appellant, the following questions were asked and rulings made by the court viz.:

“Q. What did he say about what he should do with it!

“A. He directed me to tell his mother he was—

“Objected to by solicitors for Fannie F. Weaver; objection sustained.”

“Q. What, if anything, did he say concerning the assignment of the policy to his mother, and of the possession of the, policy by anybody for the benefit of his mother!”

“Objected to by solicitors for Fannie F. Weaver; objection sustained by the court.”

“The Court: You may state what you offer to show.”

“I offer to show that Mr. Weaver said that he was glad that he had assigned it to his mother, and that he had the policy and the assignment in his box for her.” (In 1893 or 1894.)

“The Court: The offer is objected to and the objection is sustained.”

“To which ruling the solicitors for Mary W. Weaver then and there duly excepted.”

Also the following:

“Mrs. Edgar M. Snow, a witness called on behalf of Mary W. Weaver, testified as follows:

“I am a sister of Edward L. Weaver.”

“Q. What did you ever hear your brother, the deceased, say with regard to having assigned his life insurance policy to his mother?”

“Mr. Willoughby: I object.”

“The Couet: The objection is sustained and the same offer as before.”

“Mr. Holden: We offer to prove that in 1893, in California, that Mr. Weaver said that he had assigned-the policy to his mother, and also that he stated prior to the assignment that he took the insurance out originally for his. mother, and that the assignment was in pursuance of his original intention in taking out the insurance.”

“Objected to by counsel for Fannie F. Weaver; objection sustained by the court, and exception on behalf of Mary W. Weaver.”

Mary W. Weaver, called in her own behalf, testified as follows: “I am the mother of Edward L. Weaver, deceased. I am sixty-nine years of age. 1 first knew of the policy in 1882, after my husband died. He told me that he had insured his life for $2,000.”

“Q. Did he say any thing to you in regard to the persons for whose benefit he had insured his life?”

“Objected to on behalf of Fannie F. Weaver; objection sustained by the court, and exception on behalf of Mary W. Weaver.”

“Q. Did your son say any thing to you after the date of the assignment about having assigned this insurance to you?”

“Objected to on behalf of Fannie F. Weaver; objection sustained, and exception taken.”

“Q. Did ypur son ever tell you that this policy was on deposit with himself or anybody else for your benefit?”

“Objected to on behalf of Fannie F. Weaver; objection sustained, and exception on behalf of Mary W. Weaver.”

“I knew after October, 1892, that my son Edward had the policy.”

“Q. Did your son Edward tell you after October 8, 1892, whether he was keeping this policy for himself or for you?”

“Objected to by counsel for Fannie F. Weaver; objection sustained by the court, and exception on behalf of Mary W. Weaver.”

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ill. App. 301, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-weaver-illappct-1898.