Whitton v. Whitton

64 Ill. App. 53, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1007
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 6, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 Ill. App. 53 (Whitton v. Whitton) 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
Whitton v. Whitton, 64 Ill. App. 53, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1007 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Pleasants

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On October 17, 1894, appellee caused to be entered up in open court a judgment for $3,383, and costs against appellant, by confession under a power of attorney, upon the note to which it was attached and which is as follows:

“ $1,550. Hoopeston, III., March 1, 1888.

Five years after date we or either of us promise to pay to the order of Laura B. Whitton, guardian, fifteen hundred and fifty dollars, value received, with six per cent interest per annum from date, payable annually, and ten per cent attorney’s fees in case of collection by suit at law.”

Then follows the power of attorney to confes judgment, in the usual form, and the attestation clause and date, “Witness our hands and seals this 1st day of March, A. D.

1888,” with signature and seal of appellant alone. The amount of the judgment includes $216.63 for attorney’s fees. Execution issued thereon January 21, 1895, which was served on appellant February 9th, immediately after which he commenced this proceeding, which is a motion to open the judgment and let him plead. On hearing it the court allowed the plaintiff to remit $61.63, to be credited on the judgment as of its date, and then overruled the motion; from which order defendant took this appeal.

The reasons assigned for the motion were that he had not been served with process, nor had his day in court; that he had a meritorious defense to the whole of said note,' in that it was never delivered to the plaintiff, was never completely executed, and was wholly without consideration. The evidence in support of them consists of affidavits of himself alone. In opposition thereto were those of appellee, her son, and two attorneys—the latter being only to prove that appellant was informed of the entry of the judgment on the 15th day of December, being still of the term at which it was entered. In a subsequent affidavit appellant admitted that he did then get notice of the judgment, but was advised by an attorney named that no action on his part could be taken in reference to it -until execution issued.

It appears that the parties are husband and wife. They were married December 16, 1884. She was then a widow, residing with her six minor children on an eighty acre farm in Iroquois county, of which her former husband died seized. Under an order of the County Court she sold it on March 5, 1888, for $3,600, and received the price. The decree gave her $500 for her dower, and $1,500 for improvements thereon made by herself, leaving $1,550 for the children. On the same day she purchased another farm of 217 acres, in Vermilion county, for $7,000, paying $3,500 (including a mortgage of $400, which she assumed), out of the proceeds of of the sale, giving a mortgage back for the residue, and taking the deed in her own name. About January 1,1891, she conveyed to appellant eighty acres of it, for which she received nothing at that time.

So far the parties agree. But as to everything else touching the merits of this case they widely differ. His statement is that in view of his money and labor spent upon the farm, by which he paid off the mortgage assumed by her and made improvements to the amount and value of over $2,000, he was not satisfied to have the title entirely in his wife, and therefore had her make the conveyance of eighty acres to him. Soon afterward she began to insist that they should either pay the children their share of said eighty acres, viz.: $1,500, or give them something to show it was due to them. He didn’t owe them anything, but to stop the family unpleasantness and keep the peace, finally determined, without saying anything to her, that he would assume one-half if she would the other. Some time during the summer of 1893 he had the judgment note drawn up, dated back to about the time she received the money for the Iroquois farm, and signed it, intending to have her sign it also. When he got home he pulled it out, showed it to her and said: “ Here is a note that will show we owe the children;” but before he could request her to sign it she said: Their money is in the land; I don’t want anything to do with any note.” Whereupon he put it back in his pocket and never saw it again until he saw it in the files of this case. H e never delivered it to her nor authorized such delivery. How it came into her possession he did not know. He was living with her then, in the same house, and has been ever since. It was contrary to his intention that it ever should come into her possession without her signature as a joint maker. When she refused to have anything to do with the note the matter passed out of his mind and he thought no more about it until he learned of this judgment.

Appellee’s story, affecting the merits, so far as it differs from his, is in substance, that when they were married he had no money. That when the note she had given for the deferred payment on the 217 acres, secured by mortgage, became due she was obliged to borrow $3,200 to meet it, and to give a new mortgage as security. When the papers were made out and ready to be executed appellant refused to join her in the execution thereof unless she would agree to convey to him eighty acres of the land, worth at a fair valuation $50 per acre; which she did upon his agreement to execute to her, as guardian of the minor children, his note for $1,550 with interest at six per cent from the time their money was invested in the land. He delayed doing so from time to time. It was never suggested by either of them that she should join as a maker of such note, but on the contrary, it was understood that he should be alone liable for the amount of it. Ever since he executed it the note has been in her possession as guardian. She has often talked Avith him about it and urged him to pay it, but been put off by him until she was compelled to sue. He never paid anything toward the purchase of the land or any part of it; has always complained of being in ill health and unable to perform hard manual labor, and has mostly been engaged in oAerseeing the farm. All the improvements made and indebtedness paid upon it has been paid from its products, and her sons—Clarence, Avho was sixteen, and William, who was thirteen years of age when they moved upon it, and Arthur, who died July 14, 1894, aged eighteen years—have remained with her, and labored early and late in improving the land and raising crops thereon, and performed the hard manual labor necessary to raise them. She has not yet made her final settlement as guardian, but has been advised that it is necessary, and in order to make it she is desirous of collecting the note in judgment. She denies the statement by appellant that she ever said to him that the children’s money was in the land and she didn’t want anything to do with any note.

Letters of guardianship, issued to her September 19,1887, by the County Court of Iroquois County, were in evidence.

The affidavit of her son Clarence corroborates that of his mother as to the value of the eighty acres when they were conveyed to appellant; how the means to pay off the 8400 mortgage and make the improvements were obtained; the labor of the boys, and appellant’s complaints of his ill health and inability to work. He further swears that he has often seen the note in his mother’s possession during the last year or two, and he heard her and appellant talking about it.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ill. App. 53, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitton-v-whitton-illappct-1895.