Winslow v. Leland

21 N.E. 588, 128 Ill. 304
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 588 (Winslow v. Leland) 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
Winslow v. Leland, 21 N.E. 588, 128 Ill. 304 (Ill. 1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court;

The record in this case is voluminous and complicated, and various questions, both of fact and of law, have been presented and elaborately argued. Without attempting to travel over the entire ground covered by counsel in their briefs, we shall content ourselves with a consideration of those questions only which seem to us to be decisive of the case. We have reached the conclusion that the judgment of the Appellate Court should be affirmed, and such affirmance may, in our opinion, be placed upon either one of several distinct grounds.

The first point made is, that the judgments and decree upon which the complainant’s bill is based have been satisfied, or at least, that they have been so dealt with by the parties as to be no longer available as evidence of a subsisting claim against the estate of William H. W. Cushman, deceased. This point involves the contention, first, that when said judgments and decree were purchased by William H. Cushman, such purchases were made for the benefit and with the money of William H. W. Cushman, and, second, that if the money used in fact belonged to William H. Cushman, his subsequent transactions with Isaac N. Hardin, who was jointly liable with William H. W. Cushman on said judgments and decree, resulted in a satisfaction of the indebtedness evidenced thereby, or at least, should be held to estop William ,H. Cushman and his assignee from attempting to enforce them as against either debtor.

Whether the money expended in the purchase of the judgments and decree was really the money of William H. Cushman or of his father is a question of fact upon which the evidence is conflicting. The chancellor before whom the cause was heard having found the issues in favor of the defendants, it will be presumed, in support of his decree, that upon this proposition the conflict was resolved in their favor. Unless, therefore, we are able to see that the preponderance of the evidence is clearly the other way, the finding of the chancellor should not be disturbed.

The principal- witness upon this matter was William H. Cushman himself, and the difficulty grows out of the fact that, being examined on two different occasions, he gave evidence on this point which, apparently at least, is conflicting. The first occasion was when he was examined as a witness before the arbitrators chosen to appraise Hardin’s interest in the assets of the firms in which he was a copartner with William H. W. Cushman. On the second occasion he was called as a witness in the matter of a creditor’s bill brought by the complainant in this case by which he was endeavoring to reach the moneys payable on the policies of insurance on the life of William H. W. Cushman and apply the same to the satisfaction of said judgments and decree. On both occasions his testimony shows that the actual transactions by which the judgments and decree were purchased were carried on partly by himself and partly by his father. Before the arbitrators, his testimony was to the effect that he furnished all the money used both by his father and himself, the money used by his father being-furnished by him, partly by remittances and partly by paying drafts drawn on him by his father, and that the purchases were all made for the witness’ benefit. When examined as a witness in the matter of the creditor’s bill, he testified that the purchases were made in the interest and for the benefit of his father; that the money was furnished partly by himself and partly by his father; that there was a running account between them, and that he received on his account with his father, credit for whatever sums he paid in making said purchases. William H. W. Cushman was also examined as a witness before the arbitrators, and his testimony, though not very explicit, is to the effect that his son frequently furnished him money to buy the judgments, and that he had them assigned to his son as security for his advances, and that said advances were not made as a matter of personal accommodation upon a general account between himself and his son.

It should be observed that, in the matter pending before the arbitrators, the question whether the money of William H. Cushman or of his father had been used in the purchase of the judgments, or whether the judgments had been paid and satisfied or not, was of very little materiality. The arbitrators were seeking to ascertain the net value of Hardin’s interest in the assets of the firms of which he was a member, and in the accounting by which such value was to be arrived at, Hardin was liable to be charged with his proportionate share of said judgments, whether the transaction by which they had been taken up by the Cushmans was in fact a purchase or a payment.

There is only this view in which the question could be material. If the judgments were satisfied, Hardin was chargeable with only his proportionate share of the money actually expended in paying them, but if they had been purchased by William H. Cushman and were held by him adversely to the defendants therein, he ivas entitled in the statement of the account, to have Hardin charged with his proportionate share of the full amount of the judgments and decree. It seems however that William H. Cushman claimed only to have Hardin charged with his proportionate share of the money actually paid, and that the account was stated by the arbitrators on that basis. The decree was bought in for only about twenty per cent of its face, and only Hardin’s proportionate share of that sum was charged against him. This circumstance of itself tends strongly to support the view that the judgments and decree were taken up in the interest and for the benefit of William H. W. Cushman, for if his son in fact bought them with his own money and for his own benefit, no reason is shown why he should be willing to accept a credit for only Hardin’s share of the money actually<-paid, instead of charging Hardin with his share of the full amount due.

The question as to whose money was used not being material in the arbitration matter and arising there only incidentally, was not carefully investigated, and the witnesses were not fully examined in relation thereto. In the matter of the creditor’s bill, however, the question as to whether the judgments and decree had been satisfied was directly in issue, and there William H. Cushman seems to have been questioned more fully, and he there disclosed a fact upon which neither he nor his father seems to have been interrogated on the former occasion, viz., that in the adjustment of accounts between him and his father, he had received credit for all the moneys expended by him in the purchase of the judgments and decree. Upon this one point he is nowhere contradicted, and if his statement is true, it is of little consequence who furnished the money in the first instance, or whether the intention of the parties at the time the purchases were made was that William H. Cushman should take and hold the judgments and decree for his' own benefit, or as security for the money advanced. If he ultimately received, credit from his father for said money, his interestinthe judgments and decree was thenceforward precisely the same as though the purchases had been originally made by his father with his own money and for his own benefit. We are unable to say therefore that the question of fact here presented was incorrectly decided.

But even if William H.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 588, 128 Ill. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winslow-v-leland-ill-1889.