Wobbe v. Schaub

143 Ill. App. 361, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 80
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 12, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 143 Ill. App. 361 (Wobbe v. Schaub) 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
Wobbe v. Schaub, 143 Ill. App. 361, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 80 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

August H. Wobbe, defendant in error, filed his bill in the Circuit Court of St. Clair county charging that on the 29th day of December, A. D. 1891, his mother, Laura Wobbe, died leaving him and her husband, Henry Wobbe, beneficiaries under a certain certificate of insurance held by her in the American Legion of Honor, for the sum of $2,000 payable in the following proportions, to wit: To said Henry Wobbe, her husband, one-fourth, or the sum of $500, and to Henry Schaub, trustee for said August H. Wobbe, three-fourths or the sum of $1,500; that some two months later the amount called for by the certificate was paid by said association and the said Henry Schaub received $1,500 as trustee for defendant in error; that on August 29, 1896, said Henry Schaub purchased some ten acres of land of the Common Fields of Cahokia in St. Clair county, Illinois, stating at the time to the father of said August that he had paid $1,500 for the same and had invested part of the funds of August in the purchase thereof; that he used the balance of said trust fund for making improvements and betterments on said premises; that Johanna Schaub, his wife, had notice and knew that August’s money was being used in the purchase of said lands and in building houses thereon; that said August received assurances from his grandfather, the said Henry Schaub, that his money was invested in the purchase of said lands and the improvements made thereon and believed the title to the same was in his name or in the name of Henry Schaub as trustee for him, but since investigating the matter for himself had ascertained the title to said land was taken in the name of Johanna Schaub, the wife of said Henry; that the placing of said title in the name of Johanna was done through the fraud and connivance of said Henry and Johanna Schaub at the time of said purchase; that said Johanna has encumbered the premises by two mortgages held by Prosper J. Soucy; that said August arrived at the age of twenty-one years on September 4, 1906, and immediately demanded a settlement of the trust fund claimed to be due him as aforesaid, which was refused.

The bill made Johanna Schaub, Henry Schaub and Prosper J. Soucy defendants and asked that said August H. Wobbe be decreed to have a lien on said premises and improvements thereof, for the amount invested therein by said Henry J. Schaub as trustee for him; that said Johanna and Henry Schaub be ordered and decreed to pay the said sum together with interest thereon from August 29, 1896, within a time to be fixed by the decree and in case of failure so to do, the master in chancery of said court be required to sell the premises to satisfy said lien.

Johanna Schaub answered denying the allegations of the bill and stating the premises in question were purchased by her, belonged to her in her own proper person and that the deed to the same was rightfully made to her. The defendant Soucy answered denying certain of the allegations of the bill and setting up two mortgages held by him' upon said premises, amounting to the sum of $335. The bill was taken as confessed against the defendant Henry Schaub, who filed no answer. After the hearing leave was given the complainant below to amend his bill by averring directly that said Henry Schaub invested all or a portion of, • said trust fund in the purchase of said land and making said improvements and that said Johanna Schaub had notice of and knew that complainant’s money was being used for such purposes and also by asserting with more particularity the claim of complainant of a lien upon said premises for the amount of his money invested therein and the right to have said premises sold to pay the same.

The court below found that the averments contained in the bill were true and the complainant was entitled to a lien on said premises for the sum of $1,500 with interest thereon, at the rate of five per cent per annum for eight years, making a total lien against said premises of $2,100. It also' found the claim of said Soucy, which with interest aggregated the sum of $351.80, was a first and prior lien against said premises and that the lien of complainant was subject thereto. It ordered and decreed that Johanna and Henry Schaub or one of them, pay the complainant the amount found due him within sixty days and in default thereof said premises be sold by the master in chancery, with directions after paying all costs and expenses of the suit, to pay said Soucy the amount due him, then to pay the amount due complainant and to bring the remainder of the funds into court.

After the decree was rendered, but at the same term of court, plaintiff in error made a motion to set aside all orders entered in the cause and for a rehearing and supported the same by affidavit of herself and others tending to show that since the hearing new evidence bearing upon the case had been discovered.

The new evidence referred to tended to show that Henry Schaub had made statements out of court different in some respects from those made by him on the trial, but they were not of sufficient importance or of such character as to warrant a new trial and the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion.

It plainly appeared from the proofs that Henry Schaub received the $1,500 in question in 1891 from the benefit certificate issued by the American Legion of Honor to his daughter, Laura Wobbe, as trustee for his grandson, August Wobbe; that said trustee at first turned this money over or loaned it to a sister, Mrs. Bichman, living in St. Louis, Missouri, and that subsequently Mrs. Bichman paid all the money back to the trustee. It also appeared that in 1896 the mother of Johanna Schaub, who had been living with Johanna and her husband, Henry Schaub, died leaving a life insurance policy on her life of $1,000, payable in equal parts to Johanna and Henry Schaub; that this money was collected and subsequently on August 29, 1896, was used in the purchase of the premises in question here; that the total amount given for said premises was the sum of $1,500, $1,000 being paid in cash and a mortgage being given for $500; that for some reason which does not clearly appear from the proofs, the title to the premises was taken in the name of Johanna Schaub .alone. Henry Schaub, who was a witness in behalf of defendant in error, swore that the note for $500 secured by mortgage on the premises was paid by him with a portion of the trust fund, which was paid back to him by his sister; that he got the remaining $1,000 of the trust fund from his sister and used it in building a house on the premises in question; that the $1,000 so used by him was not sufficient to entirely pay for the house, its total cost being some $1,300, and the excess was paid by money made off the farm. Schaub also testified that his wife had no other property than the $500 that came to her from the life insurance on her mother’s life and that when he paid off the $500 mortgage he used the money belonging to defendant in error for that purpose. Defendant in error swore that he used to go over to Schaub’s quite frequently and that plaintiff in error told him half a dozen times, “Well, Gfus, you have got some money when you come of age and you can afford to be inde■pendent” and that she said his grandfather had the money. For some two years prior to .the trial of this case, Henry Schaub and his wife Johanna had not been living together.

Johanna Schaub denied that any of the trust fund in question belonging to August H.

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Bluebook (online)
143 Ill. App. 361, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wobbe-v-schaub-illappct-1908.