Shipman Banking Co. v. Douglas , 206 Ill. App. 586 ( 1917 )


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  • Mr. Justice Eldredge

    delivered the opinion of the court.

    Mrs. Ella Miles on the death of her husband in 1903 became the owner of one hundred and sixty acres of land near Miles Station, Macoupin County, Elinois. In 1906 she sold the farm to Edward Douglas, taking in part payment therefor a note from Douglas for the principal sum of $10,332.80, payable in five years and secured by a mortgage on the land. In 1-909, Douglas paid $3,000 on this' note and with this money Mrs. Miles bought a house for a home in Alton, where she lived until the spring of 1911, when she went to live with W. W. Rhoads at his home in Brighton, and there resided until September, 1911, when she went to the home of Annie Burgoyne. On July 27, 1911, Rhoads, who owed the appellee bank over $5,000, which indebtedness had been placed in judgment, assigned this note to the bank in part payment thereof. The note at this time bore the indorsement signed by Ella Miles, “Bay to the order of W. W. Rhoads.” Rhoads at this time was also indebted to a man by the name of Stewart to the amount of $1,700, evidenced by a note secured by a mortgage on his farm. Before the assignment of the note in controversy to the bank by Rhoads, the latter informed Metcalf, the cashier, that Mrs. Miles had given him the note and that he did not have the mortgage securing the same because he could not find it. The bank after consultation with its attorneys accepted the note, paid Rhoads’ indebtedness to Stewart and applied the balance on his indebtedness to the bank, which satisfied the same within $300, for which balance Rhoads executed a new note payable to the bank.

    On October 2, 1911, Mrs. Miles was found upon inquest to be a distracted person and Mrs. Burgoyne was appointed conservatrix of her estate. The conservatrix in taking charge of the property of her ward found a note for the sum of $100 payable to Ella Miles and executed by Rhoads; $100 in cash deposited in an Alton bank, some other personal property, and also the Douglas mortgage, but failed to find the note which the mortgage secured. On November 22, 1911, she procured the execution by Douglas and his wife of a new note for the principal amount of the balance due on the original note, payable to her as such conservatrix, and also a new mortgage to secure the payment of this note, and released the original mortgage.

    The testimony of a large number of disinterested witnesses produced on behalf of appellants shows conclusively that at the times, at least, of the incidents of which they testified, Mrs. Miles was not only feeble-minded for a year or more prior to the spring of 1911, but absolutely insane, and we agree with the master that this proof “is strong and convincing.” We do not agree with the master that the proof introduced on behalf of appellees is as convincing or entitled to the same weight as that introduced on behalf of appellants. We will state our reasons for this conclusion by briefly commenting upon the testimony of the more important witnesses who testified on behalf of appellees that Mrs. Miles was mentally sound. Francis Mayerhofer knew nothing of her condition since November, 1909. W. H. G-oodell knew nothing of her business capacity since 1906 or 1907, and had only greeted her once since that time, which was in 1910, to ask about her health. D. M. Blodgett, who is connected with a bank in Brighton, testified that Mrs. Miles had been a depositor in that bank from 1907 to 1911, and that she closed her account in the spring of 1911; she had drawn no checks against it for several years and there was no' change in it for two years before 1911; she had done no business with the bank for two years before 1911 except to sign notes as surety for Rhoads; that he is interested with Rhoads in some timber lands and Rhoads was then indebted to the bank. J. W. Darlington had not seen her since she went to live with Rhoads and had only met her once or twice since 1908. James Barber had no knowledge of her since the spring of 1909. Albert Gent testified that he was an intimate personal friend of Rhoads and was in the latter’s home at least four times a week from the time Mrs. Miles came there in May, 1911, until September or October of that year; he and Rhoads had dealings together in the prop business; that Rhoades brought Mrs. Miles to live with him after he saw in the St. Louis paper that she had been wandering away; that when she came to live with the Rhoads in May she was capable of transacting business and continued to be competent to do so all the time she was there. Ella Boyle testified that she was the matron of the Alton Woman’s Home; that between the middle of July and August, 1911, Rhoads and his wife, Gent and Mrs. Miles visited the Home and stayed about an hour. She detailed no conversation had with Mrs. Miles, but says she gained the impression that Mrs. Miles intended to leave something to the Home, and Rhoads was the only one who said anything about Mrs. Miles entering the Home as an inmate; that from what she saw of Mrs. Miles at that time, she was not insane. L. D. Yager, attorney at law, testified that on some day in May, 1911, Mrs. Miles came to his office in the morning with a woman she introduced as her niece, asked to have him draw her will and told him what she wanted therein; that she returned in the afternoon and executed the will; he does not recall who were the witnesses nor what were the contents of the will but believes at that time she was competent to transact ordinary business. He further testified that this took place about a week or ten days before he read in the newspaper of the Belleville incident.

    The Belleville incident mentioned by the witnesses is only one of the many acts of more or less similar character testified to by the witnesses produced on behalf of appellants and is the only one that will be referred to, as no good purpose would be served in detailing all the deplorable manifestations of mental weakness testified to in regard to this unfortunate woman. ' The Belleville incident is uncontroverted, was published in the press, is a matter of public notoriety and stands unquestioned. Rev. A. D. Lindsay, a witness for appellants and a minister in Belle-ville, testified that on May 11, 1911, he was called to the police station in said city where he was informed there was a lady whose name was Mrs. Miles of Alton; that she was absolutely devoid of mind and everything seemed a blank to her; he tried to talk with her for over two hours but could get very little response from her; she had some letters and newspaper clippings, one clipping she said related to the funeral of her husband, another announced the marriage of her daughter, Edna Miles, and was signed by her father; she said that the man mentioned in the clipping was her husband; the announcement was about a month old and when he asked her how her husband, who had been dead ten years, could announce his daughter’s marriage a month ago, she said .she couldn’t tell, she didn’t know; that when he asked her if this man was her husband and she her husband’s second wife, she said yes, she had forgotten that; she said she lived in'Upper Alton and she thought she was then in Peoria and said she never had been in Belleville; she said she did not know if she had any money, that she left home with $500; she had $208 in money with her; she carried a little market basket, two lady’s large hand bags and a smaller one, and in the basket was an empty oatmeal box, empty tobacco boxes and little pieces of paper folded up; she wanted to give the children some of these to put buttons in; she was very poorly dressed, very dirty and looked like a tramp; the police asked him to take her to Alton; he took her to his house and his wife bathed her and gave her dinner; he procured a neighbor lady to take her to Alton; the Edna Miles referred to in the newspaper was a daughter of a lawyer in St. Louis.

    There is no evidence in the record tending to show that a woman of her age and thus mentally afflicted could within a week or ten days thereafter have sufficient mental capacity to make a will. The only evidence in regard to her execution of the power of attorney to Ehoads is by the witness John Brenholt, Jr., who testified that he was a stenographer in the law office of his father in Alton; that sometime between January and June 1911, Mrs. Miles in company with Ehoades, came to his father’s law office and asked to have him draw an instrument making Ehoads her attorney; that his father dictated the power of attorney to the witness who wrote it out on a typewriter; that in his opinion Mrs. Miles was mentally competent at that time to transact business. The power of attorney was not introduced in evidence and the witness does not state what its contents were or what Ehoads was authorized to do by virtue thereof. Mrs. Miles had no business to transact with the exception of receiving the interest as it became due upon the Douglas note and the rent from her cottage at Alton. If she was of sound mind and capable of transacting the ordinary business affairs of life, there is no apparent reason shown in the record why she could not attend to these simple matters without the necessity of having some one act for her through a power of attorney. The will was not offered in evidence nor any testimony given as to its provisions, has never been offered for probate, and whether it still exists or in whose possession it may be does not appear. We do not think the facts that Mrs. Miles, under the tutelage of Rhoads, executed the power of attorney to him when there was no apparent necessity therefor, or that she executed a will under the circumstances shown, are incompatible with the theory that she was mentally incompetent to transact the ordinary business affairs of life, or sufficient to rebut the positive evidence of her mental infirmity. The fact that she voluntarily assigned this note, which was substantially all the property she had, to Rhoads at her age and in her condition as a gift to him, and at a time when he was financially embarrassed and being pressed by his creditors, cannot be urged as a circumstance showing business acumen.

    The witness Irving M. Clark testified that Rhoads told him in Alton on April 26, 1911, that he was looking after some business for Mrs. Miles; that she was in a very critical state mentally, was unable to attend to business and because of her mental condition, had gotten her business affairs in a very serious condition; that her mind was practically gone; that she had been found wandering on the streets of Alton; that a short time before she had lost a number of papers and that the noté and mortgage that she held on property owned by Douglas were lost and he was making efforts to find them; that she had given him a power of attorney to transact all her business for her; and that she had made an agreement with him that at her death the mortgage was to go to him but that during her lifetime she was to receive the interest and on her death he was to have the benefit of the note. Thomas F. Chamberlain testified that he was cashier of the First National Bank at Belleville and met Rhoads in the bank about the middle of April, 1911; that Rhoads stated to him that he was looking after Mrs. Miles’ business- and that the mortgage was lost; that she was not capable of handling her business and he had a power of attorney and was looking after it for her; that he didn’t know where her papers were and did not know what to do about them; that she would mention papers and then not be able to find them. This witness further testified that about the 8th or 9th of June, 1911, Rhoads told him that he had some pretty good fortune; that Mrs. Miles had given bim the $7,300 note on the Miles property. The witness asked Rhoads if he had ever found the mortgage and that Rhoads answered no; that Rhoads said that she had lived with him a long time, that she had some nieces down in Alton and she did not want them to have it, and that he thought that he was entitled to it on account of the fact that she did not want them to have it; that she had given it to him; and that she was the owner while she lived and it was to go to him after her death. Both of the above witnesses were disinterested and wholly worthy of credit, and their testimony shows conclusively that Rhoads secured the assignment of this note to him by Mrs. Miles when she was mentally deranged and incapable of transacting business. Several other witnesses testified to conversations had with Rhoads in or about this same period of time,. wherein Rhoads stated, in substance, that Mrs. Miles was “crazy” and was unable to transact any business and that she had given him this note and mortgage. The master and chancellor refused to consider any of this evidence, on the grounds that Rhoads was not a party to the suit and that such statements by him were incompetent as against the bank. "While the rule is that declarations, made by one in disparagement of his own title to property made subsequent to a transfer thereof, can-" not be admitted against his assignee or grantee, still any such declaration made during his ownership is admissible as against such grantee or assignee. Williams v. Judy, 8 Ill. (3 Gilm.) 282; Sandifer v. Hoard, 59 Ill. 246; Hanchett v. Kimbark, 118 Ill. 121; Anderson v. South Chicago Brewing Co., 173 Ill. 213; Gage v. Eddy, 179 Ill. 492; First Nat. Bank of Monmouth v. Strang, 138 Ill. 347. The evidence of the witnesses Clark and Chamberlain, at least, was clearly competent, as it tended to show that Ehoads admitted that the note in question was assigned to him as a gift by Mrs. Miles without consideration and while she was insane, and consequently he had no valid title to it.

    The proof shows that Mrs. Miles was practically insane both before and after her assignment of the note to Ehoads, and there was no proof that such insanity was of a temporary character or that the canse of the mental derangement was violence, or temporary illness. Under these conditions the burden of showing that Mrs. Miles had lucid intervals and that the assignment of this note was executed by her at a lucid interval was upon the appellees, and there is no such proof in the record. The James White Memorial Home v. Haeg, 204 Ill. 422; Taylor v. Pegram, 151 Ill. 106.

    The proof conclusively shows that Ehoads procured the note from Mrs. Miles while she was mentally incompetent to understand the nature of the transaction.

    The assignment of the note to Rhoads by her is therefore void. Jeneson v. Jeneson, 66 Ill. 259.

    In the case of Jordan v. Kirkpatrick, 251 Ill. 116, the court quoted, with approval, the following expression announced in the case of Dickerson v. Davis, 111 Ind. 433: “The protection of persons who are so unfortunate as to be bereft of reason and incapable of managing their own estates is of higher obligation and an object more to be cherished by the courts than is the protection of holders of commercial paper, however innocent they may be.” If the bank is an innocent purchaser of this note without knowledge of Mrs. Miles ’ mental condition, which in our opinion is doubtful, it is unfortunate, but a court of equity cannot sanction such looting of the estate of an insane person as is shown by the record in this case. The fact that Mrs. Miles has died since the institution of these proceedings gives appellees no greater rights than they had before her death.

    The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the original bills for want of equity and to enter a decree in arcordance with the prayer of the cross-bill of appellants.

    Reversed and remanded with directions. .

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 206 Ill. App. 586

Judges: Eldredge

Filed Date: 7/14/1917

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/26/2022