Brooks v. People

15 Ill. App. 570 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1885

Bailey, J.

The defendant has assigned for error, among other things, the decision of the circuit court overruling a demurrer to the second replication to the defendant’s eighth plea. Said plea alleges, in substance, that Sexton attained his majority August 25, 1874, and that Curtis, his guardian, thereupon entered into a copartnership with him in the oyster and fish business, which business was afterward carried on by-said Curtis and Sexton, as copartners, until the fall of 1875; that during said copartnership, and after said Sexton had attained his majority, and with his assent, a large portion of his estate in the hands of Curtis, his guardian, to wit, $60,000, was used in said business, and by reverses therein became wholly lost, and that the sums so used and lost greatly exceed the sums due said Sexton from said Curtis, as his guardian, at the commencement of this suit or since.

The second replication to this plea alleges, in substance, that on the 22d day of May, 1876, said Curtis, as guardian, tiled his final account in the County Court of Cook county, and that at the February term, 1880, of said court, said account came before said court for consideration and approval, and that said Sexton impleaded said Curtis upon the correctness of said account, and that such proceedings were thereupon had thereon, that it was found by the court that there was due from said Curtis, as guardian, on his account, to said Sexton, the sum of $55,141.10, which judgment still remains in full force.

The question raised by the demurrer is, whether the judgment of the county court, finding the amount due from the guardian to his ward, on final settlement, is conclusive upon the sureties on the guardian’s bond and their legal representatives and privies, or is onl y prima facie evidence, as to them, of the amount due. On this point the law seems to be too well settled to admit of serious controversy.

In Ammons v. The People, 11 Ill. 6, in a suit against a surety on a guardian’s bond, it was held, that an adjudication by the probate court, ordering a guardian to pay a certain sum of money over to his successor, was obligatory upon his sureties, and could be impeached only for fraud or collusion, it being an order of the court which, by the very terms of the bond, the sureties undertook that the guardian should comply with. In Ralston v. Wood, 15 Ill. 159, the same rule was applied in the case of an administrator’s bond, and in Housh v. The People, 66 Ill. 178, to the bond of an executor. See, also, Freeman on Judgments, § 180, where the same rule is laid down, and the leading authorities cited.

In the absence, then, of any allegation of fraud.or collusion, the order of the county court mus.t be held to be conclusive upon the sureties on the guardian’s bond, and being conclusive upon them, it must also, upon well recognized principles of law, be held to be conclusive upon their privies and legal representatives.

But the principal question in the case, and the one to which our attention has been mainly directed, is, whether the evidence shows a delivery of the guardian’s bond prior to the death of Brooks.

If there was no delivery before his death, it is clear that there could be none afterward, which would render the bond obligatory upon him or his legal representatives. As said in. Huey v. Huey, 65 Mo. 689, ‘‘delivery is essential to make a deed effective and this delivery must be in the lifetime of the grantor.” So, in Jackson v. Leek, 12 Wend 106, it is held, that a deed of land takes effect from its delivery,.and although signed, sealed and acknowledged, if it be not actually delivered by the grantor during his life, nothing passes by it,, delivery after the death of the grantor being no delivery. To the same effect are the cases of Jackson v. Phipps, 12 John. 418; Carey v. Dennis, 13 Md. 1; Cook v. Brown, 34 N. H. 460; Miller v. Physick, 24 Ark. 244; Jackson v. Rowland, 6 Wend. 666; and Baldwin v. Maultsby, 5 Iredell, 505.

Was there a delivery of the bond in the lifetime of Brooks? There is no precise or set form in which a delivery must be-made. A deed may be delivered by words without acts, or by acts without words, or by both acts and words. Shep. Touch. 58. After the writing has been signed and sealed, any acts or words which clearly manifest an intention to consummate and complete it, and to part absolutely and unconditionally with it and all control over it, are sufficient to give legal existence to it as a deed, and constitute a sufficient delivery. The Supreme Court, in Bryan v. Wash, 2 Gilm. 557, Gunnell v. Cockerill, 79 Ill. 79, and Byars v. Spencer, 101 Id. 429, has defined the requisites of a valid delivery of a deed in substantially the same language we have here employed, and the same rule is fully sustained by all the authorities. Ruckman v. Ruckman, 32 N. J. Eq. 259; Cuok v. Brown, 34 N. H. 460; Prutsman v. Baker, 30 Wis. 644; Yonnge v. Gilbeau, 3 Wal. 636; Folly v. Vantuyl, 4 Halst. 193; Thatcher v. St. Andrews Church, 37 Mich. 264; Johnson v. Farley, 45, N. H. 505; Brittain v. Work, 13 Neb. 347; Huey v. Huey, 65 Mo. 689; Crawford v. Bertholf, Saxt. 458; Cannon v. Cannon, 11 C. E. Green, 316; Farlee v. Farlee, 1 Zabr. 279; Duer v. James, 42 Md. 492; 3 Washb. on Real Prop. 282.

Applying the foregoing rule to the evidence before us, when must the bond in question be deemed to have been delivered ? Certainly not on the 3d day of January, 1873, when it was first presented to the judge of the county court, for at that time it had not been signed by either Brooks or Seelye, and the only object of presenting!! to the judge seems to have been to ascertain, provisionally, whether the surety who had then signed would be deemed sufficient. It was handed to the judge after he had expressed the opinion that said surety was not sufficien t, for the mere purpose of enabling him to place upon it, for future reference, a memorandum of the amount in which said surety had justified, and it was then returned to the obligors. It is apparent, moreover, that nothing done at that time could have any bearing upon the rights or obligations of Brooks, as he was not then a party to the instrument.

A week or two later, after the signatures of Brooks and Seelye had been obtained, the bond was again presented to the county judge, and the decision of the case must depend upon the legal effect to be given to what was said and done on that occasion. It should be remembered that at that time Sexton, the minor, had filed his petition, selecting and nominating Curtis for his guardian, but no action had been taken by the court approving or disapproving of such nomination, nor was any such action taken or a guardian appointed by the court until the 18th day of July following. While the proceeding was in this situation, Sexton’s attorney appeared in court, accompanied by the two additional sureties, and the sureties being examined were pronounced satisfactory, the judge announcing his decision in relation thereto by merely saying, “That is all right.” Thereupon the attorney, without saying a word, handed the bond to the judge and went away. As to what subseque. tly became of the bond, he, as he testifies, has no knowledge.

Here certainly were no toords indicating an intention to part absolutely and unconditionally with the bond and all control over it, and the delivery, if made at all, was accomplished by the mere act of handing the bond to the judge unaccompanied by any words manifesting the obligor’s intention.

It may well be doubted whether at that time the county judge had any legal authority to accept a delivery of the bond. The statute requires the county court to take a bond of the guardian appointed by it, and it would seem from the language of the statute, that neither the duty nor the power to take a bond arises until the appointment has been made. Here, Curtis had not been appointed guardian and there was no certainty that he ever would be. Before the appointment could be made,the court was required to pass judicially upon his suitableness for the position, and until that had been done and his appointment made or at least determined upon, no bond was due from him. It was, of course, entirely proper for him to prepare his bond and obtain the opinion of the court as to its sufficiency in anticipation of his appointment, but it is, to say the least, doubtful whether the judge, before any authority to require a bond arose, had power to accept the delivery of a bond, so as to give it present legal existence as the bond of the proposed guardian, and his proposed sureties.

But, waiving this point, was the mere act of handing the bond to the judge so clear a manifestation of the intention of the obligors to part absolutely and unconditionally witli it and all control over it, as to constitute in law a delivery? As said in Black v. Shreve, 13 N. J. Eq. 455, “ Mere tradition of a sealed instrument, even to the party in whose favor it is drawn, does not necessarily in all cases make it a deed. A deed complete in form, signed and sealed, may be handed to the party for inspection. If he refuse to return it, and claim that the mere tradition of the paper so executed ivas a legal delivery, he could not hold it. The answer would be that the tradition, although to the party, was not a delivery of the paper as a deed. It was not a final parting with the custody of the paper. A taking under such circumstances Avould be a tortious taking. Trover Avould lie for the paper.” And as said in Steel v. Miller, 40 Iowa, 402, “The question of delivery is always one of intention of the parties. If the deed passes into the hands of the grantee, without intention on the part of the grantor that it shall become opei’ative and be used for the purpose intended, it is not a delivery.”

It Avould not be inconsistent with the facts proved in tins case to assume that the bond Avas banded to the judge to enable him to inspect it, so as to satisfy himself that it Avas in due form and conditioned according to law, or so as to be able to identify it when it should thereafter be presented to him for approval. On the former occasion it was handed to him so that he might place on it a memorandum for future reference, and it would do no violence to the exfidence to assume that on this occasion it Avas handed to him for some similar purpose. Where the evidence is equally consistent with two conflicting hypotheses, it, can not be said to furnish clear proof of either.

In this connection considerable stress is sought to be laid upon the fact that the bond appears to have been filed' by the clerk of the county court; but Ave are unable to perceive how that fact can have any significance, as it appears from the file mark that the paper was filed January 3, 1873, the day it was first presented to the court. The fact that it was filed at that time affords no evidence of its delivery by Brooks or Seelye, as they did not sign it and so could not have delivered it until a week or two afterward.

But however doubtful the question of delivery may otherwise be, it is, in our opinion, set at rest by the testimony of Seelye in relation to the disposition made of the bond at the time. He testifies, and there is no evidence tending in the least to rebut his testimony in this respect, that, according to his recollection, he and Brooks, while in court on the occasion above referred to, concluded to get another surety on the bond to divide the liability with them, and so stated to the judge, and that he immediately handed down to them the bond and that they took it away. Their attempt to obtain another surety seems to have been unsuccessful, but there is no evidence that they returned the bond.to the judge, and the record is silent as to who had custody of it down to July 18, 1873. The act of these two obligors in taking the bond away, and that of the judge in handing it to them and permitting them to retain custody of it, are inconsistent with the hypothesis that said obligors, when they appeared to justify as sureties, intended then and there to part absolutely and unconditionally with the bond and all control over it, and the mere handing of it to the judge by the attorney with no words explaining or giving character to the act, can not, in the light of the disposition thus shown to have been immediately made of the paper, be held to constitute a delivery.

The hypothesis that the bond, instead of being left in court was taken away.by Brooks and Seelye, is corroborated by the recitals in the order of the county court of July 18, 1873. That order recites that Curtis, on receiving his appointment as guardian, came and presented said bond, and that the same being considered by the court, and being deemed sufficient and satisfactory, was approved and ordered to be filed and recorded. It is unnecessary for us to determine whether this record should be given the conclusive effect claimed for it by the counsel for the defendant, but it can not be doubted that, as between the parties thereto and their privies, its recitals furnish evidence of a very cogent nature. This record shows that on said 18th day of July, 1873, the bond was presented to the court by the principal obligor, thus showing, inferentially at least, that at the time of its presentation it was in his possession, and not in the possession of the court.

We are of the opinion then that the evidence fails to show a delivery of the bond in the lifetime of Brooks. In the absence of such delivery it failed to become operative as to him, and therefore can not be enforced against the defendant. It follows that the verdict of the jury is unsupported by the evidence, and that the judgment must, for that reason, be reversed and the cause remanded.

Judgment reversed.

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