Maher v. Aldrich

205 Ill. 242 | Ill. | 1903

Mr. Chief Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

The evidence found in this record is voluminous and upon vital questions conflicting. It, however, appears from the testimony of all the witnesses who testified upon the subject, that the relationship of the parties as stated in the bill was correct, and that Elizabeth Stevens brought up Lillie B. Maher from her infancy and that she regarded Mrs. Stevens in the light of a mother, though she was never legally adopted; that in the summer of 1883 Elizabeth Stevens, Ella L. Aldrich, Sybil Aldrich and Lillie B. Maher were at the farm of Benjamin Sumner, near Woodstock, Connecticut, where Mrs. Stevens had served in the capacity of house-keeper for Mr. Sumner for many years and'where Lillie B. Maher had spent the greater part of her life, and where Mrs. and Miss Aldrich were then visiting; that while there they met William S. King, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, a man of wealth who often visited at the Sumner farm and was then at the farm upon business with Mr. Sumner, who was then financially embarrassed; that the four women were without means of support, and that an arrangement was made at that time by William S. King with Lillie B. Maher, or with all of said women, whereby, in the fall of that year, Mrs. Stevens, her mother, her sister and Lillie B. Maher left the Sumner farm and removed to Worcester, Massachusetts, rented a house and lived together until the spring of 1885, their expenses during .that time being provided from funds furnished by William S. King; that during the spring of 1885 the Oakwood boulevard property was purchased and paid for by Lillie B. Maher with funds received from King, the deed thereto being made to Lillie B. Maher; that the family on May 1 of that year moved to Chicago, took possession of the Oakwood boulevard house and continued to reside there until May 1, 1890, at which place Sybil Aldrich died, in the year 1887; that on May 1,1890, the Oakwood boulevard property was-rented, and Elizabeth Stevens and Lillie B. Maher went east, Miss Aid-rich remaining in Chicago, where she was preparing herself for the profession of teacher at the Cook County Normal School; that in the spring of 1892 she joined Mrs. Stevens and Lillie B. Maher in New England; that in the spring of 1893 the three women returned to Chicago and took up their residence as a family in the Oakwood boulevard property, where they resided until in May, 1897, when the property was sold, and Mrs. Stevens and Lillie B. Maher went to Boston, where Lillie B. Maher was shortly thereafter married; that Ella L. Aldrich remained in Chicago; that in the fall of 1886 the Lake avenue property was purchased for $13,800 and paid for by Lillie B. Maher with money received from King, and the title thereto was conveyed by the seller to Lillie B. Ma-her; that in 1893 a ground lease was made thereon, under the advice of William S. King, by Lillie B. Maher to Wallace L. DeWolf for ninety-nine years, at the annual rental of $2000; that prior thereto Lillie B. Maher had received the sum of $2000 on the forfeiture of a lease of that property from one J. Prank Aldrich; that in 1890 William S. King turned over to Lillie B. Maher the Sumner note and mortgage for $8500; that Lillie B. Maher received all rents from the Oakwood boulevard property and the proceeds of the sale of that property, also all the rents and forfeiture money from the Lake avenue property, also the interest on the Sumner note and the rents of the St. Botolph street property; that from the time the parties went to live in Worcester, in 1883, up to the time of the marriage of Lillie B. Maher, said women, and each of them, had no property or income other than such as was received, directly or indirectly, from William S. King, excepting a small amount earned by Ella L. Aldrich making corsets during their residence in Worcester; that during that time all expenses of the family, including the allowance to Ella L. Aldrich, were paid by Lillie B. Maher out of funds received by her, directly or indirectly, from William S. King,-—that is, from money paid to her by him or from the rents and profits of the property which had been purchased and paid for by her with funds received from him.

The main controverted question of fact is as to what the arrangement was between'William S. King" and Lillie B. Maher and the other three of said women, by virtue of which Lillie B. Maher became possessed of the property the use of which during the lives of said women, or the survivor of them, is nów in controversy. The, evidence offered on behalf of the complainants tended to show that in the year 1883, and while the parties were all at the Sumner farm, William S. King created a trust for the support and maintenance of the complainants, their mother, Sybil Aldrich, and Lillie B. Maher, or the-survivor of them, by the transfer to Lillie B. Maher, in trust, of $30,000 worth of stock of the American Paper Barrel Company; that King shortly afterwards sold said stock for $30,000; that the proceeds of the sale were turned over by him to Lillie B. Maher from time to time, and that by consent of all the parties in interest $8000 of the proceeds was invested in the Oakwood boulevard property and $13,800 in the Lake avenue property; that the title to these properties was taken in the name of Lillie B. Maher by the consent of all the parties, the reason for making the transfer to her being, that she was the youngest of the number and the best able to manage the same; that she took title to said properties upon the same trusts upon which the original trust was created, that in the spring of 1890 King turned over to her the balance of said $30,000 in the form of $8500 of the Sumner note and mortgage, which she also held in trust; that Lillie B. Maher recognized such trust until after the time of her marriage by repeatedly admitting that she held the income of all of said properties for the benefit of said women, and in recognition of said trust used the income fronj said properties as they became income-bearing, as well as the interest upon the Sumner note and mortgage, in defra}7ing the family expenses and paying the allowance to Miss Aldrich. The testimony of the defendants was to the effect that William S. King" never owned any stock in the American Paper Barrel Company; that he never set aside or transferred to her any stock or moneys or securities of any sort as a trust fund, upon the trusts alleged or otherwise; that the stock of the American Paper Barrel Company was absolutely worthless at all times; that the moneys used by Lillie B. Maher previous to 1890 for the family expenses was money that was voluntarily given to her by King in small amounts, from time to time, for the purpose of meeting her expenses, and that she voluntarily and as a gift supported the complainants, who were her aunts and were members of her family, out of said moneys; that she voluntarily and as a gift, subsequent to 1890, paid all family expenses out of the issues and profits of the Oakwood boulevard and Lake avenue properties and the Sumner note and mortgage; that she also paid the allowance made to Miss Aldrich out of the same moneys; that the Oakwood boulevard and Lake avenue properties and the Sumner note were each and all of them given to her by William S. King as gifts, without any solicitation or request upon her part and not upon any trust; that he paid the money for these several properties and caused them to be transferred to her as gifts; that he paid for them out of his own money, and not out of any trust fund, and that she never promised to hold said properties, or any of them, upon the said trusts or upon any trusts.

The testimony bearing upon the question as to whether or not .the property transferred to Lillie B. Maher by William S. King was given to her by him absolutely or whether it was transferred to her in trust, the object of the trust being to create an income for the support of said women and the survivor of them, is confined almost entirely to the testimony of the complainants and that of Lillie B. Maher. As we view the matter, the testimony of Elizabeth Stevens and Ella L. Aldrich, standing alone and uncontradicted by, that of Lillie B. Maher, is amply sufficient to establish that William S. King set aside a fund of $30,000, consisting of shares of stock of the American Paper Barrel Company, or $30,000 in cash in lieu thereof, the earnings of which were to be used to support said women during their lives or during the life of the survivor of them, and it cannot be controverted that trusts in personal property of the character mentioned may be established by parol evidence, if the evidence to establish the trust is clear and convincing. The testimony of the complainants is corroborated by that of a number of witnesses who met and conversed with Lillie B. Maher at their respective homes and at her home in Chicago, with reference to the manner in which she held said property. Nellie Whitcombe testified she knew Mrs. Stevens and Lillie B. Maher. She said: “I first met them in my own home in 1885. Mrs. Stevens and Miss Stevens were present. They told us of acquiring property through W. S. King, and told us the property was the result of stock of the barrel factory; that he had given them the stock in this paper barrel factory; that they were to have the income. Mrs. Maher said the property was for her mother, her grandmother, the aunt and herself.” Grace B. Foster, Isabel N. Adams, Rebecca Adams and Winnie H. Wiles testified to admissions of Lillie B. Maher of a similar character. These witnesses appear to be entirely reputable and not unfriendly to either of the parties. Shortly after the marriage of Lillie B. Maher, in reply to a letter written by Ella L. Aldrich to her demanding that she account to her for her interest in said trust fund, Miss Aldrich received a .letter bearing date October 6,. 1898, from Lillie B. Maher, which is as follows: “Your letter of September 24 was received'. In answer will say, you will have $50 (fifty) a month ($600 per year) as you have been having and as intended you should have as long as you needed it, and it can be paid to you direct once a quarter, but cannot be given to "you outright, as none of it is given to anyone outright.”

Prom a careful consideration of this evidence, in connection with the evidence of tire complainants, we are unable to say that the chancellor erred in holding that the trust had been established, and that Lillie B. Maher held the income of said properties in trust for the joint benefit of Sybil Aldrich, Elizabeth Stevens, Ella L. Aid-rich and herself during their natural lives and during the life of the survivor of them..

There is evidence in the record tending to show that William S. King was never a stockholder in the American Paper Barrel Company and that the stock of said company had no market value. If it be conceded that this testimony is in part true, we do not think these facts a bar to the rig'ht of recovery in this case. It must be conceded that William S. King was largely interested in the American Paper Barrel Company; that he spent large sums of money in attempting to perfect the manufacture of flour barrels from paper, and that he and oth- ' ers believed in the ultimate success of the company. If he set aside, or agreed to set aside, fqr the benefit of said women the income from $30,000 worth of that stock, and the stock afterwards proved to be worthless and he substituted in the place of the stock $30,000 in cash, which he delivered in lieu of the stock to Lillie B. Maher upon the same trust upon which the stock was to be held, it would seem clear that after she had received the cash she ought not to be permitted to repudiate the trust and hold the property purchased therewith freed from the trust by reason of the fact, alone, that the $30,000, which was ultimately invested by her in the property which she now holds, was not money received from the sale of the stock, but was cash substituted by the donor in lieu of said stock. A perusal of this record must convince, we think, any fair mind that Elizabeth Stevens and Lillie B. Maher, in company with Sybil Aldrich and Ella L. Aldrich, would not have left the Sumner farm, where they had made their home for sixteen years, without any property or means of support, and set up an independent establishment at Worcester, unless there was a definite, understanding with William S. King that their future support was provided for. The fact that William S. King did talk with said women about setting aside for their support certain interests in said American Paper Barrel Company cannot be questioned. It is also admitted that from the time said four women left the Sumner farm they were provided for by William S. King, and that he did ultimately make an investment, in the name of Lillie B. Maher, of about $30,000, the income of which was used for their maintenance and support by Lillie B. Maher down to shortly after her marriage. These admitted facts, in our opinion, afford strong presumptive evidence that the title to said property is held by Lillie B. Maher in pursuance of the original arrangement made between William S. King and said women in the summer of 1883, at the Sumner farm. While there is no direct proof that William S. King substituted $30,000 in cash in lieu of the stock, which appears to have proven worthless, we think said substitution can be legitimately inferred from the fact .that after he had agreed to set aside the stock and it had proven worthless, he, without notifying the complainants that the stock was without value, invested a like amount through the trustee who had originally been selected to administer the trust, and that said trustee recognized the original trust and executed the same for a period of fifteen years in a manner satisfactory to all parties interested therein.

The bill is framed upon the theory that a parol trust in personal property was created, and the property thus set aside was invested by the trustee in the property the income of which is now sought to be reached, and that the original trust thereby became impressed upon the property now held by the trustee, and this contention having been sustained, the Statute of Frauds does not apply, for the reason, as has been already suggested, that a verbal trust in personal property may be created by parol, (Price v. Laing, 152 Ill. 380,) and when such trust is established it is well settled the beneficiaries of such fund may follow the fund into all forms of investment which it may assume. Breit v. Yeaton, 101 Ill. 242.

The trust here was not disavowed by the trustee until subsequent to the year 1897, and as the bill was filed in 1899, the Statute of Limitations will not bar a recovery, as that statute never begins to run so as to bar the recovery of a trust fund until subsequent to the disavowal ent of the trust by the trustee. Albretch v. Wolf, 58 Ill. 186; Hancock v. Harper, 86 id. 445.

The trust having been recognized by the trustee and executed in a manner satisfactory to both trustee and cestuis que trust until a few months prior to the time of the filing of the bill herein, there was no occasion to file.a bill to enforce the same at an earlier date, and the complainants are not barred by reason of their delay in commencing suit, as laches is imputable only where there has been gross negligence or great delay in asserting a right.

The question sought to be litigated here is the ownership of the rents and profits arising from said trust properties now held by Lillie B, Maher; and William S, King, (or, he being deceased, his heirs and personal representatives,) was not a necessary party, as no relief was demanded of him or the heirs. Grafton Dolomite Stone Co. v. St. Louis, Chicago and St. Paul Railway Co. 199 Ill. 458.

The important question in this case is one of fact, and we are of the opinion that the evidence found in this record fully justifies the findings of the chancellor that Lillie B. Maher held the income produced by the fund received by her from William S. King in trust, in its present form of investment, for the benefit of the complainants and herself, and that she should account to the complainants for their share of such income. The question arises, however, from what date should the account be had? The decree does not fix such date, but simply re-refers the case to the master for the purpose of an accounting. It clearly appears that for many years plaintiff in error Mrs. Maher administered the trust in a manner satisfactory to both the complainants, and it is reasonable to infer from the evidence in this record that the income from this trust fund, whether received in the form of rent or interest, was used for the joint benefit of the complainants and the defendants, and while, perhaps, not used for their benefit in equal proportions, it was used in such manner that all were satisfied with its disbursement. At least no complaints are made by any one of the parties to this suit until September 24, 1898, the date of the letter of Miss Aldrich to Mrs. Maher. That letter appears to have been the first complaint that was made by Miss Aldrich, or anyone else, as to the manner in which the income arising from said trust fund was being applied by Mrs. Maher. We are therefore of the opinion that date should be taken as the date from which Mrs. Maher should be required to account for the rents and interest derived by her from said trust fund, whether held by her in money, securities, or invested in real estate.

The de'cree of the circuit court will be affirmed.

Decree affirmed.