Mueller v. Mueller

222 Ill. App. 435 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1921

Mr. Justice Barry

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case a bill was filed by plaintiffs in error to establish and enforce a trust. A demurrer was interposed and sustained and the bill dismissed for want of equity. The bill averred that Arthur Mueller was a son of the complainant Christ Mueller and a brother of the other complainants and that he died in October, 1918, while in the service in France; that upon his induction into the service he took out a war risk policy of insurance for $10,000 in which he designated defendant in error as the beneficiary. The bill then proceeds:

“Tour orators further represent that said designation of said Walter, as beneficiary, was for convenience only, and in trust for said Walter to act as trustee to divide-up and share the proceeds of said policy in case of death of the insured, among all of complainants and said defendant equally. That said soldier kept a memorandum book in which he made this entry: ‘In case of my death I request my brother Walter to share the insurance equally with my father and my sisters, ’ and also he requested his comrades in case of his death to request his said brother Walter to divide up his insurance among his father and sisters equally and that his brother had been designated the beneficiary for convenience with the understanding with him had, that he was to share the insurance with the aforesaid.”

It is then averred that since the death of the insured the United States has paid to defendant in error $50 per month and that he refuses to divide the same with plaintiffs in error and prays that he be required to account for all the trust fund received by Mm and that he be decreed- to pay to complainants their share thereof and also their share of all future payments.

A demurrer was interposed to the bill on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction; that the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Illinois has exclusive jurisdiction; that the United States is a necessary party and that there is no equity shown by the bill.

In our opinion the UMted States was neither a necessary nor a proper party. The circuit court of St. Clair county had jurisdiction of the cause.

The bill fails to show that there was an agreement between the insured and defendant in error that the latter should collect the insurance and share it with plaintiffs in error. The taking out of the policy with defendant in error as the designated beneficiary was in legal effect a contract that he should have the whole of the insurance. If such was not the contract the burden was on plaintiffs in error to make such a showing. To aver that the insured had told others that his brother had been designated the beneficiary for convenience with the understanding with him had that he was to share the insurance with complainants is wholly insufficient. Declarations of the insured in the absence of defendant in error, inconsistent with the contract shown by the policy, are not binding on the latter. Vail v. Rynearson, 249 Ill. 501-507. The declarations made by one party as to a contract with another person cannot bind the latter unless he assents thereto. Willis, v. Zorger, 258 Ill. 574-578.

The bill fails to show that there was any agreement other than the one shown by the policy at or prior to the time the policy was issued; nor does it show that any subsequent agreement was made with reference to a division of the insurance. It is a fair inference from the averments of the bill that the requests made by the insured were subsequent to the time the policy was issued and defendant had become the sole beneficiary. There is no showing that said requests were communicated to defendant in error in the lifetime of the insured, or that hef ever assented thereto.

The allegations are wholly insufficient to establish an express, implied or a constructive trust. The decree dismissing the bill for want of equity was properly entered and it is affirmed.

Affirmed.

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