Elwell v. Stewart
Elwell v. Stewart
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action was to recover money which appellee claims she paid upon the fraudulent inducements of the appellant and which she ought not to have paid. TJiere is a concession in the brief of the appellant upon which the case might be readily affirmed. It is conceded that the evidence was for the most part that of the appellee and of the appellant; that the case was tried by the court upon conflicting- evidence and that the court found in favor of the appellee. Ordinarily these facts alone are sufficient to compel an affirmance. There is, however, a contention that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain a finding of fraud.
The appellee, Mrs. Elwell, is the mother of Hettie H. Culp, who died at Tucson, Ariz., in December, 1918, leaving a will by which she devised her property to the appellant, Clyde Stewart, as executor, in trust for the use and benefit of her mother during the latter’s lifetime and at her death the property was to go to the two daughters of Stewart. The appellee is an old lady and the evidence shows that she is an invalid and was sick during most of the time when the transactions involved herein occurred. Although she was in Tucson during her daughter’s illness and death she was not with the daughter much of the time. Immediately after the funeral of her daughter she returned from Arizona with the Stewarts and went to their home at Baldwin where she stayed for about ten weeks, when she returned to her home at Galesburg, 111. The first count in the petition involved the payment of $700 by the appellee upon a note upon which she was not herself liable. It was a note that her
Stewart and his wife were witnesses, and while they contradicted the appellee on some matters, and testified that they told her there was a will and that it would have to be probated, both admitted that during the time she remained sick in their house following their return from Arizona they never exhibited the will to her and-never told her that their two daughters were the residuary legatees.
The appellant was the trustee of the estate under the will of which Mrs. Elwell, the' appellee, was a beneficiary. There was a confidential relation existing between the parties and if he suppressed the truth and concealed from her the fact that his daughters were the residuary legatees, and thereby induced her to take her own money and apply it in payment of a note upon which she was not liable, and in the belief that by paying the note she would benefit herself, while as a matter of fact the payment would or might benefit members of his own family, that was sufficient to sustain a finding of fraud. The concealment of a fact material to a transaction which was peculiarly within his own knowledge, with evidence which, if believed by the court, carried the presumption that the other party was acting on the belief that the facts were different, was just as harmful and actionable as though he had asserted a fact to be true which was false. The commonest kind of good faith required that he exhibit the will to her and explain to her what interest she took in the estate under the will, and the fact of the interest of his daughters.
The court accepted as true the testimony of the appellee and
Save for some damaging admissions of thé appellant, the whole ■case turned upon conflicting evidence. .There was abundant evidence to support the judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.