Court Opinion

ID: 8846335
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 16:59:03.726541+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:05:21.489463
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Gridley delivered the opinion of the court. On March 2, 1925, Antoinette Maneini filed a claim in the probate court of Cook county against the estate of her deceased husband, John P. Maneini, who died testate in said county on November 7, 1924. Letters testamentary had been issued to Michele Giannini, the executor named in the will and the stepfather of the deceased. The claim was based upon Maneini’s promissory note, date October 28, 1924, and duly executed in- Ms lifetime, wherein he promised to pay on demand $5,000, to the order of Antoinette Maneini, for value received, without interest, at the office of M. Giannini, Chicago Heights, Illinois. Such proceedings were had in the probate court that, on January 22, 1926, it was ordered that the claim be allowed against said estate for $5,000, as of class No. 6, to be paid in due course of administration. Michele Giannini, as executor, etc., perfected an appeal to the circuit court where, after a trial de novo without a jury, the court, on October 27, 1926, found the issues in favor of the claimant, assessed her damages at $5,000, and entered judgment against said Giannini, as executor, etc., for that amount, to be paid in due course of administration. The present appeal followed. On the trial the note was admitted in evidence. No question as to its consideration was raised, but it was contended that there had been no valid delivery of it. The claimant called two witnesses, said Michele Giannini and Hilda Madson, a trained nurse in a hospital in Chicago Heights, and they were examined and cross-examined. No witnesses were called by the executor. The facts disclosed are in substance as follows: Maneini, suffering from an abcess of his right lung, was confined in the hospital for about five weeks. About three weeks before his death an operation was performed upon him. His stepfather, Giannini, was accustomed to come to the hospital nearly every day to see him. On October 27, 1924, he executed his last will, which was afterwards probated, and to which said nurse was one of the witnesses. The will is not contained in the present transcript, but it appears that, while he made some provisions therein for his wife, Antoinette Maneini, the chief beneficiary was Giannini. On October 28,1924, he caused the note in question to be drafted, signed it at the hospital in the presence of Giannini and the nurse, and gave it to Giannini. He (Giannini) testified through an interpreter that, when he was given the note, John* Maneini said, “I should put it in my pocket, and when the time comes I should take it out and give it to her”; that two or three days after Maneini’s death he (Giannini) delivered the note to Antoinette Maneini; that when he did so he said to her that “Johnny gave me the note, and said that when it was time for me to take it out I should do it,” and that “I had to give it to her”; that he never told Antoinette Maneini anything about the note until after John’s death; and that John never said anything further to him about the note after he executed it. Hilda Madson, the nurse, testified that Maneini signed the note in her and Giannini’s presence; that Maneini said to Giannini “I want you to hold this for Antoinette; in case I die, see that she gets it”; that Giannini put the note in his pocket and shortly thereafter went away; and that just after the note was signed Maneini said to her: “I fixed my wife, I gave her some more money; I think she deserves it as she has worked so hard in the store for six years.” Counsel for the executor of the estate here contend that the court erred in allowing plaintiff’s claim, based upon said note, against the estate, and in entering the judgment. And practically the only argument they make in support of the contention is, in substance, that Giannini was the mere agent of Mancini to deliver the note to the claimant and, Mancini having died before such delivery, the agency was revoked, and; when Giannini did deliver the note after said death, no title thereto passed to the claimant. In view of the undisputed evidence we cannot agree with the contention or the argument. We regard Giannini, not as Mancini’s mere agent but as a depositary or trustee of the note, in escrow, with directions to deliver it to the payee (the claimant) in case of Mancini’s death; In 21 Cl J. 865, an escrow is defined to be “a written instrument, which by its terms imports a legal obligation, deposited by the grantor, promisor, or obligor; or his agent with a stranger or third person, who is not a party to the instrument, to be kept by the depositary until the performance of a condition or the happening of a certain event and then to be delivered over to take effect.” Substantially the same definition is found in Main v. Pratt, 276 Ill. 218, 224, where it is also stated that “the term ‘escrow,’ though usually applied to. deeds, is equally, applicable to all written instruments. ’ ’ In Baum v. Parkhurst, 26 Ill. App. 128, 131, it is said: “A promissory note or other simple contract in writing, as well as a deed, may be delivered as an escrow and the law of escrows is substantially the.same in both cases.” (See, also, 1 Parsons on' Notes and Bills [2nd Ed.], p. 51; 1 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments [6th Ed.], sec..68; Foy v. Blackstone, 31 Ill. 538, 541.) Mr. Daniel in the cited section says: “A bill or note * * * may be delivered as an escrow —that is, delivered to a third party (but not to the payee) to hold until a certain event happens, or certain conditions are complied with — and then the liability of the party commences as soon as the event happens or the conditions are fulfilled, without actual delivery by the depositary to the promisee, * * $ and it matters not that the actual delivery is not designed to take place until after the death of the promisor; the instrument, ivhether negotiable or otherAvise, is nevertheless valid.” In a noté under said section the author says in part: “If the maker of a note delivered it to a third person, to be held by him and delivered to the payee on condition that the maker died Avithout recalling it, the happening of the condition left the holder Avith authority to deliver it to the payee and thereby to give him a good title. ’ ’ (Citing Daggett v. Simonds, 173 Mass. 340.) In said Baggett case it is also decided in substance that, in an action by the payee against the executor of the will of the maker of a promissory note, delivered by the testator to a person in his employ and by the latter delivered to the payee after the maker’s death, evidence of directions given by the testator Avhen he handed the note to his servant is competent on the question of delivery, as is also evidence of admissions by the testator upon that subject. Under the evidence and the authorities above referred to, our conclusion is that the judgment of the circuit court Avas right and should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed. Barnes, P. J., and Wells, J., concur.'