delivered the opinion of the court:
Appellee, George Trumbull Woodbury, filed separate suits against the United States Casualty Company, the Ocean Accident and Guaranty Corporation, Ltd., and the Continental Casualty Company, in the circuit court of Cook county. The pleadings and issues in all three of the cases are identical. The declarations contained two counts. The first count charged the defendants with having wrongfully obtained appellee’s insurance policies by means of fraud and duress. The second was a general count in trover. The defendants each pleaded the general issue and an additional plea averring, in substance, that the plaintiff, after the time of the supposed grievances laid in the declaration and before the institution of the suit, on November 8, 1910, by his deeds of that date released to the defendants all his demands and causes of action whatsoever. The court sustained a demurrer to a third special plea of the defendants and at the same time sustained a demurrer to two replications of appellee to appellants’ second special plea. Appellee then filed a replication, in substance averring that he did not execute his deeds of release discharging the defendants from all claims for damages and from all manner of actions which he had charged against them, arising out of the matters and things alleged by appellee in his declaration, which replication was not verified by affidavit. The causes were consolidated for trial, and at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of all of the evidence, upon motions made by all of the appellants, the court instructed the jury to return verdicts of not guilty and entered judgments against appellee in all the cases. On appeals prosecuted to the Appellate Court for the First District that court reversed the judgments and remanded the causes. All of the appellants filed a statement and stipulation reciting that the same was made solely for the purpose of expediting the final disposition of the matters in controversy and permitting the final determination of the issues in the Supreme Court, with the sole reservation that any orders or judgments entered by the Appellate Court should be without prejudice to appellants to have the same reviewed in the Supreme Court, said statement and stipulation being to the effect that appellants had no additional evidence to offer upon a new trial; that they waived a re-trial of said cause by jury and submitted the same to the Appellate Court for such order and judgment as to law and justice might appertain; and that if, under the law and facts as shown by the record, the Appellate Court should adhere to its former opinion and refuse to affirm the judgments of the court below, the appellants were then willing that the judgments of the Appellate Court might be modified and such judgments entered by it, final in character, as it might think proper, so as to be reviewable by the Supreme Court. Thereafter, on motion of appellee, the judgments of the Appellate Court were set aside by it, as also were the orders reversing and remanding the causes, and on July 24, 1917, the Appellate Court entered judgments in favor of appellee, the judgment against the Ocean Accident and Guaranty Corporation being for $8294 and costs, the one against the United States Casualty Company being for $1342.98 and costs, and the one against the Continental Casualty Company for the sum of $2226 and costs. All the judgments recited that “upon the allegations and proofs in the record the court finds the issues in favor of George Trumbull Woodbury, the appellee.” There was no other or formal finding of the ultimate facts by the Appellate Court, as shown by its judgments. Certificates of importance were granted by the Appellate Court and appellants have all appealed to this court, and the causes were consolidated for hearing and disposition by this court.
The record evidence discloses that in the year 1908 the Ocean Accident and Guaranty Corporation issued to the appellee an accident insurance policy which provided, among other things, for the payment of $12,500 in case the insured lost either hand or foot solely through external, violent and accidental means. The occupation of appellee, as stated in the policy, was that of vice-president of the Columbus Safe Deposit Company, with the ordinary duties of office and traveling. In the year 1910 the Continental Casualty Company and the United States Casualty Company issued to appellee similar policies with practically the same statements therein contained and the same provisions so far as the issues in this suit are concerned, which provided' for the payment of $5000 and $2500, respectively, in case the insured lost either foot solely through external, violent and accidental means. On October x, 1910, the appellee having moved from Chicago to Phcenix, Oregon, while the policies were still in force had his right foot practically shot off a few inches above the ankle through the accidental discharge of a high-power rifle loaded with a .38-caliber soft-pointed bullet, the bullet breaking both tibia and fibia bones, cutting them entirely into two parts and shattering the bones into fragments for some distance around the wound, thereby necessitating the amputation of the foot and lower part of the limb. It was stipulated that appellee had suffered the loss of his right foot solely through external, violent and accidental means, that the policies were then in force and effect and that due proofs of loss were furnished, and no question arises concerning the correctness of the amounts of the judgments if they are otherwise correct.
From the recitals in the opinions of the Appellate Court the other evidentiary facts are, that at the time appellee took out the insurance he was employed by the Columbus Memorial Building as renting agent. On. June 10, 1910, he went to Phcenix, Oregon, where his father-in-law lived, to go into the ranch business. Six or eight weeks after his arrival in Oregon he gave up the idea of going into the ranch business and went into the real estate business at Med-ford, Oregon, and was in that business at the time he was injured. About August, 1910, he wrote letters to all three of the insurance companies informing them that he was in the real estate business and inquired of them whether or not they considered that business more hazardous, and was informed by all of them, in substance, that they did not consider it more hazardous and that no increase in the premium would be required. On October 1, 1910, appellee went out to a tool-house in the rear of his home and reached up for his rifle. It got away from his hand and struck the door and dropped, muzzle down, and then fell over and was discharged, the bullet going transversely through his right leg about three inches above his ankle. He lost a great amount of blood from the wound and suffered a great deal of pain. In the first operation three inches of the bone of the leg was removed, and he was hardly from under the influence of the anesthetic when the second operation was performed and his foot and lower part of his leg removed, and he was very much weakened in body and mind as a result of the operation. One Wisner, the adjuster for all of the appellants, visited him November 5, 1910, while so suffering from his wound, and informed him that he had come to adjust his claim but wished to make some investigation and would be back again. The next day he came back and informed appellee that he had some suspicious evidence regarding the accident; that it was rather unusual for a man out in the country to have so much insurance, and talked to him of people going to the penitentiary when the evidence was less against them than it was against appellee. He cited the case of a man at Buffalo, New York, who threw his arm under a street car, had it cut off- and sued the companies, and that they sent him to the penitentiary. He cited other similar cases, and when appellee informed him that he would not settle for anything but the face value of his policies he told appellee that the companies would bankrupt him and possibly put him in the penitentiary; that they would ruin his reputation anyway; that they had unlimited funds and the best legal talent in the country, and that it was foolish for him to attempt to fight them. On appellee informing him that he was in no condition to talk over the matter and that there would be time enough to settle later, he informed the appellee that it was either fifty per cent settlement on all the policies ($10,000) on the one hand or litigation on the other, with the penitentiary as the possible wind-up for him. This talk greatly alarmed and worried appellee and his wife, who was worn down by constant sitting up with him, and they did not sleep that night but talked about the matter all night, according to appellee’s testimony. The adjuster called again on the third day, and after reiterating his talk about the penitentiary for appellee, and further telling appellee that he was a lawyer and knew that this was the best thing for appellee to do, and after assuring him that if he so settled he would not be further molested, appellee, fearing that the companies might prosecute him and send him to the penitentiary on false testimony, accepted the terms and vouchers for the money and released the companies by executing written releases. The Appellate Court further recited in the opinions filed in the cases that it was bound to assume that the evidence tended strongly to show that at the time of the accident and at the time of the settlement there was no justification for the dispute concerning the occupation of the appellee or as to the amount of the indemnity to which he Was entitled; that appellants had made some showing in the evidence that appellee’s occupation was that of a ranchman or orchard-man, but the testimony of appellee was to the effect that it was that of a real estate agent, and that appellants knew that he had not changed his occupation and that the adjuster knew it. The Appellate Court further recited that appellee was in a feeble condition and not normal at the time of the settlement, and that by “insidious suggestions as to suspicious evidence and the possibilities of the plaintiff going to the penitentiary persuaded the plaintiff to settle for a grossly inadequate sum,” and that there was no valid defense against payment of the policies and no consideration for their release.
The main contention of appellants in this case is that the lower court held that appellee’s actions were barred by the releases executed by him and his wife as such releases were deeds or sealed instruments, and that appellee could not in any action at law defend against said releases on the ground of want of consideration or for fraud unless he could show that there was fraud in the execution of the .instruments,—i. e., that he signed them upon representation that they were some other character of instrument, or that by some other device or trick he was induced to sign them believing they were some other kind of writing. It is well settled in this State that in an action at law a release under seal by a person of his cause of action is a complete, bar unless its execution is shown to have been obtained by fraud. Such a release carries with it the presumption that it was executed for a valuable consideration, and no evidence can be introduced for the purpose of showing that there was no consideration for the giving of the instrument. To do so would be to permit one to deny his receipt of the consideration expressed, for the purpose of making void a sealed instrument, which under the law in this State is not permissible in any case. • Before such an instrument can be impeached for fraud relating merely to the consideration and not to its execution, resort must be first had to a court of equity to set it aside for such fraud. (Papke v. Hammond Co. 192 Ill. 631; Jackson v. Security Life Ins. Co. 233 id. 161; Robinson v. Yetter, 238 id. 320.) The same rule does not apply, however, where the suit is on a simple contract or one not under seal. Simple fraud as to the consideration or fraudulent representations as to the nature and value of the consideration are a good defense where the contract is not under seal. (Robinson v. Yetter, supra.) It is equally true that where the release is not under seal a defense can be made that it was without consideration, or that there was payment of only a portion of the amount due and a release of the whole amcfunt without any further consideration for the release. These propositions are not controverted by counsel for appellants.
The contention of appellee is that the releases in question are not releases under seal and do not purport to be releases of all rights of action of appellee in this case but are simply releases of all actions on the policies. There were two sets of releases signed by appellee and his wife: one set purporting to release all actions on the policies and causes of action, and another set which released every claim, cause of action or right of action whatever upon any and all claims that appellee and his wife had from the beginning of the world to the day of the date of said releases. Both sets of releases were simply signed by appellee and his wife, and the letters “L. S.,” enclosed in parenthesis, followed their signatures. If they are to be considered as releases under seal the actions of appellee now in question must be considered as barred thereby. They were not releases of actions on the policies, simply, but of all actions of every kind and character and of all rights or claims concerning said policies.
The contracts of settlement between appellee and the insurance companies were executed and completely performed in the State of Oregon. The appellee received his money there in payment of the policies, and the insurance companies there received the insurance policies from appellee and his contracts of release, which were also made in Oregon. It is therefore contended by appellee that the releases are Oregon contracts or instruments made in Oregon, and that their construction and validity are governed by the law of the place where made. The law is stated correctly on this proposition; Woodward v. Brooks, 128 Ill. 222; Consolidated Tank Line Co. v. Collier, 148 id. 259; 5 R. C. L. 931.
There was no proof in this case as to the laws of Oregon pertaining to the questions in dispute. It is therefore further contended by appellee that it must be presumed, in the absence of such proof, that the common law prevails in Oregon. It is contended, on the other hand, by appellants that in such a case it is presumed that the laws of Oregon are the same as those of Illinois, and that the presumption that the common law is in force in Oregon will not be indulged because Oregon was not one of those States having a common origin, formed by colonies which constituted a part of the same empire and which recognized the common law as the source of their jurisprudence. It is also claimed by appellants that Oregon was a part of the Louisiana purchase obtained by this government from France, and if not so obtained, that it was obtained from Spain by the United States by the Spanish cession and treaty of 1819, and that therefore, as the common law did not prevail in France or Spain at the time of such acquisitions, it must be presumed that the laws of Oregon are the same as the laws of Illinois. As the laws of Illinois recognize a simple scroll or the letters “L. S.” in parenthesis as giving to a release the same character and dignity as if executed with a common law seal, with wafer or wax, it is further insisted by appellants that whether the law of Illinois or of Oregon is presumed to be in force, the result in this case will be one and the same and the releases in this case be held to be under seal. Appellants further contend that the law of Illinois governs because the suit is brought here, and as the releases are made the basis of their plea the question is merely one of procedure and of remedy, and that on such questions the law of the forum governs.
In Illinois, if the question as to the laws of a sister State-is raised, the presumption in favor of the common law is indulged when the common law on the subject in question prevails in Illinois, (Crouch v. Hall, 15 Ill. 263,) and the presumption in favor of the common law is also indulged even when the law of Illinois on the subject is statutory. (Tinkler v. Cox, 68 Ill. 119; Schlee v. Guckenheimer, 179 id. 593.) A number of other States in this country announce the same rule on the subject, while there are a few that announce the general rule that the presumption is that the laws in another State or foreign country are the same as tire laws of the forum until otherwise proved. In the case of Norris v. Harris, 15 Cal. 226, Justice Field, who was later an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, laid down three instances in which the presumption must be indulged that the common law prevails in the State in the absence of proof and where the subject of inquiry is as to the law of such State on the point in question: (1) In all of the States of the Union which were originally colonies of England; (2) in all such States as are carved out of territory belonging to such colonies; and (3) in all those States which have been established in territory acquired since the revolution, where such territory was not at the time of its acquisition occupied by an organized and civilized community, and where, in fact, the population of the new State upon the establishment of government was formed by immigration from the original States. The first two propositions laid down in that decision appear to have been adhered to by the courts of all of the States in which holdings have been made, whose holdings are similar to those above announced by this court. It was also laid down by Justice Field as the rule that the presumption that the common law prevails is not indulged as to those States in which there were established civil governments or systems of domestic law different from those of the common law prior to their becoming Territories or States of the Union, and that in such a case, in the absence of proof, courts will presume that the foreign law is the same as that which prevails at the forum. Accordingly it has been held by several courts in this country that it would not be presumed that the common law prevailed in Florida, Louisiana and Texas. The third proposition laid down by Justice Field seems to us to be the rule that should be adopted in this case. It was followed in the cases of Cressey v. Tatom, 9 Ore. 541, and Buchanan v. Hubbard, 119 Ind. 187. See, also, note to the case of Cherry v. Sprague, (Mass.) 67 L. R. A. 33, and particularly at page 40, in which note the decisions of the various States of the Union have been fully discussed and distinguished.
While the various questions concerning the Oregon territory were settled between this country and Spain, France and England by treaties and by the Louisiana purchase, nevertheless this court will take judicial notice of the fact that the boundary lines of that territory were finally settled to be the 42b parallel on the south and the 49th on the north; that it was a wilderness, inhabited only by a few emigrants from the eastern part of the United States and by a few trappers and traders emigrating from England or some of her colonies; that it was not inhabited by French or Spanish settlers, or by any other settlers who were governed by the laws of France or Spain, up to the time of the Spanish cession to the United States by the treaty of 1819, and that one among the many claims to the Oregon territory by the United States was that she was entitled to' the territory by right of discovery and of occupation. No presumption, therefore, ought to prevail that any rules of daw of France, Spain or Mexico were ever at any time in force in the Oregon territory, much less in the State of Oregon at the time this suit was tried in the lower court.
As the validity of a seal directly affects,the obligation of a contract it is to be tested by the lex loci contractus. Where the remedy upon a written instrument depends upon the question whether it is sealed or unsealed, it is well settled that the sufficiency of the seal is to be tested by the lex fori and not by the lex loci contractus. (35 Cyc. 1169.) In the absence of evidence of the law of the State where the instrument was executed, the sufficiency of the seal will be tested by the principles of the common law. (Waln v. Waln, 53 N. J. L. 429.) The presumption will therefore be indulged in this case that the common law prevails in Oregon, and as the law of Oregon governs the question as to the validity and character of the seal, the releases in question are held to be simple contracts and not under seal. At common law a seal was an impression upon wax or wafer or some tenacious substance. A scroll is not such a seal. (Waln v. Waln, supra; Corlies v. VanNote, 16 N. J. L. 324.) No question of remedy arises in this suit, as that can only arise where the instrument is sued on directly. Many cases are cited by appellants in which it was determined that the instrument was or was not a deed according to the law of the forum wherein the instrument itself was sued on, and in those cases the remedy or the character of the suit was to be determined by the law of the place where the suit was brought. In one of those cases (LeRoy v. Beard, 8 How. 451,) the Supreme Court of the United States held that the law of the forum governed the remedy, and that that suit was properly instituted in the State of New York on the deed in question in assumpsit because not a deed by the laws of New York for want of a sufficient seal. The deed was made in Wisconsin. After making such holding the court said: “We hold this, too, without impairing at all the principle that in deciding on the obligation of the instrument as a contract, and not the remedy on it elsewhere, the law of Wisconsin, as the lex loci contractus, must govern.” No real question of remedy ever arose in the case at bar. Appellee began the suits and selected his own remedies, resorting to a court of law and selected actions of tort. When the releases were relied on by the defense they were simply pleaded by appellants in the form applicable to the forms of action already begun. The releases at that stage of the proceedings had nothing to do with the determination of the remedies or the forms of action by reason of the fact that it was claimed they were deeds.
The effect of our holding so far requires the further holding that the Appellate Court properly held that the releases were not deeds, and that the claim of appellants that their special plea barred appellee’s recovery is not sustained. The only remaining defense of appellants to be considered is that made by the general issue pleaded.
Appellants claim as to the first count of the declaration that the evidence in the record did not make out a case for the consideration of the jury. That is a question of law, also, and without discussing further the evidence, we think it was sufficient to authorize the court to submit it to a jury and that the refusal to do so was error.
As to the second count, appellants’ contention is that there was no demand made by appellee upon appellants for the policies and that such a demand was necessary. A demand and refusal in such a case are unnecessary if the taking of the property was tortious. (Hayes v. Massachusetts Life Ins. Co. 125 Ill. 626.) There was no error in holding that no demand was necessary in this case, with a finding that the taking was tortious.
An acceptance by a creditor of a sum less than the amount due in satisfaction of a demand of a sum due, without further consideration, does not amount to a discharge of the debt. With a finding in the record in this case by the Appellate Court that at the time of the accident and settlement in question there was no real or bona fide dispute concerning the occupation of the'plaintiff or of the amount of indemnity to which he was entitled, and with a further finding of the other ultimate facts above referred to, this court would have jurisdiction to ultimately pass on such findings. But in this record there is no finding of the ultimate facts by the Appellate Court but a mere indication by the language in the opinion that such might have been the intention. As that court reversed the lower court on propositions of law it should have either remanded the cause for further trial or it should have made a finding of facts under the stipulations in the record so that this court could review the case upon questions of law. This court cannot review questions of fact except for the purpose of determining whether or not they are sufficient to make out a prima facie case for appellee.
The judgments must therefore be reversed and the causes remanded to the Appellate Court, with directions to make a finding of the ultimate facts or to enter such other judgments as it may see proper.
Reversed and remanded.