Abel v. Schuett

160 N.E. 548, 329 Ill. 323
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1928
DocketNo. 18489. Decree reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 N.E. 548 (Abel v. Schuett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abel v. Schuett, 160 N.E. 548, 329 Ill. 323 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Flaudia M. Abel (hereafter referred to as appellee) filed her bill in the circuit court of Macon county to the October term, 1926, seeking to set aside and cancel as a cloud upon her title a certain deed executed and acknowledged by her father and mother on November 27, 1912, conveying to appellee and “the heirs of her body” 160 acres of land in Macon county. The consideration recited in the deed was love and affection and the sum of one dollar, and it also contained the following provisions: “Reserving to the said grantors and to the survivor of them, the absolute title, use, control, and income of said premises, during the life of them and the survivor of them. * * * In case said Flaudia M. Abel shall leave no heir or heirs of her body her surviving, the said premises are upon her death to revert to the heirs of the said grantor, A. C. Traughber, as if he had died intestate at the date of her death.” Appellee’s father died intestate in July, 1913, and the deed here involved, together with four other deeds to be hereafter mentioned, were thereafter found in his safety deposit box in a bank in Decatur, Illinois. Appellee acquiesced in having said deed recorded January 18, 1922, at which time three other deeds to each of her three brothers were also placed on record. During December, 1924, appellee secured a quit-claim deed from her mother and her three brothers and their respective spouses to the 160 acres in question, and has since contended that the recorded deed of 1912 was never delivered, and that she owns title in fee to the property by descent from her father and by virtue of the 1924 quit-claim deed from her mother and her three brothers, who, with herself, were her deceased father’s only heirs-at-law. The chancellor approved the report of the master in chancery to whom the cause was referred to take the evidence and report his conclusions of law and fact, found the deed had not been delivered, and entered a decree declaring it null and void and removing the same as a cloud upon appellee’s title. The decree further recites that appellee is the present owner in fee of the 160 acres in question. From that decree Ruth Abel Schuett, the daughter and only child of appellee, has prosecuted an appeal to this court.

The following facts were developed upon the hearing of the cause: A. C. Traughber in 1904 owned about 800 acres of land in Macon county and lived on a part of it near Mt. Zion. His immediate household consisted of his wife and daughter and the latter’s infant child. The daughter had been divorced from her husband and had returned to the home of her parents, where she continued to reside with her mother for some time after her father’s death, and then with her mother moved to the city of Decatur, where they now live. Traughber also had three married sons, George, Judd and Bert, all of whom maintained separate dwelling places and farmed different parts of the father’s land. One son paid grain rent for the use of the land and the other two paid no rent whatever. During the latter part of 1904 the father on one or more occasions discussed with his four children his intention of dividing his farm property so that each child would receive 200 acres of land. They were told as to what property each was to receive, and that each, child would have to pay the taxes on the land he received and two dollars an acre rent to the father and mother as long as either of them lived. Each child assented to the proposal and was fully satisfied with the division of the land. Accordingly, at the father’s request, the parents and children met at a lawyer’s office in Decatur on November 7, 1904, where, by the father’s direction, the attorney prepared four deeds, conveying to each of the children 200 acres of land. The land conveyed to at least one of the sons was not identical with that which he had been previously farming. The four deeds were executed by the parents in the presence of the four children, and it appears that one deed was perhaps read aloud, after which the father took possession of the instruments. None of the deeds were recorded during the father’s lifetime, but three of them to the three boys were found after the father’s decease in his bank safety deposit box. Two of the deeds executed in 1904 were introduced in evidence and showed they were acknowledged four days after being executed. The third deed of 1904, being the one devising 200 acres of land to the son Bert, had disappeared before the time of this hearing. No one seems to know, or at least the record does not disclose, what became of the fourth deed, supposedly made on the same date to appellee. The four children and their mother, all of whom testified on the hearing, have practically no recollection of any conversation or of other details which occurred on November 7, 1904, at the lawyer’s office when the four deeds were prepared and executed. The attorney who drafted them has been dead for several years. Each of these deeds conveyed 200 acres to a child of the grantors and the heirs of its body. A life estate was reserved to the father and mother and the survivor of them, and there was a reverter clause if any grantee died leaving no issue him surviving. These last clauses were almost identical with the language used in the clauses of the 1912 deed here involved and previously quoted from in this opinion. The deeds to the boys also provided, in the case of a reverter, for the use of one-third of the land by their respective widows under certain restrictions.

Upon the execution of the deeds of 1904 Traughber’s four children took possession of the respective lands deeded to them, paid the taxes thereon each year, paid two dollars an acre rent to the father until his death and thereafter a like sum to the mother. The boys, at least, after 1904 considered they owned the respective lands of which they were placed in possession and neither claimed any interest in the lands of any other child. The mother was also of opinion the property had been divided among the children, regarded it as their property, and that the land would finally go to her grandchildren. While appellee was living with her parents she requested her. father to make a deed to her for 40 acres so that she could sell the same. On November 27, 1912, two deeds were executed and acknowledged before the same officer by appellee’s parents. One instrument conveyed 40 acres in fee to appellee but reserved a life estate to the parents or the survivor of them. The other deed conveyed 160 acres to appellee “and the heirs of her body,” and is the deed she now seeks to set aside as a cloud upon her title. It contained provisions reserving a life estate to her parents and a reverter clause, as heretofore stated. These two deeds, as we understand the record, comprised the same lands originally set off to appellee by her father in 1904, and were included in the deed of that year supposedly made to her by her parents in furtherance of the proposed division by her father of his 800 acres of farm land. Appellee testified she did not remember being present when the two deeds were executed and acknowledged by her parents conveying the 40-acre and the 160-acre tracts of land to her, neither did she remember seeing the deed for the 40 acres before her father’s death, in July, 1913, and supposed she obtained that deed from her father’s safety deposit box. She stated positively she never saw the deed here involved for the 160 acres until “I had it recorded,” which was on January 18, 1922, at which time she took it from the safety deposit box.

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Bluebook (online)
160 N.E. 548, 329 Ill. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abel-v-schuett-ill-1928.