Adlard v. Adlard

65 Ill. 212
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 65 Ill. 212 (Adlard v. Adlard) 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
Adlard v. Adlard, 65 Ill. 212 (Ill. 1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, exhibited in the Cook circuit 'court by Thomas Adlard against Mary Ann Adlard, and is before us on a rehearing.

It appears by the bill of complaint and the proofs in the cause, that these parties were married in 1862, complainant then being about twenty-two years of age, just out of his apprenticeship, and the defendant a widow, of the more mature age of thirty-five or forty. From the time of their marriage up to March, 1868, they lived together as man and wife.

Complainant alleges, at the time of hi's marriage he was the owner of a frame building situate on leased land in the city of Chicago, worth, at that time, about eight hundred dollars; that defendant was worth only her wearing apparel and a small quantity of furniture. Complainant was an ornamental painter and grainer, and since his marriage had devoted all his time to his art, realizing large profits therefrom, his average daily receipts throughout the year being from fifteen to twenty dollars. These earnings, complainant alleges, he placed in the hands of defendant, she being acquainted with business, and he having none outside of his art, to keep the same, and to invest them, from time to time, in such property as complainant might select and purchase, being greatly controlled therein by the defendant.

There appears to have been six different pieces of real estate—city lots—claimed to have been purchased with the money so placed in the hands of his wife, the deeds for wrhich it is alleged were taken by his wife in her own name, without complainant’s knowledge or consent; that his wife informed him, from time to time, when the purchases were made, that the deeds were made to them jointly, and he, supposing such was the proper mode of conveying real estate to a married man, was satisfied, and paid no further attention to the matter, believing that the title to the lots was in himself alone. He alleges, from the time the lots were purchased he commenced to improve them, erecting buildings on those most valuable ; improved and repaired the buildings and fences on other lots, and was, at the time of filing the bill, on the property known as No. 15 Fourth Avenue, a large brick house; three two-story frame dwelling houses on other lots on Hubbard street, and three cottages on lots on Paulina street, the value of all of which is alleged to be twenty-five thousand dollar’s, with a rental value of four thousand two hundred dollars per annum.

The scope and object of the bill is to compel defendant to convey this property to complainant, he alleging he has filed a bill for divorce, and that defendant is making preparations to sell the property and place it beyond complainant’s reach, she herself to take her departure for a foreign country with her paramour.'

It is charged defendant has collected all the rents, no part of which has she paid over to complainant.

The prayer of the bill is, that the defendant be compelled to unite wi£h complainant, or alone, in a deed of trust to a third party, for complainant’s benefit, and be decreed to convey the lots by good and sufficient deeds, so that the title to the same may vest in complainant, and to repay to complainant the money collected by her for rents, and that she be enjoined from selling, leasing, or in any way disposing of the property, or interfering with the same, except under the order of the court; and that, in the meantime, a receiver be appointed to take possession and charge of the property and collect the rents.

An injunction was allowed by the circuit judge, and affidavits received by the circuit court in support of the averments in the bill.

The defendant appeared and entered a motion to dissolve the injunction, which the court disallowed and required the defendant to plead, at the same time appointing a receiver,us prayed for.

The defendant put in her answer under oath, although the oath was waived by complainant in hi's bill.

The answer admits the marriage and cohabitation, but denies most of the other material facts charged.

Exceptions were taken to the answer, which were disallowed, and a replication put in and the cause set for hearing. Much testimony was taken, and a decree passed in favor of the complainant, allowing to him one-half of the property. To reverse this decree, the defendant appeals, and assigns various errors.

As the bill of complaint waives an answer under oath, the answer of defendant, although under oath, can be regarded' only as a pleading in the cause, to which the oath adds no force. Moore et ux. v. Hunter, 1 Gilm. 317; Willenborg, v. Murphy, 36 Ill. 344; Wallwork v. Derby, 40 ib. 527; Hopkins v. Granger, 52 ib. 504.

The evidence on some points is conflicting, but from the whole tenor of it, we are satisfied the proceeds of complainant’s labor amounted to many thousand dollars, a great part of which he put in possession of defendant, not as a gift, but for safe keeping, she being a woman of business capacity, of mature age, and of experimental knowledge of the world, he himself being young and inexperienced, ignorant of business, and confiding fully in the fidelity and judgment of his wife. He testifies he was under the belief, all the time, that the money so entrusted to his wife was invested for his benefit, and the titles taken to him, or to him and his wife, he sup-1 posing the latter was the proper mode by which to convey land to a married man, and he remained in that belief until about the time of filing this bill.

The questions made upon the record are, do the proofs show that complainant’s money paid for the pieces of property and for what parcels? Was the title to them acquired in such a manner by appellant as to raise a trust in which complainant is the only beneficiary? Can a married woman be a trustee for her husband, and can she be called into chancery by him that she may be compelled to perform the trust ?

We do not deem it necessary to determine either of these questions, in the view we have taken of the case.

It appears there were six different parcels of real estate purchased, and deeds taken in the name of appellant. The)' are described in exhibits A, B, C, D, E and F. That described in exhibit A was purchased of Wolf Schaeffer on the 14th of August, 1863, and that in exhibit B on the 13th of October of the same year, through B. W. Thomas, acting for Charles Tobsy, the owner. Those deeds contain these words: “This conveyance is made to said Mary Ann Adlard, wife of said Thomas Adlard, and to her heirs and assigns forever, for her sole and separate use, benefit and behoof, as a separate estate, independent of her husband.” The word “ forever” is omitted in exhibit B.

It is claimed by appellee that he had, at this time, ability from his earnings, by a laborious prosecution of his art, to make these purchases, and to pay for them, and his money was so applied by appellant.

Taking this for true, what is the reasonable presumption, this clause being inserted in each of these deeds with the knowledge of complainant, who examined the papers?

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Bluebook (online)
65 Ill. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adlard-v-adlard-ill-1872.