Banning v. Patterson

2 N.E.2d 712, 363 Ill. 464
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1936
DocketNo. 23145. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 N.E.2d 712 (Banning v. Patterson) 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
Banning v. Patterson, 2 N.E.2d 712, 363 Ill. 464 (Ill. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice

Orr delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee George D. Banning, as the receiver of a State bank, by his verified creditor’s bill in equity, endeavored to have the title to certain real estate in Winnebago county declared to be in the defendant Everett G. Patterson, in order to collect a judgment against him for $4483.63, obtained by the receiver in that county September 10, 1932. Patterson had been adjudicated a bankrupt, and Sam Schreiber, the trustee in bankruptcy of his estate, intervened in the suit, asking that the title to the property involved be declared in him, subject to the judgment lien of the receiver. The circuit court of. Winnebago county decreed that the title to tract 1 should vest in the trustee in bankruptcy subject to the lien of the receiver’s judgment, if the indebtedness of the bankrupt was not paid by defendants, or some of them, in thirty daj^s. The decree failed to adjudicate the title to tract 2. On this appeal as to tract 1 by Hazel Patterson, the receiver and the trustee cross-appealed because the decree failed to order the conveyance of tract 2 set aside and declared void as to them. A freehold is thus involved. Dean v. Plane, 195 Ill. 495; Daly v. Kohn, 230 id. 436; Ashton v. Macqueen, 361 id. 132.

In 1923, according to the bill, Niles Patterson possessed the fee to a 348-acre farm (tract 1) and to residence property in Durand, (tract 2). In that year Niles and his wife, Helen, by two warranty deeds conveyed both tracts to their son, Everett, in fee simple, and both deeds were shortly afterwards recorded. Their other children at the time were a son and two daughters and there was a daughter of a deceased child, all of whom were defendants to the suit. At the time there were two banks in Durand. In 1931, and prior thereto, Everett G. Patterson was president and a director of the Durand State Bank, which was merged with the Citizens State Bank of the same place on January 17, 1931. A short time prior to the merger, Everett G. Patterson, with others, acting on the orders of the State Auditor, executed notes to increase the assets of the bank. After the merger the note of Everett G. Patterson became the property of the new bank. Upon the subsequent failure of this new bank, the receiver reduced the Patterson note to a judgment and now seeks to collect. The title to tracts 1 and 2 remained in Everett G. Patterson until August 22, 1932. On or about that date he executed two quit-claim deeds whereby he conveyed title to both tracts to his mother, Helen. The deeds were recorded the same day. On September 19, 1932, two quitclaim deeds executed by Helen Patterson conveyed the fee simple title to the two tracts to Hazel Patterson, and were recorded March 13, 1933, about one month after the death of Helen Patterson. The bill of the receiver was filed to the January, 1933, term of court, before the last two deeds had been recorded. In the bill the receiver alleged that the two deeds from Everett G. Patterson to Helen Patterson were made with .the intent of hindering and delaying the creditors of Everett G. Patterson, and prayed that they be set aside and the premises subjected to execution upon the judgment.

Everett G. Patterson filed his sworn answer, denying lack of consideration for the deeds. The answer continued with these averments: That on the day Niles Patterson and wife conveyed the two tracts to him, he (Everett) executed his quit-claim deeds conveying the premises to Plelen Patterson; that the conveyances were made for the purpose of transferring the fee simple title in the two tracts to Helen Patterson; that the deeds of Everett G. Patterson to Helen Patterson were delivered to her on or about August 29, 1923, where they remained until they were recorded, August 27, 1.932. He denied that he possessed any right, title or interest in the tracts at any time, and stated that the conveyances were made a long time prior to the execution of his note to the Durand State Bank. The allegation was made that tract 2 was the homestead of Plelen Patterson for more than twenty-seven years prior to her death.

On July 27, 1934, Everett G. Patterson was adjudicated a voluntary bankrupt. After he was examined at bankruptcy hearings, on leave granted, he filed a sworn amendment to his answer. In this he said that Niles Patterson occupied tract 1 as a homestead until his death, in 1925; that Helen Patterson possessed a homestead therein until her death, in 1933; that the two obtained all the income from tract 2 according to their respective legal rights thereto; that he did not pay anything to Niles and Helen Patterson for the conveyances to him of the two tracts; that they were made for the sole use and benefit of Niles and Helen Patterson, during the lifetime of Niles, and after his death for Helen; that Helen Patterson, after the death of her husband, did, in fact, receive all the income from the two tracts until she conveyed them to Hazel Patterson. He denied the receipt of any benefits whatever from the two tracts, further stating that the deeds executed by him to his mother, purporting to have been made on August 29, 1923, were in fact executed on or about August 27, 1932.

The allegations of fraudulent intent on the part of Everett G. Patterson, as contained in the bill, require us to carefully examine the evidence for and against those allegations. It is well at this time to call particular attention to the different grounds of defense assumed by Everett G. Patterson in his sworn answer and the sworn amendment thereto. In short, he first disclaimed the possession of any interest in the tracts at any time, except as he was the mere intermediary for transferring the titles thereto from Niles Patterson to his wife, Helen Patterson. The amended answer sets up the defense of a parol trust, which, if established, will enable Hazel Patterson to retain fee simple title to the tracts, free and clear of any claims of the bank receiver and of the trustee in bankruptcy.

The defendants offered in evidence the six deeds by means of which the title moved in sequence from Niles Patterson and wife to Hazel Patterson; receipts for general taxes paid by Helen and Hazel Patterson on both tracts, from 1925 to 1933, inclusive; special assessment notices addressed to Helen Patterson; special assessment receipts paid by her on tract 2; a lease to tract 1 dated October, 1925, signed by Everett G. Patterson, trustee, as lessor; a lease to tract 1 dated October, 1929, signed by the same person as agent for Helen Patterson, lessor, and checks drawn on the account of Helen Patterson, signed “Helen Patterson by Everett G. Patterson.” The latter testified that the deeds from him to Helen Patterson, dated August 29, 1923, were in fact executed on the day they were recorded — i. e., August 27, 1932; that Helen and Hazel Patterson furnished all money expended upon or for the two tracts during the years each was the beneficiary of the trust estate, and that he was not the only one authorized to check on the account of his mother, as his brother, Niles O. Patterson, possessed like authority. He related that a short time prior to the death of Helen Patterson she gave all of the personal property on tract 2 to Hazel Patterson, and for that reason it was not inventoried as part of his mother’s estate.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.E.2d 712, 363 Ill. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banning-v-patterson-ill-1936.