Botsford v. Wilson

75 Ill. 132
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 Ill. 132 (Botsford v. Wilson) 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
Botsford v. Wilson, 75 Ill. 132 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court i

This was a bill in equity, exhibited in the circuit court of Cook county, by J. K. Botsford, appellant, against appellees, administratrix and heirs of Marie E. Wilson, deceased.

It appears from the bill that in April, 1868, appellant purbhased of Marie E. Wilson, a married woman, certain real estate in the city of Chicago, for the sum of $12,000 ; the purchase money was paid and a general warranty deed executed by Mrs. Wilson and her husband, and delivered to appellant.

The grantor of Mrs. Wilson derived title to the premises by virtue of an administratrix’s sale of the estate of Charles O’Conner, deceased. Subsequently, and in 1869, Mary O’Conner, Charles B. O’Conner and Ann O’Conner, the heirs at law of Charles O’Conner, deceased, brought an action of ejectment against appellant; on the trial of the action it was shown that at the time of the death of Charles O’Conner his widow was pregnant with a child, and thereafter Ann O’Conner was born, and became an heir to one-third of the estate of her deceased father, Charles O’Conner, and that she was not made a party to the proceedings by which the land of the estate of Charles O’Conner was sold at the administratrix’s sale; that the return of the sheriff indorsed on the process issued in the proceedings to obtain a decree to sell the lands showed no legal service on Charles R. and Mary O’Conner. The three heirs thereupon recovered the premises from appellant. It is also alleged in the bill, that Mrs. Wilson and appellant, in the sale and purchase, acted under a mutual mistake and ignorance in regard to the birth and existence of the posthumous child, nor had either of the parties any knowledge that the return of the sheriff upon the summons issued in the proceedings to sell the premises failed to show a legal service upon Mary and Charles R. O’Conner.

It is also averred that Mrs. Wilson represented that she had the title to the premises which she undertook to sell, and furnished appellant an abstract which showed that the title represented by her came by and through the sale made by the administratrix of Charles O’Conner, deceased.

The bill contains no allegation of fraud, but it is alleged Mrs. Wilson honestly believed she had good title to the premises.

To the bill a general demurrer was filed, which was sustained by the court, and the bill dismissed. The- complainant, Bots-ford, brings the record here, and the question presented is, conceding the allegations of the bill to be true, is appellant entitled to relief against the administratrix and hens of Mrs. Wilson to recover back the purchase money paid for the premises %

The statute in force at the time Mrs. Wilson conveyed the premises to appellant, and which authorized a married woman to convey her lands, provides that no covenant or warranty, contained in any such deed or conveyance, shall, in any manner, bind or affect such married woman or her heirs, further than to convey from her and her heirs, effectually, her right and interest expressed to be granted or conveyed in such deed or conveyance. Gross’ Statutes of 1869, p. 87.

Under this statute, a deed made by a married woman, with covenants of warranty, had no more force or effect to bind her or her heirs than a quitclaim deed; such a deed would pass whatever titles he had in the lands conveyed, but neither she nor her heirs could be liable upon any covenants contained in the deed.

Under the statute, a warranty deed executed by a married woman was but a quitclaim deed.

The act of 1861, to protect married women in their separate property, did not repeal, change or modify the former act in any manner whatever.

In Strawn v. Strawn, 50 Ill. 34, this court, in passing upon a warranty deed made by a married woman after the act of 1861 was enacted, said, had it been her own land, and her husband had united in a conveyance of it, containing covenants, she could not be held responsible upon them, any farther than that they should be held to convey from her and her heirs, her right and interest in the land, and this immunity is not destroyed by the act of 1861.

The deed made by Mrs. Wilson to appellant, although it contains covenants of title and warranty, she at the time being a married woman, can only, as to her and her heirs, be regarded as a quitclaim deed.

Regarding the deed in that light, the question then is, the title conveyed to appellant having failed, can the administratrix of the estate of Mrs. Wilson, or her heirs, be compelled, in a court of equity, to refund the purchase money paid for the premises ?

It is true, the bill alleges that Mrs. Wilson claimed to own the title to the premises conveyed; such may, however, be said of almost every case where lands are conveyed by quitclaim deed; it is not usual for a party to convey lands by deed, unless he has some title or claim upon which to predicate a conveyanee, and yet it has not been understood that a grantor was to be held to refund the purchase money upon failure of title, unless the deed contained covenants, or unless fraud was used by the grantor.

Kent, in vol. 2, sec. 473, in discussing this question, said, “ I apprehend, in sales of land, the technical rule remits the party back to his covenants in his deed; and if there be no ingredient of fraud in the ease, and the party has not had the precautioto secure himself by Covenants, he has no remedy for his money, even on failure of title. This is the strict English rule, both at law and in equity.”

It is alleged in the bill, that Mrs. Wilson, when the sale was made, presented an abstract showing her title to the premises, but it is nowhere pretended that the abstract presented contained any fact not appearing upon the record or that0would not be verified upon examination of the record. Ho means either false or fraudulent were resorted to by Mrs. Wilson to inspire confidence in her title or to induce appellant to purchase.

Mrs. Wilson, no doubt, in good faith, supposed she had the title to the premises, and appellant purchased with the belief that he was acquiring the title; it turned out, after a long and protracted litigation, that they were mistaken.

And while we fully appreciate the fact that it is a great hardship upon appellant to lose the purchase money paid, we cannot overturn the settled law of the country for the purpose of granting him relief.

The real question involved in this record is not an open one in this court. As early as December, 1830, in case of Snyder v. Laframboise, Breese, 268, it was said that a party who takes a quitclaim deed on the sale of land, runs the risk of the goodness of the title, unless some fraud has been practiced upon him.

This was followed by the case of Owings v. Thompson, 3 Scam. 502, where the. same principle is announced.

In the case of Slack v. McLagan, 15 Ill. 242, it was held that the doctrine of caveat emptor applicable to sales of real estate leaves purchasers to protect themselves by covenants of warranty, except for the frauds of vendors, against which courts of law as well as equity will give relief, by refusing an enforcement of the contract.

In the case of Stookey v. Hughes, 18 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ill. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/botsford-v-wilson-ill-1874.