Braidwood v. Charles

159 N.E. 38, 327 Ill. 500
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1927
DocketNo. 17845. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 159 N.E. 38 (Braidwood v. Charles) 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
Braidwood v. Charles, 159 N.E. 38, 327 Ill. 500 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

The superior court of Cook county sustained the general and special demurrer of Margaret Braidwood, the appellee, to the cross-bill of Harold G. Milham, the appellant, by which he sought a decree (a) declaring that Henry Welsch acquired title to three parcels of real estate in trust to convey them to Mathias H. Milham, Mrs. Braidwood and Roy Charles in equal parts; ( b) setting aside the deeds by which the real estate was conveyed to Welsch, as well as the deeds by which he conveyed one parcel to Mrs. Braid-wood and the others to Roy Charles; (c) removing all of the deeds as clouds on the cross-complainant’s title; and (cl) for partition of the lands. The cross-bill was dismissed for want of equity at the cross-complainant’s costs, and he prosecutes this appeal.

The original bill of complaint was filed by Margaret Braidwood, and in it the following facts are alleged: Effie F. Milham, the mother of the complainant, owned a parcel of real estate consisting of two lots in Cook county, and with her husband, Mathias H. Milham, conveyed the lots by warranty deed to Henry Welsch under an agreement that he would convey them to the complainant. Welsch conveyed the lots to the complainant by warranty deed dated January 29, 1925, and recorded April 2, 1925. Mrs. Mil-ham died intestate on February 4, 1925, leaving as her only heirs the complainant, her daughter, and Roy Charles, her son. On May 15, 1925, Charles filed for record an affidavit in which he set forth that the two deeds of conveyance under which the complainant claimed title to the lots had not been delivered prior to the death of Mrs. Milham and had been, obtained by misrepresentation. The bill charges that the affidavit is false; that the deed to Welsch was delivered prior to the death of Mrs. Milham and that both deeds were executed and delivered without misrepresentation; that Charles has no interest in the property and that his affidavit constitutes a cloud upon the complainant’s title. Charles, and Loretta, his wife, and John B. Anderson, a lien claimant, .were made defendants to the bill. The prayer of the bill was for the cancellation of the affidavit as a cloud upon the complainant’s title and the confirmation of the title in her, free from any claims of Charles and his wife.

Upon petition, Harold G. Milham, the appellant, became a defendant to the original bill and filed an answer thereto. Subsequently, by order, he was given leave to file a cross-bill, which contains the following allegations: When Efiie F. Milham died, February 4, 1925, she owned in fee not only the two lots described in the original bill but also two additional parcels of real estate, one situated in DuPage county, Illinois, and the other in Allegan county, Michigan. On or about January 28, 1925, she called Daniel Henrici, of the firm of Henrici & Welsch, real estate brokers, to draw her last will and testament. Henrici, observing her fatal condition, suggested that she execute deeds instead of a will. She adopted his suggestion and instructed him tb draw certain deeds whereby she would convey her real property to Henry Welsch, a bachelor, who was Henrici’s partner, with the express provision that Welsch should convey it to Mathias H. Milham, her husband, Mrs. Braid-wood, her daughter, and Roy Charles, her son, in equal shares or portions. Welsch prepared, and Mrs. Milham executed, three deeds,'all dated January 28, 1925, by which she conveyed her real property to Welsch, and the deeds were filed for record after her death. None of these deeds made mention of the trust under which Welsch acquired title, but, contrary thereto, by deed dated January 28, 1925, he conveyed the lots described in the original bill to Mrs. Braidwood, the complainant, and by two other deeds dated the same day he conveyed the real estate in DuPage county, Illinois, and Allegan county, Michigan, to Charles. These deeds were subsequently filed for record. Both grantees had complete knowledge of the terms and conditions of the trust imposed upon Welsch at the time the deeds to him were executed. Mrs. Milham died intestate on February 4, 1925. She was married twice — once to Roy Charles, who died before her death. Two children, Margaret Braidwood and Roy Charles, were born of that marriage. Her second marriage was to Mathias H. Milham, the father of the cross-complainant by a former marriage. Mrs. Milham left surviving as her only heirs, Mathias H. Milham, her husband, Mrs. Braidwood, her daughter, and Roy Charles, her son. Upon the death of Mrs. Milham her surviving husband inherited one-third of her personal property absolutely and in lieu of dower one-third of each parcel of real estate of which she died seized. Milham died intestate on February 12, 1925, leaving the cross-complainant as his sole heir-at-law. The cross-complainant, in consequence, acquired by descent his father’s undivided one-third of the real estate left by Mrs. Milham, and Mrs. Braidwood, Charles and the cross-complainant are vested with the title in fee simple to the real property in question, each owning an undivided one-third thereof. The cross-bill charges that the deeds from Mrs. Milham, as well as those executed by Welsch, were procured by fraudulent means, for the sole purpose of defrauding the cross-complainant and of depriving him of his rights in the property; that the deeds were made without consideration and were never delivered, and that they should be declared to be void and removed as clouds upon the cross-complainant’s title.

Margaret Braidwood filed a general and special demurrer to the cross-bill. Roy Charles and Loretta Charles answered both the original bill and the cross-bill. In their answer to the former they denied that Mrs. Braidwood was the owner of the two lots in Cook county and averred that Effie E. Milham conveyed her real estate to Welsch in trust to convey it to Mathias H. Milham, her husband, Mrs. Braidwood, her daughter, and Roy Charles, her son, in equal parts. By the other answer they admitted the allegations of the cross-bill except that they denied that Charles had any knowledge of the existence of the deeds in question prior to August 15, 1925. John B. Anderson filed answers to the bill and the cross-bill.

Appellant makes certain contentions of a general nature which have no relevancy to this controversy and which for that reason need not be considered. The two contentions upon which he relies for a reversal of the decree are: First, that by the deeds from Effie F. Milham to Henry Welsch a trust was created, under which appellant’s father became a beneficiary to the extent of an undivided one-third interest in fee simple in the three parcels of real estate, which interest by his father’s subsequent death descended to appellant as his father’s sole heir; and second, that in any event, by section 1 of the Descent act, as amended in 1923, appellant’s father became vested, upon the death of his wife, with an undivided one-third in fee of the real estate of which she died seized, which share or interest likewise descended to appellant, as the only heir of his father, upon the latter’s death.

In the cross-bill it is alleged that Effie F. Milham conveyed her real estate to Henry Welsch in trust to convey it to her surviving husband, son and daughter in equal portions, and that, contrary to or in violation of the trust, Welsch conveyed one parcel, consisting of two lots, to the daughter and the rest to the son. The deeds to Welsch, it is alleged, made no mention of the trust under which he acquired title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 N.E. 38, 327 Ill. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braidwood-v-charles-ill-1927.