Brust v. Brust

89 N.E.2d 897, 405 Ill. 132
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1950
DocketNo. 31338
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 N.E.2d 897 (Brust v. Brust) 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
Brust v. Brust, 89 N.E.2d 897, 405 Ill. 132 (Ill. 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Crampton

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant appeals directly to this court from a decree of the circuit court of Livingston County directing her to convey certain real estate to plaintiffs in accordance with the terms of a contract to make a will.

The evidence discloses that on September 12, 1938, one Henry Brust was the owner of a tract of farm land subject to a mortgage securing an indebtedness of $7,840. On that day he caused a form of contract to be prepared, reciting that he finds it impossible to make payments on the mortgage indebtedness and is in danger of losing the farm by foreclosure, that his son and daughter-in-law, plaintiffs herein, agree to make the payments of principal as they fall due during the lives of Henry Brust and his wife, Maggie, or the survivor, and that in consideration thereof Henry Brust agrees to and does make his will devising the premises to his son and daughter-in-law after the death of Henry Brust and Maggie Brust. On the same day he made a will so providing, and a few days later the contract was executed under seal by both parties. Prior to signing the contract the son expressed an uncertainty as to whether the contract would be valid, and asked his father to give him notes for the payments as he made them. This was satisfactory to the father, and the son then signed the contract. Payments aggregating about $900 were subsequently made by the son to the mortgagee, and the father delivered his. note to the son for each payment as it was made.

Henry Brust’s wife Maggie died in 1938. In May, 1940, he became acquainted with defendant, and about a month thereafter they were engaged to be married. In June of that year Henry began negotiating with his son to pay him money for a surrender of the contract. He made successive offers of $500, $1000 and $1500, all of which were refused. The son insisted that if he would surrender the contract at all he would also want payment of certain prior indebtedness, unrelated to the contract. On July 22 the son wrote a letter to his father stating that “the total amount you owe me is $2080.72.” That figure included the payments the son had made on the mortgage with interest thereon. The letter further contained an offer to return the notes and contract upon receipt of that sum. However, the son later refused to surrender the contract on those terms.

On August 20, 1940, Henry Brust caused title to the property to be placed in himself and defendant as joint tenants, and the following month he revoked his will. On August 20, 1945, four months prior to his death, he and defendant were married. On Henry’s death title to the property vested in defendant as surviving joint tenant, and the son and his wife thereafter brought this suit praying that defendant be decreed to hold title impressed with a trust for the purposes of the contract, and that she be required to convey legal title to plaintiffs.

The cause was referred to a master, who found that defendant had full knowledge of the contract at the time title was placed in joint tenancy, and that the notes, given by Henry Brust to his son after payments to the mortgagee were made by the latter, were mere evidences of the amounts so paid under the contract and could not have been legally collectible. He recommended that a decree be entered granting the relief sought by plaintiffs. Defendant’s exceptions to this report were overruled and a decree was entered for plaintiffs.

To reverse the decree defendant argues that the contract was intended merely as security for advances by plaintiffs in making payments on the father’s mortgage; that this is shown by the fact that notes were delivered by Henry Brust to his son for the amounts of principal payments made by the latter on the mortgage indebtedness and the fact that plaintiffs later offered to surrender the contract on being repaid the amount of such advances with interest; and that the contract should, therefore, be held to be a mortgage or equitable lien which plaintiffs should be required to surrender on being repaid whatever is due to them for the advances. We think this contention cannot be sustained. It is not disputed that an owner may contract to dispose of his property by will in a particular way; that such a contract, when based upon adequate consideration, is enforceable in equity; that the contract in the case at bar is unconditional on its face; and that plaintiffs have performed their obligations thereunder. To sustain the burden of establishing that an instrument absolute in form is in fact a mortgage or other security for a debt, clear and convincing proof to that effect must be made. The evidence here falls far short of this standard. The finding of the master that the notes were given merely as evidence of the amounts paid under the contract finds support in the record. The evidence shows that the son was uncertain as to the legal effect of the contract and wanted the notes to represent the payments made, if it developed that the contract was invalid; that Henry Brust had his lawyer draw up the contract and will in accordance with his own preferences, and that the notes were intended merely as a substitute for the contract if the latter should prove to be unenforceable. The only other evidence that the contract was not what it purported to be, but was in fact given only for security is the testimony of one witness, disputed by the testimony of plaintiff, that a conversation occurred between the plaintiff son and his mother at or about the time the contract was executed. This witness testified that Maggie Brust then said to plaintiff: “When we get the money to pay you back, we want to pay you back, because we want them all to have an equal share,” to which plaintiff replied, “Yes, when you get it, let me know.” This conversation, even if tending to show an understanding that the parents should have a right to redeem, cannot be accepted to alter the plain provisions of the written contract.

In determining whether a transaction consummated by a written instrument is unconditional or is, merely in the nature of a mortgage, conversations of the parties tending to show a contemporaneous understanding inconsistent with the terms of the instrument cannot be regarded. Some equity must be shown independently both of the instrument itself and of the understanding with which it was executed. (See Kelly v. Lehman, 297 Ill. 33, 56.) In the case cited we observed, with reference to a deed sought to be given the character of a mortgage: “The right to redeem lands so conveyed cannot be established by simply proving that such was the understanding on which the deed was executed, because equity as well as the law will seek for the understanding of the parties in the deed -itself. The right must be one paramount to and independent of the terms of the deed as well as of any understanding between the parties at the time it was executed. Parol evidence is admissible so far as it conduces to show the relations between the parties or to show any other fact or circumstance of a nature to control the deed and to establish such an equity as would give a right of redemption, and no further.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Metcalf v. Altenritter
369 N.E.2d 498 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1977)
Robison v. Moorefield
107 N.E.2d 278 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 N.E.2d 897, 405 Ill. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brust-v-brust-ill-1950.