Burroughs v. Mefford

56 N.E.2d 845, 387 Ill. 461
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1944
DocketNo. 27967. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 56 N.E.2d 845 (Burroughs v. Mefford) 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
Burroughs v. Mefford, 56 N.E.2d 845, 387 Ill. 461 (Ill. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This cause is here to review a decree of the circuit court of Crawford county setting aside a deed of Marilyn R. Burroughs to appellant Selena Rousch, conveying an undivided one-fourth interest in certain lands described therein, and personal property also described in the deed.

The facts are as follows: One William Rousch died intestate leaving appellant Selena Rousch, his widow, Emogene Mefford, Elsie Phipps and Frances Guy, his daughters, and appellee, daughter of a deceased son, as his sole heirs-at-law. He owned real estate of a value in the neighborhood of $40,000. In July, 1940, appellant Emogene Mefford was appointed guardian of appellee, who was then a minor. For about a year prior to the making of the deed here involved, appellee lived with Emogene Mefford and Frank, her husband. About April 14, 1943, a warranty deed was prepared, with the three daughters of William Rousch and their husbands, and appellee, as grantors, conveying to Selena Rousch, widow of William Rousch and mother of the three adult grantors, all the interest in the lands left by William Rousch. Appellee became 18 years of age on July 25, 1943. She was engaged to marry Paul Burroughs and the wedding was fixed for the date of her eighteenth birthday. On the evening of July 24, 1943, she was informed by Emogene and Frank Mefford that as she was becoming of age the next day, it would be necessary that some papers relative to her guardianship be signed, and that arrangements had been made to meet one Phillips, a notary public, at his office, at 7 o’clock the next morning. Accordingly, on the morning of July 25, appellants Emogene and Frank Mefford took appellee to Phillips’s office. Mefford handed appellee a deed and requested her to sign it. After some objection and asking why the matter had not been presented to her before, she did sign the deed, after consulting with Burroughs, and left the office of Phillips. She and Burroughs were married that day.

About two months thereafter she filed a complaint against appellants to set aside the deed, alleging want of consideration, the existence of a fiduciary .relationship be- » tween her and Emogene Mefford, her guardian, alleging the ignorance of appellee in business affairs, the false representation of the Meffords that the deed related to guardianship matters, and charging that they withheld from her all knowledge.of the deed until the morning of her marriage, thus giving her no opportunity to obtain independent advice. She alleged she did not, at the time she signed the deed, understand it. Answers were filed denying fraud or misrepresentation or undue advantage, and averring that appellee is intelligent and educated and knew at the time she executed the instrument that it was a deed and what its effect would be. On hearing before the chancellor, a decree was entered setting aside the deed and ordering an accounting.

Two principal assignments of error are made here. The first is that the decree is broader than the complaint on which it is founded, and, second, it ignores the positive evidence submitted by appellee’s own witnesses. It.is a rule well established that a plaintiff must recover on the case made by his complaint supported by evidence. He cannot state one cause of action in his complaint and make out a different one by his proof. (Gregory v. Gregory, 323 Ill. 380.) In this case the issue made by the pleadings was whether the deed was wrongfully, fraudulently and without consideration obtained from appellee under circumstances justifying the trial court in setting it aside. It is clear from reading the abstract that appellee was induced by Emogene and Frank Mefford to go to the office of the notary public on the day- of her eighteenth birthday, the day on which she also was to be married, with the understanding that she was to execute some papers relative to the guardianship, which was about to cease by reason of appellee’s becoming of legal age. At the notary’s office she was presented a deed. Nothing had been told her prior to that time of the purpose to have her execute a deed. It is also clear that a fiduciary relation existed between Emogene Mefford and appellee and that appellee was ignorant of the legal purport of the deed. These were the charges in the complaint.. These facts are found by the decree. It appears, therefore, that the decree is definitely within the scope of the complaint, and this contention of appellants cannot be sustained.

Counsel for appellants appear to place some importance upon certain observations made by the chancellor in rendering his decree. Such observations on the evidence are not a part of the decree. This court reviews only the decree and even though the reasons given may not be sound, the decree will be affirmed if it is supported by the pleadings and the evidence.

Appellants also argue that, under the proof made by appellee, the existence of a fiduciary relationship between appellee and appellant Emogene Mefford, arising out of the relationship of guardian and ward, had terminated, as appellee became of legal age some eight hours preceding the presentation of the deed for her signature. This contention appears to be based upon the theory that since, upon arrival at the age of eighteen, the authority of the guardian over appellee had expired, there can be no recovery based upon a fiduciary relationship as alleged in the complaint.

Courts of equity hesitate to set limitations as to the facts and circumstances upon which a fiduciary relationship may arise. Such relationship includes not only all legal and technical relations, such as guardian and ward, attorney and client, principal and agent, and the like, but extends to every possible case in which a fiduciary relationship exists in fact and in which there is confidence reposed on one side and a resulting domination and influence on the other. The relationship need not be legal, it may be either moral, social, domestic or merely personal. When such relationship is established, the burden is upon one profiting by transactions arising out of that relationship to show that such transactions were conducted fairly, without the exercise of undue influence and for a valuable consideration. A transfer made to one who exercises a dominant position in a fiduciary relationship with the transferor is presumptively fraudulent and will be set aside unless the one claiming the benefit thereof establishes its fairness by clear and convincing proof. Fisher v. Burgiel, 382 Ill. 42; Children’s Home of Rockford v. Andress, 380 Ill. 452; Seely v. Rowe, 370 Ill. 336; Mors v. Peterson, 261 Ill. 532.

In McParland v. Larkin, 155 Ill. 84, where a deed was procured from an erstwhile minor within a short time after she had reached her majority, and before final settlement of guardianship matters, it was argued that the deed was made with full knowledge of the facts, and that, as it was executed six. days after plaintiff arrived at her majority, it was not, therefore, to be questioned. The chancellor, however, set the deed aside, and in affirming that decree this court observed: “The presumption of influence on the part of the guardian, and the dependence of the ward, continues after the legal condition of guardianship has ended, and transactions between them, during the continuance of the presumed influence of the guardian, will be set .aside, unless shown to have been the deliberate act of the ward, after full knowledge of her rights.

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.E.2d 845, 387 Ill. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burroughs-v-mefford-ill-1944.