Byron v. Byron

62 N.E.2d 790, 391 Ill. 256, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 359
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1945
DocketNo. 28798. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 62 N.E.2d 790 (Byron v. Byron) 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
Byron v. Byron, 62 N.E.2d 790, 391 Ill. 256, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 359 (Ill. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Murehy

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is from a decree of the circuit court of Piatt county, which on motion of defendants dismissed plaintiff’s complaint for want of equity. The subject matter of the litigation revolves around an 80-acre tract of land located in said county, the title of which was acquired by John Byron, appellant’s father, in 1918. In February, 1940, he conveyed the tract to his two daughters, appellees herein, reserving a life estate to himself. The title thus conveyed was subject to a mortgage lien of $6000. In September, 1943, John Byron executed a second deed conveying the same tract, including the life estate reserved by the first deed, to the same grantees. He died intestate July 17, 1944, leaving appellees, appellant and two other sons, his only heirs-at-law. Appellant has cultivated the land since 1934 arid has resided upon it since 1939. His first entry into the land in 1934 was pursuant to verbal arrangements made with John Byron.. It is alleged that after the deeds were made to appellees, he negotiated with one or both of appellees in reference to his occupancy and cultivation of the farm. It is stated that appellees were then acting for and on behalf of John Byron. In March, 1944, appellees started an ejectment action against appellant to obtain possession of the parts of the farm occupied and cultivated by him. A trial resulted in a judgment in favor of appellees. It appears that a receiver was appointed and leased the land to appellant for a period ending March 1, 1945.

In June, 1944, appellant started this suit making his two sisters and two brothers parties defendant. The mortgagee was not made a party. The brothers filed disclaimers and the cause was dismissed as to each of them. Appellant prayed that the two deeds from John Byron to appellees be set aside and the land partitioned among the heirs-at-law of John Byron as intestate property and that there be an accounting of the rents, issues and profits therefrom; that the value of certain improvements appellant had placed on the land during his possession be determined and that he be decreed an equitable lien in the land to the extent of such value; that there be a judicial determination of the amount of principal and interest due and unpaid on the mortgage and that there be an accounting of the principal of the mortgage indebtedness with a view of determining who received it and the purpose or purposes to which it was applied. It was prayed that an injunction be granted, restraining appellees from causing a writ of possession to issue in the ejectment action. The claims made in the complaint and the relief prayed, challenged by appellees’ motion to strike, raise a question of a freehold, which gives this court jurisdiction by direct appeal. Rossiter v. Soper, 384 Ill. 47; Wright v. Risser, 378 Ill. 72.

The complaint is voluminous and contains many allegations which are inconsistent with others and with the relief prayed. Many of the allegations are mere conclusions of the pleader. Parts of the complaint are irrfmaterial to the relief prayed. In short, it was subject to demurrer on any one of-several grounds. Appellees’ motion to dismiss alleges fifteen different grounds but no attempt will be made in this opinion to enumerate the various grounds or to discuss the various allegations of the complaint.

It is elementary that a complaint, in order to stand, must contain sufficient averments of facts to state a cause of action. The complaint here does not state a case which, if proved, would warrant the setting aside of the two deeds given by John Byron to appellees. Some facts are pleaded which, if proved, would support a finding that John Byrun "was advanced in years when he executed the deeds and that when he executed the first deed he was suffering from physical and mental ills, but no facts are pleaded.to show that his physical defects or mental deficiencies' were such as to render him incapable of making the first deed. The allegations that mental ills were present when the first deed was executed are not extended to show what his mental condition was when the second deed was signed. The complaint referred to certain things as fraudulent but no facts are stated to support such a conclusion. There are no facts stated showing a fiduciary relationship existing between any of the parties. In short, the complaint does not state a cause of action which, if proved, as alleged, would warrant a setting aside of the deeds. The complaint contains the general allegation that the deeds were without consideration. Such claim would not be material unless it was shown that John Byron was mentally incapable of making the deeds or 'that they were obtained by means of fraud or undue influence, for the reason that, in the absence of proof of such matters, John Byron had the right to convey his property without consideration if he should so elect, and upon his death an heir-at-law cannot attack the conveyance on the basis that there was no consideration.

Brief mention should be made of appellant’s attempt to plead fácts which would bypass the legal effect of an instrument he and his two brothers signed the day the first deed was executed. The substance of it was that the signers approved the father’s act in conveying the premises to their sisters, subject to the father’s life estate. It also specified that at the father’s death “such property shall be in their [appellees here] full possession.” The effect of the instrument or its effect as estopping appellant from claiming an interest is not of so much importance as the light thrown on the purpose for which the deeds were given. This is found in that part of appellant’s complaint where he seeks to avoid the effect such an instrument would have in defense of his claims and explains it was executed under circumstances that he should be relieved from facing as a defense. It is alleged that appellant’s brother Joseph told him that Walter, the other brother, owed various amounts, that the father was obligated on a part of Walter’s debts and that if the father should die intestate, owning these premises, such creditors would take the estate to the exclusion of John Byron’s heirs-at-law, and that the deed to the sisters was to hinder these creditors from collecting their" claims. It is alleged that the representation by Joseph as to the father’s liability was false, but it is not claimed that Walter was not indebted as stated. We will not consider the effect of such representations for it is enough to say that appellant was lending his name to a scheme which equity does not sanction. No cause of action was pleaded upon which the deeds of John Byron to appellees could be set aside. Brady v. Huber, 197 Ill. 291; McElroy v. Hiner, 133 Ill. 156.

The facts pleaded which refer to appellant’s claim that he was entitled to an equitable lien for improvements placed on the land are as follows: When John Byron bought the farm in 1918 it had a set of- improvements thereon consisting .of a house, barn, and other farm buildings. John Byron and those persons who were members of his family occupied the building from the time he acquired title to the date of his death. At that time appellant was a member of the family and continued to reside with John Byron on the said premises until his marriage in 1934. On his marriage he established a home for himself and wife in the village of Ivesdale, which was about two miles distant from the farm.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.E.2d 790, 391 Ill. 256, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byron-v-byron-ill-1945.