Chilvers v. Huenemoerder

250 Ill. App. 499, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 296
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 4, 1928
DocketGen. No. 7,953
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 250 Ill. App. 499 (Chilvers v. Huenemoerder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chilvers v. Huenemoerder, 250 Ill. App. 499, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 296 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant, as conservator of the estate of Myron K. Brunson,' filed a bill in the circuit court of DuPage county, setting forth that his ward, Myron K. Brunson, was a bachelor, 75 years of age, and the owner of certain real estate in the village of Downers Grove; that for some 20 years he had been employed in the business of house moving and well drilling; that prior to 1924, he had been active in business, efficient and careful; that about the year 1924 he began to show signs of advanced age, was forgetful and indifferent as to business matters and that his condition grew worse; that appellant “is informed and believes that in the spring of the year A. D. 1927, Daniel C. O’Connell and Walter Huenemoerder, doing business as Fort Dearborn Builders, of the City of Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, did through fraud, misrepresentation and undue influence, induce said Myron K. Brunson, who was then 74 years of age, a bachelor, living alone, seriously ill and in a mental and physical condition which rendered him wholly incapable of tending to his matters of business, to sign a contract for the construction of a large flat building”; that appellant “is informed and believes that the building contemplated and which has been partially constructed on said premises should not cost more than $95,000 to build complete”; that at the time of the signing of said contract, said above-mentioned persons, hereafter referred to as Fort Dearborn Builders, “were insolvent and hopelessly involved financially”; that on the 27th day of June, A. D. 1927, said Fort Dearborn Builders, “through fraud, misrepresentation and undue influence, induced Myron K. Brunson to execute a trust deed, dated June 27, 1927, * ® * and to execute and deliver to them the bonds mentioned in said trust deed, aggregating the sum of $100,000; that all said bonds and trust deeds, your orator is informed and believes, were delivered by * * * Fort Dearborn Builders, to the Heitman Trust Company,” and that “its officers, employees and agents, were at the time acquainted with said Daniel C. O’Connell and Walter Huenemoerder, trading as Fort Dearborn Builders, and accepted said trust deed, bonds and other documents, with full knowledge of the financial condition and general reputation of the said * • * * Fort Dearborn Builders, and with full knowledge of the circumstances of said transaction, and the contract between Myron K. Brunson and the said builders ; that the execution and delivery of said above mentioned trust deed, bonds, etc., were obtained from said Myron K. Brunson upon the fraudulent misrepresentation of the * * * Fort Dearborn Builders, to the effect that the money secured from the sale of the mortgages was to be used to pay the cost of the construction of the said building and * * * that no commissions for the negotiation óf the said mortgages were to be charged to said Myron K. Brunson, but that the full face value of said mortgages were to be used to pay the cost of the construction of the building”; that said Fort Dearborn Builders “also fraudulently induced Brunson to execute and deliver to them additional bonds aggregating the sum of $25,000, being part of the $100,000 mentioned in the above trust deed, which were to be subrogated to $75,000 of the above-mentioned bonds, and which last-mentioned bonds your orator believes were obtained by Daniel C. O’Connell and Walter Huenemoerder for their own personal use, and that they have negotiated said bonds at tremendous discounts and have appropriated the moneys received therefor to their own private use; that said Fort Dearborn Builders thereafter on July 26, 1927, procured the said Brunson to execute a trust deed securing notes aggregating $2,306.25”; and also, “by the same fraudulent misrepresentations and undue influence, caused said Myron K. Brunson to execute and deliver to them a, third mortgage trust deed * * * securing notes aggregating the sum of $31,500, and to deliver the bonds secured thereby.”

Said bill further alleges that appellant “is informed and believes that the Heitman Trust Company, a corporation, has made certain payments on said loan, the exact amount of which is unknown to your orator, but that your orator is informed and believes that the advancements amount to about $50,000; that a portion of said $50,000 was obtained by said * * * Fort Dearborn Builders, by. fraudulent affidavits and bogus waivers, said sums so obtained they have also appropriated to their own personal use; * * * that he is informed and believes that said Heitman Trust Company, a corporation, claims the sum of $11,000 as commissions and expenses in advance to make said mortgage of $75,000, and that said Heitman Trust Company, a corporation, has with it on deposit approximately the sum of $12,000, undisbursed, in said loan”; that the Fort Dearborn Builders “by fraudulently misrepresenting to said Myron K. Brunson that they were unable to obtain advancements on said first mortgage induced said Myron K. Brunson to make a further advancement to them of approximately $8,000 in cash, which said Builders agreed to return to said Myron K. Brunson but which they failed, neglected and refused to do, and in order to obtain said $8,000 the said builders, through fraudulent misrepresentation induced said Myron K. Brunson to mortgage and dispose of all the remainder of his property, and that he is now destitute and has no money with which to complete said building, nor any money for the necessaries of life. * * ”; that said building has been partially erected; that there are now outstanding more than $20,000 in unpaid accounts, and that it will require approximately $25,000 to complete said building; “that said Heitman Trust Company refuses to make any further payments on said loan, and that the Fort Dearborn Builders have abandoned and refuse to complete said building”; that appellant is informed and believes that said Fort Dearborn Builders “have negotiated the above trust deeds and notes, and have obtained thereon approximately the sum of $47,000, which they have appropriated to their own personal use.”

Said bill named as parties defendant said Fort Dear-born Builders, Heitman Trust Company, Lake View Trust & Savings Bank, “unknown owners and holders of the notes and bonds secured by” the trust deeds mentioned, and Chicago Title & Trust Company, and prayed “that the above mentioned mortgages or trust deeds be vacated and set aside and be declared to be absolutely null and void; that the notes and bonds secured by said trust deeds be also declared null and void; that the holders of the same be decreed to surrender them for collection; that the contract between said Myron K. Brunson and Daniel C. O’Connell and Walter Huenemoerder, doing business as Fort Dear-born Builders, * * * be decreed to be surrendered by said builders and canceled, and that the same be decreed to be absolutely null and void; that an accounting be taken in this behalf by this honorable court, and that the equities of the parties hereto may be ascertained, and that your orator may have such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet.”

To said bill appellees Heitman Trust Company and Chicago Title & Trust Company filed demurrers, general and special, which were sustained and, the complainant electing to abide his bill, a decree was entered dismissing the same. To reverse said decree, this appeal is prosecuted.

The question here for determination is whether, on the allegations of the bill, the court erred in sustaining said demurrers.

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Bluebook (online)
250 Ill. App. 499, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chilvers-v-huenemoerder-illappct-1928.