Crawford v. Hurst

132 N.E. 521, 299 Ill. 503
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1921
DocketNo. 13826
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 132 N.E. 521 (Crawford v. Hurst) 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
Crawford v. Hurst, 132 N.E. 521, 299 Ill. 503 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, Minerva C. Crawford and her husband, Henry H. Crawford, filed their bill in the circuit court of Brown county against Allen B. Hurst, appellee, and Apolles W. O’Harra, Clifton J. O’Harra, Earle W. Wood, Henry S. Walker and Jacob S. Palmer, co-partners doing business as the O’Harra Farm Mortgage Company, charging, in substance, that Stella Hurst died March 25, 1917, intestate, seized of the equitable title in fee of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 8, and the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 17, in township 2, south, range 2, west of the fourth principal meridian, in said county, leaving her surviving Minerva C. Crawford, her sister, and Allen B. Hurst, her husband, as her only heirs; that Minerva C. Crawford is the equitable owner of an undivided one-half of the premises subject to a dower interest therein of Allen B. Hurst, and that Allen B. Hurst is the equitable owner of the other undivided one-half in fee and has a dower interest in her half; that said real estate was purchased in January, 1910, of George W. and Arthur McCoy by her husband with the money of Stella Hurst and the title thereto was taken in his name; that the other defendants, composing the O’Harra Farm Mortgage Company, hold a mortgage of $6000 against said land and which is a first lien thereon. The prayer of the bill was for a declaration of trust and for partition, subject to the mortgage aforesaid. All of the defendants answered the bill and replications were filed to the answers. On a hearing the circuit court dismissed the bill for want of equity. The appeal is direct to this court.

The following facts were established by the proofs and were not disputed: On January 10, 1910, George W. McCoy and Arthur McCoy entered into a written contract with Allen B. Hurst, by which it is recited that the McCoys on that day executed a warranty deed to Hurst to said premises for the consideration of $10,400, $600 of which was paid in cash and $1000 was to be evidenced by a note which was attached to the contract and signed by Hurst and his wife, Stella, payable on or before March 6, 1910. It was further provided by the contract that said note and the further sum of $8800 were to be paid at the Brown County State Bank on or before. March 6, 1910, and in case said payments were not made as agreed, the $600 cash payment was to be retained as liquidated damages for failure to complete the purchase, but in case the payments were made, then the Brown County State Bank was to deliver to Hurst the warranty deed aforesaid, which had been executed on the date of the contract. On September 20, 1909, Stella and Allen B. Hurst' sold to John Bowman a certain other tract of land for $9500 which • belonged to Stella. On March 1, 1910, she deposited $9400 of this latter purchase money-in the First National Bank of Mount Sterling. On March 5, 1910, she drew a check on said bank for the sum of $9400 in favor of her husband, Allen B. Hurst, and on the same day, March 5, 1910, he paid the remainder of the purchase money to the McCoys, $9800, and received a warranty deed to the premises, which was recorded April 4, 1910. On March 20, 1916, Hurst and his wife executed and delivered the $6000 mortgage aforesaid to the O’Harra Farm Mortgage Company, and it is still a valid lien on the premises. Stella Hurst died intestate March 25, 1917, leaving no children or descendants of children, but leaving her sister, Minerva C. Crawford, and her husband, as her only heirs.

The original bill charged that Allen B. Hurst had been in possession of said land since the death of his wife and that he is chargeable with annual rent amounting to $500. The answer of Hurst charges that since the date of the warranty deed to him he has been in possession of the land, has used and occupied the same, has collected all rents and profits and has paid all taxes thereon, with full knowledge and consent of Stella Hurst. There is no proof in the record as to the occupancy of the land, collection of rents or payment of taxes. It was proved by the two McCoys that Hurst told them that his wife had money and they wanted to put it in land, and that his wife’s money was buying the land in question. Arthur McCoy testified positively that Hurst told him it was his wife’s money that was going into the land,—“the money out of the land of Bowman,”—John L. Bowman. It was proven by two other witnesses that previous to his wife’s death Hurst told'them that the land belonged to his wife and that she did not want to sell it. He also gave to them as a reason why he did not want to have a graveyard fenced on the place, that the land belonged to his wife and that she did not want it fenced. Hurst in his testimony denied telling the McCoys that his wife’s money went into the purchase of the land and denied saying to the other two1 witnesses that his wife owned the land. He admitted, however, that he had a conversation with the latter two witnesses about fencing the graveyard. His testimony in denial of these facts was competent. He also testified that the land did not belong to his wife, and this testimony is objected to on the ground that he was an incompetent witness against the appellants. This latter evidence was clearly incompetent. Some of the witnesses testified for appellants that Hurst’s wife, out of his presence, said that she was sick and wTas not present when the deed to the land was made, and that she had asked that the deed be made in her name when the place was bought but that it was made in her husband’s name, and that these statements were made shortly before she died. This testimony was also incompetent. The testimony of George W. McCoy was to the effect that he did not know Stella Hurst, but thought that Hurst’s wife was present when the deed was made but was not certain. The foregoing is the sum and substance of all of the testimony bearing upon the issues in this case.

We think the evidence in the record shows, beyond a reasonable doubt, that at least $9400 of the purchase money for the land in question was money furnished by Stella Hurst, wife of Allen B. Hurst. There is no competent evidence in the record as to what the understanding was on Mrs. Hurst’s part as to whom the deed was to be made. There is no proof of any understanding between Hurst and his wife that the deed was to be made to him. The evidence does positively show that the contract for the land with the McCoys was made by them with Allen B. Hurst, and that on the day the contract and deed were drawn there was not one word said between them or to the scrivener as to whom the land, should be conveyed. The well settled rule of law in this State is, that the intention of the parties to create a resulting trust is not necessary to its existence. Such a trust results from the fact that one man’s money has been invested in land and the conveyance taken in the name of another. So, also, where two or more persons together advance the purchase price and the title is taken in the name of one of them a trust will result in favor of the others, and all of them will take the title in equity in undivided shares in the property, proportioned to their respective shares of the purchase money furnished by them. A resulting trust, as the term implies, is not based upon agreement of the parties but is independent of any contract, and is raised by the law itself upon a particular established state of facts. (Baughman v. Baughman, 283 Ill. 55; Katzing v. Wiegand, 286 id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 N.E. 521, 299 Ill. 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-hurst-ill-1921.