Cross v. Janes

158 N.E. 694, 327 Ill. 538
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1927
DocketNo. 18334. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 158 N.E. 694 (Cross v. Janes) 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
Cross v. Janes, 158 N.E. 694, 327 Ill. 538 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Cumberland county dismissing for want of equity appellant’s bill, filed to the March, 1926, term of court, seeking to reform a certain deed, to set aside another deed as a cloud upon appellant’s title, and praying for a writ of assistance for the purpose of placing appellant in possession of approximately twenty-five acres of land situated in that county.

The material facts disclosed by the proof are, that in June, 1889, John Gray and his wife, Elizabeth, for a consideration of $250, conveyed the property here involved by quit-claim deed, wherein the grantees were designated as “Alexander Cross and Eliza Cross, and at their death to James Cross, their son.” October 14, 1892, Cross and his wife, Eliza, who were the parents of appellant, conveyed the same property by warranty deed to their two daughters, Mary and Winnie Cross. The former, and the daughter and only heir of the latter, who is deceased, are appellees here. The consideration named in the second deed was one dollar, and the grantors reserved to themselves a life estate. The two deeds were thereafter recorded on the same day, November 2, 1892, but the county records show the omission of the words, “and at their death to James Cross, their son,” appearing in the deed of June, 1889. That original instrument has been certified to this court, and an inspection thereof shows two pen lines drawn horizontally through the aforesaid quoted words. The pen lines are of a different colored ink than that used in the quit-claim deed form at the time of its execution and acknowledgment. John Gray, one of the grantors in the first deed mentioned, died prior to this litigation, but his wife, Elizabeth, was alive and eighty-four years of age. Her deposition was taken, the substance of which was, that she recognized and identified the signatures of herself and husband on the original deed which they made to Alexander and Eliza Cross, and at their death to James Cross, their son, and that neither she nor her husband changed the deed or crossed out any words after executing it. She also stated that the last payment of the consideration for the sale was made to her husband by the acceptance of a team of horses, which were the property of appellant, who was then a minor. Eliza Cross, appellant’s mother, died in 1895, but his father continued to live on the property until a year or so prior to his death, which occurred in October, 1925. The bill in this case was filed by appellant at the term of court succeeding his father’s death.

Appellant at the time of the trial was fifty-two years of age. He testified, in substance, that he first saw the deed to the property at the time it was made and received by his parents and at that time there were no pen marks or erasures on it; that his two horses were used as part payment on the property; that a year or so after his mother’s death was the first time he knew certain words in the deed had been crossed out; that his father gave him the altered deed about 1907, and told him at that time, and on other occasions, that he didn’t want to change the deed but the mother of the witness insisted upon it being changed, and it was done to satisfy her; that the father went to one Welshimer three times before he would change it, and on that occasion Welshimer told the father, “I will, but it ain’t worth the paper it’s written on.” It appears that appellant farmed the land for some years during his father’s lifetime. The evidence of two other witnesses was introduced by appellant. One of these was an insurance agent, who recalled a visit to the Cross home in 1892 seeking to insure the house. He testified they stated the insurance would have to be in appellant’s name, as the property was in his name because they had traded in his team of horses as a part of the purchase price. Another witness, a nephew of appellant’s father, testified the latter talked with him several times, after 1890, about the purchase of the land and trading in appellant’s team as part payment; that his uncle said the land was deeded to appellant at the death of the latter’s parents; that his wife kept at him to change the deed; that after the deed was changed his uncle told witness about his wife and himself going to Welshimer three times before the latter would mark the deed out.

Mary Janes, one of appellees, and her husband, were the only witnesses who testified in their behalf. The former stated that appellant had rented and looked after the property up to the time of their father’s death and thereafter delivered possession thereof to her, and she had since rented it; that the deed executed by her father and mother to herself and sister in 1892 was delivered to witness by appellant after their father’s death, and he then stated the place was hers and that she was the only one who could have the buildings insured. She insured the buildings at that time and had no knowledge that appellant claimed the property until the bill was filed in this case. Her husband testified corroborating some of the statements made by his wife. Appellant sought to explain some of the statements alleged to have been made by him to his sister and as testified to by her, but the chancellor refused to hear that testimony.

Two material questions confront us for decision: First, whether the proof sufficiently establishes an alteration in the deed after its execution and delivery and whether there was a satisfactory explanation of such alteration; and second, if the deed was so altered, may laches be imputed to appellant because he did not bring his action at an earlier date and prior to the death of his father, who, appellees claim, must have known the true facts pertaining to the entire transaction and the deeds.

Appellees object to the consideration of any of the evidence contained in the deposition of Elizabeth Daggy, former wife of John Gray, and that the court erred in receiving it after appellees made a motion to suppress the deposition. The reason for the motion was that the deposition had been taken, upon due notice, at the residence of Elizabeth, before a notary public who at the time was a stenographer employed in the office of counsel for appellant. Section 33 of chapter 51 (Smith’s Stat. 1925, p. 1317,) provides that “the party, his attorney, or any person who shall in anywise be interested in the event of the suit, shall not be permitted to dictate, write or draw up any deposition which may at any time be taken under this act,” etc. The commissioner before whom the deposition was taken was not “interested in the event of the suit,” within the meaning of the statute. Her employment as a stenographer by appellant’s solicitors might, and not unnaturally would, cause suspicion in appellees’ mind of her fairness and impartiality but would not make her interested in the event of the suit. We do not approve the practice of having an employee of solicitors in a case made commissioner to take depositions, but we cannot say it is within the prohibition of the statute. The solicitors of both appellant and appellees reside in the same city — Mattoon, Illinois. The deposition was taken in that city. Notice in writing was given appellees’ solicitors on February 1, 1927, that the deposition would be taken upon oral interrogatories at the residence of the witness in the city of Mattoon on February 12, 1927, before Iva M. Richeson, notary public. Iva M. Richeson was the stenographer of appellant’s solicitors — a fact which was presumably known to appellees’ solicitors.

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Bluebook (online)
158 N.E. 694, 327 Ill. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cross-v-janes-ill-1927.