Dorsey v. Wolcott

50 N.E. 1015, 173 Ill. 539
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 N.E. 1015 (Dorsey v. Wolcott) 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
Dorsey v. Wolcott, 50 N.E. 1015, 173 Ill. 539 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

This record reveals a revolting story of imposition upon the infirmity of age and the helplessness of disease.

In May, 1892, Jehu Walker was an old man about seventy-nine years of age living in Logan county, where he had lived many years. At that time he owned, and had owned for many years, 160 acres of land which he cultivated as a farm and occupied as a homestead. He was a bachelor and lived alone.

On May 17, 1892, he had a stroke of paralysis. On November 23, 1893, he had a second stroke of paralysis. On April 11, 1894, a petition was filed for the appointment of a conservator of Jehu Walker. On May 10, 1894, upon the petition for such appointment, the jury returned a verdict finding said Walker to be a distracted person, afflicted with softening of the brain and incapable of caring for, and having charge of, his property. On August 1, 1895, Jehu Walker died. He was a man without education, and could neither read nor write.

The stroke of paralysis, which he had in May, 1892, affected the left side of his face and body and deprived him of the use of his left arm and leg. After he was paralyzed he talked but little, and, when he talked, it was with great difficulty. He was unable to dress or undress himself. He had to be dressed and undressed by others. Nor was he able to eat without help; he had to be fed by others. He was unable to walk without help. After he was paralyzed in 1892 he never went anywhere without an attendant, and never did anything, in the way of business or otherwise, without being attended by some other person. Before he was paralyzed he was close and miserly in his habits, and strictly careful of his property interests. After he was paralyzed, he changed entirely in these respects, and was almost reckless in the manner in which he disposed of his property.

As soon as he was paralyzed, a brother of his, named Samuel Walker, was sent for from Macoupin county and came to Jehu Walker’s farm in Logan county, where he staid one month, and then removed Jehu to Gillespie in Macoupin county, Illinois. At this time Jehu Walker was unable to walk. Prom the home of Samuel Walker he was taken to the house of the widow of a deceased brother, named Barbara Walker, the mother of George Walker, and the mother-in-law of William Howell hereinafter named. George Walker was a nephew of Jehu Walker, and the wife of Howell was his niece.

About July 27, 1892, George Walker took Jehu Walker back to his farm in Logan county. The 160 acres constituting the farm are described as the east half of the north-east quarter of section 15, etc., and the east half of the south-east quarter of said section 15. Almost immediately upon the return of Jehu Walker to his farm in July, 1892, with his nephew, George Walker, to-wit: on July 30, 1892, the said George Walker obtained from his uncle, the said Jehu Walker, a deed conveying to him the south 40 acres of said farm, to-wit: the south half of the east half of the south-east quarter of said section 15. The consideration named in this deed was §500.00, and by its terms the grantor, Jehu Walker, reserved the use of the land during" his lifetime. The land was then worth about §75.00 an acre. No consideration whatever was paid by George Walker for this conveyance, which was acknowledged by the grantor on July 30, 1892, and recorded on August 19, 1892. The testimony tends to show, that Jehu Walker was induced to make the deed upon the promise of George Walker to support him and care for him during the remainder of his life. In violation of this promise George Walker deserted his uncle soon after obtaining said deed, and, on August 27, 1892, sold the 40 acres, so conveyed to him, to certain bankers named Redmond & Lucas at Latham, Illinois, for §1000.00. In October, 1892, Jehu Walker bought the land back from Redmond & Lucas, and gave them §2200.00 for it.

The decree of the court below sets aside the deed to George Walker, arid orders the same to be canceled of record. No appeal is taken by George Walker from this part of the decree, and its correctness is not in dispute here. Redmond & Lucas were not parties defendant to the bill in the court below, which did not seek to reach any portion of the money paid to them by Jehu Walker.

After obtaining the deed from Jeliu Walker, and before he finally abandoned him, George Walker took Jehu Walker back from Logan county to Gillespie, in Macoupin county, to the house of William Howell, whose wife, as before stated, was a sister of George Walker. Jehu Walker remained with William Howell about a week. During this time, and on August 4,1892, William Howell induced the said Jehu Walker to execute to him a deed, conveying another 40 acres of said 160 acres, to-wit: the south half of the east half of the north-east quarter of said section 15. In this deed to Howell, Jehu Walker reserved the use of the land during his lifetime. One hundred dollars is named in the deed as the consideration thereof, but no money was actually paid for the land by William Howell. The testimony tends to show, that Jehu Walker made this deed to Howell upon the promise of the latter to take care of him during the remainder of his life.

After the execution of the deed to Howell on August 4, 1892, Howell took Jehu Walker back to his farm in Logan county, arriving there on August 11, 1892.

On September 5, 1892, Howell sold the 40 acres, so deeded to him, to Jacob A. Voile and John O. Voile for the sum of §2800.00. At the same time, Jehu Walker executed a deed, conveying to the same parties 80 acres of said 160 acres, to-wit: the east half of the north-east quarter of said section, for a consideration, expressed in the deed, of §3100.00. The latter deed included the 40 acres previously deeded by Jehu Walker to William Howell on August 4, 1892, and recites upon its face that, as to the south half of the 80-acre tract, the deed was intended to be only a quit-claim deed, and was intended only to convey the life interest therein of the grantor, Jehu Walker. In other words, Jehu Walker sold the north 40 acres of his farm to the Voiles, and at the same time quit-claimed to them his life estate in the south 40 acres, previously deeded to Howell. Jehu Walker received for such life estate only the sum of §150.00. The §2800.00 which William Howell thus received from the sale of this 40 acres he invested in a residence in the city of Gillespie, in Macoupin county.

William Howell states that, when he came to Jehu Walker’s farm in August, 1892, Jehu Walker had §750.00 in money and a certificate of deposit for §5900.00 in a bank called Scroggin’s bank, making- §6650.00 in all. If to this amount be added the §3100.00, realized from the sale to the Voiles he had, early in September, 1892, the sum of §9750.00. Of this amount the sum of §2200.00 appears to have been made use of to buy back from the bankers, Bedmond & Lucas, the land deeded to George Walker, leaving a balance of §7550.00. Of this sum of §7550.00 Jehu Walker paid over, as a loan to the appellee, Nelson Wolcott, §5700.00. Wolcott was a farmer and neighbor of Jehu Walker, and had been a neighbor for a number of years. The payment of §5700.00 to Wolcott was made about the first of September, 1892.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E. 1015, 173 Ill. 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorsey-v-wolcott-ill-1898.