Douglas v. West

31 N.E. 403, 140 Ill. 455
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 403 (Douglas v. West) 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
Douglas v. West, 31 N.E. 403, 140 Ill. 455 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the-Court:

This bill was filed on May 20, 1889, by Nellie Douglas, Stella Douglas, Leona Douglas and Franklin Douglas, (the-latter a minor suing by his next friend), who are the appellants herein, against Pleasant West, the appellee herein, to-restore a lost deed and perfect the title of the complainants to the premises therein described and for partition, etc. After hearing had upon bill, answer, replication and proofs taken, both oral and documentary, the court below dismissed the bill for want of equity, and this appeal is prosecuted from-such decree of dismissal.

Without setting forth the pleadings or going into an extended review of the evidence, we will content ourselves with,. stating such of the facts as we deem to be material in the decision of the cause. Thomas D. Brewer and Ann Brewer, his wife, were very old and had no children. He died on ■June 26, 1885, when he was over eighty years old, and she ■died on December 14, 1888, at the age of about ninety one years. For many years prior to the fall of 1884, they had resided in Yellow Springs, Greene County, Ohio, but some time in October, 1884, they removed to Danville, Illinois, where they had formerly lived before going to Ohio, and where Thomas had considerable property, and where he and his wife had many relations.

The complainants and the defendant are nieces and nephews •of Mrs. Brewer. The defendant appears to have been a man of shrewdness and experience. He attended to the business of Mr. Brewer for about thirteen years both during the latter’s residence in Ohio, and while he lived in Illinois. In the summer and fall of 1884 the complainants were minors, and the ■defendant was their guardian. On June 7, 1874, Mr. Brewer made a will and therein devised all his real estate to his wife during her life, and, at the death of himself and wife, all his '“real estate not disposed of” to Pleasant West, the defendant. 'There was a bequest of money to Carolina Yapp; and Jacob Yapp, the defendant’s father-in-law, a farmer, lumber dealer :and justice of the peace at Georgetown, was made executor in the will. The will was made in the office of Yapp and was left with him at the time of its execution and remained with him or with the defendant for eleven years and until the death ■of the testator.

In May, 1884, Brewer conveyed a valuable piece of property in Danville to the defendant. In August, 1884, while in Ohio, he executed a deed of a lot in Urbana, Illinois, to a nephew named Davis, and delivered the same to Davis after his return to Illinois. He also executed a deed of a lot in Danville to a ■nephew named Douglas, and a deed of another lot in the same town to a niece named Brewer.

In September, 1884, shortly before returning to Illinois, and in pursuance of a previously expressed purpose to do so, Thomas D. Brewer and his wife executed a deed, conveying to the complainants lot 7 in Block 4 Bange 1 Bast in Cunningham’s Addition to Danville, on which was situated a large, building, known as the Boland Boarding House. This deed ivas drawn by J. W. Hamilton, a justice of the peace in Tel-low Springs, in Ohio, and was executed and acknowledged before Hamilton by Mr. and Mrs. Brewer, and was witnessed by a man named Finderbaugh. It was handed to Mrs. Brewer and brought by her to Illinois. Some testimony waseintroduced by the defendant for the purpose of proving that this deed was not made by Mr. Brewer, but we think that its execution is clearly established; and counsel for appellee admit in their brief that it was signed and acknowledged by Brewer and his wife, conveying said property to the complainants. Hamilton, before whom the deed to Davis was acknowledged, swears that the deed to complainants, like that to Davis which is in the record, contained a clause by which the grantors reserved to “themselves and either of them absolute control of said property during their lives.”

The only material question in this case is: was there a delivery of said deed of lot 7 to the complainants as grantees therein during the life-time of Brewer ?

In December, 1884, Mr. Brewer told Mrs. Brewer to hand the deed to Mrs. Mary A. Moore, and accordingly Mrs Brewer delivered the deed to Mrs. Moore in Mr. Brewer’s presence. Mrs. Moore was an old friend of Mr. and Mrs. Brewer; she had known them for over fifty years; she was their neighbor in Danville, living about a half block from them and on the same street; they staid at her house during a part of the previous summer and she frequently visited them at their house. The deed remained in the possession of Mrs. Moore until after the death of Mr. Brewer. It was obtained from her possession in August, 1885, and destroyed under the circumstances hereinafter stated.

When Hamilton was requested by Brewer in Ohio to draw the deed, he did not have the description of the property and wrote to West in Illinois to get the description. He was told by Mr. and Mrs. Brewer, that they did not want West to know that they were conveying the property to the Douglas children. They told him, that they had given West enough, that he was greedy and wanted more, and that the Douglas children were relatives and were poor, and that they felt it their duty to give something to them, as well as to Davis. The following is a quotation from a letter written by Hamilton to West on September 23,1884: “At first they appeared to accept the proposition you made for them to go to your place, but to convey property or give up any of their property in any form, they would then object; * * * they are opposed to you making any investments in property, and say if they went to Ill. they would live in Danville in their own property, and would not go to Georgetown, ” where West lived. Hamilton swears, that they said they wanted to convey the boarding-house'lot to the Douglas children, but to control the property during their lives and collect the rents to live on.

Hamilton accompanied the old people to Illinois, and they arrived in Danville on October 15, 1884, and were met at the depot by West.- They went to the Boland boarding house. West then learned from Hamilton that a deed had been made to the Douglas children, and that the description had been sent for in order to draw such a deed. Brewer and his wife had not been in Danville more than two weeks before' West saw and examined the deed. He said that Mrs. Brewer obtained it and brought it to him for examination. It was not left with the defendant. It is clear to us from the evidence, that Mr. Brewer was afraid of West, and desired to keep this deed away from him. It is said that it was not delivered to Mrs. Moore for the Douglas children, but to hold for a temporary purpose, and that she was acting merely as the agent of the grantors while she was custodian of the deed. But we do not think the evidence supports this theory. It is claimed, that Mr. and Mrs. Brewer were fixing up a new house, and that Mrs. Moore was to hold the deed until the house was ready. But after they were settled in the new house, Mr. Brewer still permitted Mrs. Moore to keep the deed, and she had it when he died.

“The law presumes much more in favor of the delivery of •deeds in case of voluntary settlements, especially when made to infants, than it does in ordinary cases of bargain and sale.” Bryan v. Wash, 2 Gilm. 557; Rivard v. Walker, 39 Ill. 413. Jerome Douglas lived with the old folks in the fall of 1884, and saw the deed and read it. He swears, that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 403, 140 Ill. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-v-west-ill-1892.