Dowdall v. Cannedy

32 Ill. App. 207, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 115
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 23, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ill. App. 207 (Dowdall v. Cannedy) 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
Dowdall v. Cannedy, 32 Ill. App. 207, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 115 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Pleasants, P. J.

The parties to this suit are brother and sister residing in the county of Greene. George L. Dowdall, another brother, who resides in Macoupin, died there on the 6th of June, 1879, leaving a will by which he devised all his real estate to his wife for her life, and in case she should have issue by a future marriage, to her and such issue in fee, but if she should die without issue, then that at her death it should be sold and the proceeds equally divided between his father, brothers, sister, sister-in-law, and two half sisters jointly, making eight equal parts. The same disposition was made of his personal property. His wife was named to be his executrix, but she did not survive him, and he left no descendant. On the 1st day of July, appellant was duly appointed administrator with the will annexed. As such, in the fall of that year he made sale of the personal effects, which realized about enough to pay the debts. In November, 1880, he purchased of appellee her interest in the real estate for $1,200 cash, and took a conveyance thereof in the form of two quit-claim deeds, the land lying in two counties. In August, 1881, he sold all the real estate, under an order of the County Court, to Don A. Burke for $11,750, one-half cash, and the balance in a note, at one year, with interest at eight per cent. In November following appellee tiled her petition to that court for an order on appellant as such administrator to pay over to her the balance of the share of the proceeds of said estate to which she was entitled under the will, after deducting the $1,200 paid to her as above stated, which petition he successfully resisted, the court holding that by virtue of the quit-claim deeds mentioned she had ceased to have any interest in said estate. On her appeal from that order denying her petition the Circuit Court held the same way and affirmed it. Thereupon on the 12th day of January, 1885, she filed the bill herein, praying to have said deeds canceled, and for the relief sought by said petition.

It sets forth the facts above stated, excepting the filing of said petition and the proceedings therein, and avers that before she was informed of the provisions of the will or oilier rights thereunder, and before defendant, as administrator, had made any report of the condition of said estate, he came to her and solicited the purchase of her interest in it; that she then told him she did not know what it amouted to, nor what right or power she had to sell or convey it, nor when she would be entitled to it ór any part of it; that he told her he didn’t know just what it would amount to; that there were debts coming against the estate of which he had not heard until recently; that the land would have to be divided by a partition suit, which would involve cost and expense and delay; that there now was a minor heir less than a year old, which she knew was a fact; that he then further stated that the land could not be divided, nor the proceeds thereof, until said minor was of age; that complainant therefore might not receive anything from them in her lifetime; and that he would then, November 6, 1880, give her in ready money the sum of $1,200, for all her interest in said estate; that knowing he was a man of business experience, and well acquainted with the condition of the estate and the provisions of the will, and haxdng confidence in him and in his disposition toward her “as her brother and as the trustee, as it were, of her interests,” she accepted all his statements as true, and sold and conveyed all her interest in the real and personal estate of the testator on the terms proposed. It then avers that she afterward discovered he had “grossly deceived” her in respect to the condition of the estate and the terms and effect of the will, and as to when the land could be dixnded and when she could obtain her share of the proceeds of the sale of the same; that from his reports thereafter made by him as administrator it appeared that of the proceeds of real and personal property of the estate she was entitled, for her share as heir and under the will, to $1,939.92.

Besides the averment that he had “ grossly deceived ” her, as above set forth, all that the bill contains as a charge of fraud is the following: “ That by the abuse of her confidence in his fairness and good faith, and by the disregard of his duty in the premises, and the abuse and betrayal of his trust, seeking to speculate upon the trust funds so being in his hands to administer and to wrongfully deprive your oratrix of her fair share of said estate, he has wronged and cheated her out of more than one entire third of her just net share of said estate.” A demurrer to this bill was overruled and the defendant answered, denying the gravamen thereof, and setting up as a further bar the order and judgment of the Circuit and County Court above referred to, as having been made upon a-hearing on the same grounds of claim here relied on. To these special matters in the answer exceptions were filed, the consideration of which was reserved to the final hearing.

Upon the pleadings and the proofs taken and reported by the master, the court found that said sale and conveyance was procured to be made by the fraudulent representations and deceptions practiced by defendant, and abuse of confidence reposed in him by his sister, the complainant, because of his relationship to her and of his being administrator with the will annexed of said estate, and thereupon decreed the sale and deeds void and canceled, and that defendant account for and pay over to her so much of the proceeds of his sale of said lands and of the personal estate as she was entitled to, to-wit, thirty-five two hundred twenty-fourths of the same, with interest from the date of the filing of the bill, which on further reference to the master to ascertain and compute, was found and decreed to be (including interest to November 24, 1888, the date of the decree, amounting to $131.83) the sum of $895.23. Exceptions were duly taken to the master’s reports and to the several orders and decrees of the court.

Upon the assumption that this sale by appellant was obtained by fraud, we do not think she had a remedy at law, either in the Probate or Circuit Court, nor that the judgments of those courts upon her petition referred to were such adjudications as would bar the relief sought by this bill. The deeds of conveyance stood in the way, an insurmountable obstacle. The direct object of the bill was to remove it by their cancellation, and the power to cancel them was in the chancellor alone. Obtaining jurisdiction for that purpose he would retain it to do complete justice in the premises between the parties. Bnt we are clearly of opinion that no proper case was here made for the rightful exercise of that power.

Besides the documents introduced, the only evidence in the record is the testimony of complainant and her husband, in her behalf, and of the defendant in his own. At the time of the sale in question she was about fifty years of age, for many of which she had been, as she then was, living with her husband, who was something over sixty, on their farm in Greene county. Habitual or frequent personal association with the defendant had thus been long broken up and her life identified with that of a nearer and dearer one. She consulted her husband most fully throughout this whole transaction. The purchase of her interest was not proposed until June, 1880, nearly or quite a year after the death of the testator and probate of the will. Within two weeks after his death she was correctly informed of the provisions of the will and of her interest in the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ill. App. 207, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowdall-v-cannedy-illappct-1889.