Easley v. Little

145 N.E. 625, 314 Ill. 553
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
DocketNo. 16344
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 625 (Easley v. Little) 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
Easley v. Little, 145 N.E. 625, 314 Ill. 553 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees, heirs of Sarah A. Little, deceased, filed their. bill to partition real estate alleged to have belonged to Mrs. Little at the time of her death. The real estate consisted of farm land and a lot in the city of Benton. There is no controversy about the farm land. Mrs. Little had during her lifetime conveyed to appellant, Josephine Little, the lot in Benton, reserving to herself a life estate and the right “to sell, trade or dispose” of the property, if she desired, during her natural life. That deed is dated September 24, 1918, and was filed for record June 13, 1919. The consideration expressed in the deed was one dollar and love and affection. May 23, 1922, Mrs. Little executed a warranty deed conveying the premises to W. L. Capps for the. expressed consideration of $2000, which was filed for record June 3, 1922, and June 3, 1922, Capps and wife by warranty deed reconveyed the premises to Mrs. Little for the expressed consideration of $2000, which deed was recorded the day of its date. The bill alleges the deed from Mrs. Little to Josephine was never delivered; that no consideration was paid for the conveyance; that May 23, 1922, Mrs. Little sold the premises to W. L. Capps, and he conveyed them back to her June 3, 1922; and that the deed from Mrs. Little to appellant constituted a cloud on the title of appellees. The bill prayed the appointment of a guardian ad litem for appellant, who was a minor twelve years old, that the deed to her be canceled and set aside and the premises partitioned among appellees. The guardian ad litem answered the bill for appellant, claiming she was the owner of the fee simple title by virtue of the conveyance from Mrs. Little, and averred that the conveyances from Mrs. Little to Capps and from Capps back to her were without consideration and were made in an attempt to defeat appellant’s title and were inoperative and of no force and effect. The guardian ad litem also filed a cross-bill substantially along the lines of the answer. Appellees answered the cross-bill, and the cause was heard by the court. A decree was rendered finding the deed to appellant was null and void, that it was made without consideration, and that it had never been delivered. The decree also found the deeds from Mrs. Little to Capps and from Capps back to her were valid deeds and passed a good and valid title. The cross-bill was dismissed and partition decreed among appellees as heirs-at-law of Mrs. Little. Josephine Little has by her guardian ad litem and next friend prosecuted this appeal from that decree.

The decision of the case involves the construction and effect of the deed from Sarah A. Little to appellant, dated September 24, 1918, recorded June 13, 1919.

Mrs. Little died in September, 1923. Appellant is the illegitimate child of one of the daughters of Mrs. Little. The mother of appellant was married, and appellant had lived with her grandmother practically from the date of her birth and was living with her at the time the conveyance was made to her, and, as we understand the record, at the time of the death of Mrs. Little. The conveyance to appellant was a statutory-form warranty deed, and was sufficient, under section 9 of our statute on conveyances, to convey to the grantee a fee. The grantor reserved a life estate to herself, but did not limit the estate or interest conveyed to the grantee by the reservation of a life estate to the grantor. The deed contained a further reservation to the grantor of the right to “sell, trade or dispose” of the premises during her life, but that reservation was not intended to limit the interest or estate granted to a less estate than a fee. The decree finds the deed to appellant was null and void; that it was made for no consideration; that the grantor owed no duty to the grantee; that the deed was not executed for the purpose of passing the title; that it was not the intention of the grantor to deliver the deed and that it never was delivered, and that appellant acquired no title by virtue of the conveyance. The decree also finds that the conveyances from Mrs. Little to Capps and from Capps back to her were good and valid conveyances and passed the title to the premises.

The deed was a voluntary conveyance to the grandchild of the grantor, and the consideration expressed was love and affection. That was a good consideration and rendered the deed a valid conveyance. (Spencer v. Razor, 251 Ill. 278.) The execution, acknowledgment and recording of a deed reserving a life estate to the grantor is prima facie evidence of a delivery, and where the grantee is a minor and the conveyance is a voluntary one by a parent or grandparent delivery is presumed, and the burden is on the opposite party to disprove delivery. (Spencer v. Razor, supra; Valter v. Blavka, 195 Ill. 610; Buck v. Garber, 261 id. 378; Sargent v. Roberts, 265 id. 210.) The only reasonable inference warranted by the testimony is that Mrs. Little had the deed recorded. Under the law and the evidence it must be held the deed was delivered.

The granting clause of the deed conveyed the fee to the grantee subject to a life estate reserved by the grantor, and the further reservation in the grantor of the right during her life to sell and dispose of the lot. In other words, it was a conveyance of the fee subject to a life estate in the grantor, and her right during her life to divest the fee conveyed by selling the premises. In no event can it be said the deed did not vest the fee in the grantee, unless it can be said the reservation of the right in the grantor during her life to sell and dispose of the property was so repugnant to the estate granted as to render the deed inoperative and of no effect to convey to the grantee any estate or interest. The general rule, however, is, that a stipulation or condition in a deed repugnant to the grant is void. Levy v. McDonnell, 135 A. S. R. (Ark.) 183; Wilkins v. Norman, 111 A. S. R. (N. C.) 767; Pynchon v. Stearns, (Metc.) 45 Am. Dec. 210.

In construing deeds the purpose and intention of the grantor in making the conveyance will be given effect if the same can be ascertained from the instrument and the purpose and intention are not inconsistent with the rules of law applicable. When the intention is clear, repugnant or inconsistent provisions will be rejected. (See authorities cited in note to Wilkins v. Norman, supra, on p. 770.) It cannot be doubted that the purpose and intention of Sarah A. Little were to convey to appellant an interest or estate in the property. She used apt words to convey the fee, and it must be held the grant was of a fee. The grantee was a minor child and the grantor desired to retain a life estate in the property, and the right during her life, if she so desired, to divest the estate granted by selling or disposing of the lot. Clearly it was the grant- or’s intention when she made the deed to convey the fee to the grantee with the power reserved to divest it by a sale, if she chose to execute this power during her lifetime. If she did not, the fee became absolute at the death of the grantor. The deed was effective to convey a valid fee to appellant, subject to the rights and powers reserved to the grantor.

Appellees insist, and the decree finds, Sarah A. Little during her life made a valid sale of the property to Capps ; that the sale divested appellant of her estate or interest in the property, and when Mrs. Little acquired it back by the deed from Capps it was freed from any interest or claim of appellant.

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145 N.E. 625, 314 Ill. 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easley-v-little-ill-1924.