Elsasser v. Miller

49 N.E.2d 21, 383 Ill. 243
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1943
DocketNo. 26903. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 49 N.E.2d 21 (Elsasser v. Miller) 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
Elsasser v. Miller, 49 N.E.2d 21, 383 Ill. 243 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant, Bernadine Miller, seeks by this appeal to reverse a decree of the superior court of Cook county which set aside a deed by appellee, Adolph F. Elsasser, conveying to her his homestead located at 1124 Cleveland avenue, Park Ridge, Illinois. The deed contained a clause which recited that a part of the consideration was the agreement of appellant to furnish the grantor, as long as he should live, a comfortable home, including room and board. The chancellor heard the evidence on the issues raised by the complaint and answer, and in the decree embodied findings that appellee had proved the allegations of his complaint; that the execution of the deed was without actual consideration, was not the free and voluntary act of appellee, and was not the instrument he understood he was executing; and that the instrument constitutes a cloud on appellee’s title. Appellant has assigned, in general terms, a number of errors, but all of them may well be inclosed in the contentions which are covered in the last assignment, that the decree is contrary to the law and the evidence.

.The allegations of the complaint which are denied by the answer are that appellee’s son, Adolph K. Elsasser, and appellant, conceived a design to deprive appellee of his property; that in furtherance of that design and with intent to wrongfully obtain his property, they insisted upon appellee making provision for appellant, in the event of appellee’s death; that while he was suffering a dizzy spell in February, 1941, resulting from a fall, appellant and appellee’s son were alarmed that appellee might die without leaving something “black on white;” that the son made threats and both threatened to throw him out; that under this duress and mental confusion and in fear of physical violence, appellee was interviewed by a lawyer brought to his home without his request, who, with the son and appellant, represented that he should sign an agreement already prepared so he could have a roof over his head; that relying on the lawyer’s statement that the paper could be can-celled if he so desired, believing it to be an agreement for board and room, and under pressure of said parties, he signed a paper which he later discovered was a deed, "a copy of which is set out in full in the complaint; that as soon as he discovered it was a deed, he protested and demanded its return, which was refused, and he was informed to.leave the premises, which he did a few days after signing the deed and in consideration of his health and safety; and that the consideration, if any, was so grossly inadequate and so completely failed, that it would be inequitable to permit the conveyance to stand.

Appellant denied the above allegations and averred that appellee voluntarily left and failed to perform his part of the agreement, and that she has been compelled to pay the gas, electric, water and heating bills to keep the home livable and that she is, and always has been, ready, willing and able to furnish him a comfortable home.

The clause in the deed, which was executed February 22, 1941, around which the controversy revolves, reads as follows:

“As a part of the consideration of this conveyance the grantee herein agrees to furnish the grantor herein, as long as he shall live, a comfortable home, including room and board. In addition to this conveyance the said grantor agrees to pay during his lifetime the general taxes on said premises and the expense of heating the same, and agrees to pay for the gas, electricity and water for the operating of said premises as a home, and the insurance premiums for fire and windstorm insurance in the improvements on said premises. All of said expenses are to be paid promptly as the bills therefore are rendered from time to time.
“It is further understood and agreed, that the obligations herein mentioned shall be binding upon the heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of the respective parties.”

The instrument in question was executed under the following circumstances. Appellant, who had been employed at Montgomery Ward 8¿ Company for several years, became acquainted with appellee and his wife while they lived in Chicago, about twelve years prior to the hearing. She met them through their son, to whom she was engaged, and she began boarding and rooming with them, for which she paid $25 a month. When appellee sold the Chicago home and moved to the Park Ridge property in question in 1936, appellant went with them and continued as a roomer and boarder until appellee’s wife died on October 27, 1939. After that she continued to reside there in the capacity of roomer, boarder, and housekeeper. After the death of appellee’s wife, appellant ceased paying for her room and board, because, as appellee said, it was not right that she keep on paying. However, she paid for the food, or the major part of it, prepared breakfast before going to her work, and supper when she returned in the evening. She made the beds, cleaned the house, worked in the garden, did the washing and ironing, and fired the furnace of evenings.

The deed was executed in the dining room, on Washington’s birthday, in the presence of appellee’s son, the lawyer who prepared it, and appellant. After it was signed, at the suggestion of the attorney, appellee handed the original to appellant and kept a carbon copy. He paid the attorney $5 for his services and appellant afterwards reimbursed the attorney for the recording fee paid by him when he had it recorded for appellant. About three days after the deed was made, appellee took his carbon copy down the street to a man he thought knew more than he did about such matters and was told that he had deeded his home to appellant. He was then seventy-one years old, and had about $4800 which he had received from the sale of real estate on Leclaire avenue, in Park Ridge.

On April 4, 1941, appellee packed up his things and left the home involved in this proceeding, while his son and appellant were both absent. He went to the home of one Bertha Tenbusch, where he has continued to board and room, paying therefor the sum of $25 a month.

Appellee testified in response to leading questions by both court and counsel. As to whether there was any talk between him and his son about the real estate before he signed the paper, he replied: “Why, yes, they told me to make a will.” Responding further to leading and suggestive questions he fixed the time of the conversation as in the spring of 1941. He also testified that appellant once struck him and that his son struck him a half-dozen times, because he mentioned “fancy house,” referring to appellant and the son living there in an unmarried status, and that his son said if he did not get the property, he would put appellee in an insane asylum; that on one occasion the son called the police who came and searched him to see if he had a weapon, and that the police told him he had better go to bed. Appellant explained the incident by stating that appellee was drunk on that occasion.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E.2d 21, 383 Ill. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elsasser-v-miller-ill-1943.