Finch v. Green

80 N.E. 318, 225 Ill. 304
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 80 N.E. 318 (Finch v. Green) 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
Finch v. Green, 80 N.E. 318, 225 Ill. 304 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The parties to this litigation are the heirs-at-law of David Finch and Catherine Finch, his wife, and it was com- ' menced by the filing of a bill by appellees against appellant, in the circuit court of Mercer county, for the partition of that part of the north-east quarter of section 27, in township 14, range 5, in said county, lying south of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroad, containing ninety-three acres more or less, and another tract of forty'acres. The only controversy relates to the tract of ninety-three acres. David Finch died December 19, 1905, at the age of eighty-seven years, and Catherine Finch died about fourteen years before that time, when seventy-five years old. Both died intestate. At the time of the death of Catherine Finch she owned the undivided one-eleventh part of the tract in question and David Finch owned an undivided ten-elevenths. On October 19, 1903, David Finch executed a deed intended to convey the tract of land to his son William Finch, the appellant, but by a mistake of the scrivener the land was misdescribed as being in the south-east quarter of the section. The appellant answered the bill, alleging the conveyance of the tract to him by his father and the mistake in the description, and he then filed a cross-bill, in which he claimed title to the interest which his father had, and alleged that a mutual mistake was made in drafting the deed, and prayed the court to correct the mistake or construe the deed to pass title to him to the undivided ten-elevenths of the tract. Answers to the cross-bill were filed by appellees, setting up that the deed was procured by undue influence; that the grantor was mentally disqualified to make it; that there was no valuable consideration for it, and that it was void for the reason that it purported to convey the entire title when the grantor only owned the undivided ten-elevenths. Replications having been filed, the cause was heard and the court refused the relief prayed for by the cross-bill, found the interests of the parties as set out in the original bill and ordered a partition of the premises accordingly. From that decree this appeal was prosecuted.

The facts proved are, in substance, as follows: David Finch, and Catherine, his wife, lived on the tract of land from about the year 1857, he owning an undivided ten-elevenths and she the remaining one-eleventh. About the year 1880 their son William Finch, the appellant, married, and afterward lived on the farm with his parents. Appellant, with his wife and children, and his father and mother,, lived together as one family until the death of the mother, and from that time until the death of the father, on December 19, 1905, the parties lived together in the same way. After the marriage of appellant he did the work on the farm and his wife did the housework. Catherine Finch was in poor health most of the time and David Finch did little of no work, but he bought .groceries the same as appellant, and the proceeds of the grain and stock business carried on were divided equally between them. As' David Finch advanced in years his health was not good, and he became afflicted with a trouble of the bowels to such an extent that for three or four years before his death he could not control their movements. The discharge would take place in his clothing or bed, and with intervals of a day or a few days, when the trouble would not occur, he would have to be cared for in that respect the same as a child. Laura Finch, the wife of appellant, waited on him personally and performed the necessary services consequent upon his condition, which were of a most disagreeable character. David Finch recognized the nature and the value of the services performed by Laura Finch, and more than two years before his death he made a will, the terms of which are not definitely proved, but apparently the tract of land was devised to appellant. David Finch afterward stated that some of his children were dissatisfied with the will and he feared that there would be an attempt to set it aside. He said that he had been a great deal of trouble to William and his wife, and he wanted them to be paid for it and to have the land on which he resided. He made repeated statements of that character and that he was going to deed the place to appellant and his wife, saying at one time that he was going to make the deed when the wife returned from a visit in Ohio. On October 19, 1903, he sent for W. C. Austin, a justice of the peace, who had drafted the will, and Austin came to the house and received directions for the conveyance. They talked about the consideration, and he was directed to make it $5000, and he then made a memorandum of the property to be conveyed, as follows: “South 93 acres of the N. E. yi of Sec. 27, less amt. sold to E. M. Willits.” David Einch had previously made a deed to E. M. Willits of a narrow strip out of the north-west corner of the tract, containing about one-tenth of an acre. Austin prepared a warranty deed as directed, with a consideration of $5000, reserving a life estate in the grantor, but wrote the south-east quarter instead of the north-east quarter. The deed was acknowledged on the day of its date and was recorded on November 25, 1903. The appellees called a witness and proved.by him .that appellant had told him he was not going to stay on the farm and do what .they had been doing for his father and not get any more than the rest of the heirs; that he was not going to stay there unless he was sure that he was going to be paid for what he and his wife were doing, and that he had given his father to understand the situation. The personal services, which were mainly performed by the wife, were continued after the making of the deed for more than two years, up to the death of David Finch, and they were of a character that scarcely any person would have performed them for a money consideration.

There was no evidence tending to prove undue influence which would invalidate the deed, and there can be no dispute of the facts that David Finch was capable of making the conveyance, and that there was a mutual mistake in the der scription of the land, which was not discovered until after his death.

The first disputed question of fact is whether there was a valuable consideration for the conveyance which would entitle the appellant to have the mistake corrected by a court ‘of equity. If David Finch attempted to convey the land.as a mere gift and without any valuable consideration, and the gift was unexecuted by reason of a mistake in the description of the land, a court of equity would not lend its aid to make the gift effective by correcting the mistake. (Strayer v. Dickerson, 205 Ill. 257.) It is contended that this conveyance was a mere gift, for the reasons that there was no express contract to pay for the services rendered to the grantor and that none would be implied by the law. ’

Where parties live together as members of one family the law does not imply a contract on the part of one to pay. for services rendered by another, but the presumption arising from the relation is that services are rendered gratuitously. In such a case there can be a recovery only by proving the making of an express contract, or circumstances from which a reasonable inference would arise that such a contract was in fact made. (Faloon v. McIntyre, 118 Ill. 292; Collar v. Patterson, 137 id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.E. 318, 225 Ill. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finch-v-green-ill-1907.