Finley v. Felter

86 N.E.2d 188, 403 Ill. 372, 1949 Ill. LEXIS 321
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1949
DocketNo. 31005. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 86 N.E.2d 188 (Finley v. Felter) 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
Finley v. Felter, 86 N.E.2d 188, 403 Ill. 372, 1949 Ill. LEXIS 321 (Ill. 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the circuit court of Sangamon County seeking to reverse a decree of that court finding the issues involved herein for the defendants.

Louis J. Finley, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, filed his suit in equity to remove certain deeds as clouds upon his title to real estate, consisting of a house and lot in the town of Auburn, Sangamon County, Illinois. All of the defendants herein are relatives of plaintiff’s deceased wife. Defendants have counterclaimed for a partition of the property, which counterclaim is not in issue here.

It appears from the record that some time prior to May 20, 1933, the plaintiff and one Elizabeth Orr Finley were married. ' On May 20, 1933, the plaintiff and his wife conveyed by quitclaim deed the property here in question and a farm purported to be owned by the plaintiff, which is not directly involved herein, to one James A. Huddleston, who, in turn with his wife, reconveyed all of the realty involved in the transaction to the plaintiff and his wife as joint tenants. The acknowledgment of these deeds was taken by one Clarence B. Davis. The property involved in this transaction was farm property which was purportedly the separate property of Mr. Finley, and the Auburn house here involved which was the separate property of Mrs. Finley. These deeds of May 20, 1933, were drawn by an attorney, Thomas A. Jarrett.

It further appears that Mrs. Finley died on June 8, 1939. On April 18, 1942, the plaintiff, by virtue of the joint-tenancy deed he received with his wife from the Huddlestons, sold the property. When the abstract was extended for this sale, he allegedly discovered that on August 15, 1934, a deed was recorded from Louis J. Finley and Elizabeth Orr Finley conveying the real estate in question to one Clarence E. Townsend, and on August 16, 1934, Clarence E. Townsend executed a deed for the property back to Mrs. Finley as her sole property. These deeds running from the plaintiff and his wife to Townsend and from Townsend back to Mrs. Finley are the questioned deeds in this suit.

The record also discloses that these deeds are not to be found. They were recorded in the recorder’s office on August 18, 1934, and on September 8, 1934, respectively, and were withdrawn from the recorder’s office by Mrs. Finley and have not been seen since that time.

In substance, the plaintiff contends that his signature on the deed from him and his wife to Townsend was a forgery, that the signature on the deed for the property to Townsend is not his, and that he did not make or deliver any deed on August 15, 1934. In support of this claim he states that the name “Louis J. Finley” could not be his genuine signature inasmuch as his name is “Lewis” .and that he always used “L. J. Finley” in signing papers.

The case was referred to a master, who found the issues for the defendants herein, and the chancellor entered a decree in accordance with the master’s report.

The sole question presented to this court by the pleadings and the facts in this case is whether or not the plaintiff has met the burden of proof that the deeds involved herein were forged. The answer to this question depends upon consideration of the testimony herein and the findings of fact as set forth and approved by the chancellor.

The defendants cite Kerr v. Russell, 69 Ill. 666, and Duncan v. Duncan, 203 Ill. 461, for the proposition of law that recorded instruments are presumptive evidence of the execution, acknowledgment and delivery of such instruments, and the burden of proving a deed to be forged is upon the plaintiff. These cases further acknowledge the rule of law in this State that the record of a conveyance and a certificate of acknowledgment thereon can be overcome only by clear, convincing and satisfactory proof, the burden being upon the parties seeking to impeach such acknowledgment. The plaintiff admits the propriety of these rules, but contends that he has met the burden of proof in this case and has, in fact, proved his signature on the deed in question to be a forgery.

At the hearing before the master, the plaintiff, over the objection of defendants that the plaintiff was incompetent under section 2 of the Evidence Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 51, par. 2,) stated that his name was spelled “Lewis” and not “Louis,” but that, in any case, he had always used the name of “L. J. Einley” on all papers and deeds. Attorney Thomas L. Jarrett, the attorney who filed the original complaint in this cause on behalf of the plaintiff, but who had withdrawn prior to the hearing in the cause before the master, testified that he had been the attorney for Mrs. Finley before the marriage of the plaintiff and Mrs. Finley, and that he had prepared the original deeds in 1933, which placed the property in joint tenancy. He stated that on August 15, 1934, Mrs. Finley asked him to notarize a deed which he refused to do because Mr. Finley’s signature was not genuine and Mr. Finley was not there.

James A. Huddleston, a real-estate man who had offices in the same building and on the same floor as attorneys Jarrett, Townsend and Davis, testified that in August, 1934, he saw Mr. and Mrs. Finley in Townsend’s office and had asked Townsend what he was doing with his, Huddleston’s, clients. He further stated that Townsend told him that they were transferring the property in question here into the wife’s name. He reports that Townsend further stated that Jarrett was using Townsend as the grantee of the deed for the purpose of transferring the property into Mrs. Finley’s name. Huddleston testified later on deposition that Finley had come into his office on that day and had repeated the purpose of his visit on that date to Townsend and Jarrett.

Attorney Townsend, through whom the title was reconveyed to Mrs. Finley by the deeds in question, was called and testified that he did not recall whether plaintiff and Mrs. Finley had been in his office in 1934, but that he knew he did not draw the deeds. He could not remember the transaction, and would neither admit nor deny it.

. Attorney Clarence B. Davis, the notary public who took the acknowledgment of the deeds here in question, as well as those of the 1933 joint-tenancy transaction, testified that he did not draw the deeds. He recalled that the Finleys had talked with Huddleston and that he had frequently acknowledged papers for Jarrett and Townsend. He would not say whether he did or did not notarize the deeds. He further stated that he had no recollection of ever notarizing the immediate deeds for Mr. and Mrs. Finley to Townsend and for Townsend back to Mrs. Finley, but would say that the record spoke for itself.

It appears that the farm property, conveyed by the original deeds of May 20, 1933, consisted of about 86 acres, which was, in fact, conveyed by the plaintiff to one John H. Gosch, on August 1, 1931. • Gosch reconveyed this farm property to plaintiff by deed dated July 19, 1934. Prior to that time, on July 5, 1934, the plaintiff and his wife had conveyed this farm to one Frank M. Jones. The consideration of the conveyance of the farm to Jones was satisfaction of the plaintiff’s personal debt of $3200 owed to Jones and an additional payment of plaintiff’s $1500 personal debt owed to Gosch which Jones had paid.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.E.2d 188, 403 Ill. 372, 1949 Ill. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-felter-ill-1949.