First National Bank v. Kurtz

22 Ill. App. 213, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 328
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 10, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 Ill. App. 213 (First National Bank v. Kurtz) 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
First National Bank v. Kurtz, 22 Ill. App. 213, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 328 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Baker, P. J.

The First National Bank of Princeton, appellant herein, brought suit on the 19th day of February, 1885, in the Bureau Circuit Court, against Isaac Kurtz, Jr., and Isaac Kurtz, Sr., upon two promissory notes, one for $800, and the other for $1,500, executed by Isaac Kurtz, Jr., as principal, and Isaac Kurtz Sr., as security, and the summons was served upon them on the 27th day of February, 1885. An affidavit was filed in the court, on this last mentioned date stating that the defendants and each of them had within two years next preceding the filing of the affidavit, fraudulently conveyed or assigned their effects or a part thereof so as to hinder and delay creditors; and thereupon an attachment writ in aid of the suit at law was issued and levied upon the W. ½ N. W. ¼ Sec. 3, T. 17 N., R. 8, E. of 4th Principal Meridian, in Bureau County, Illinois, as the property of said Isaac Kurtz, Sr., and served upon Thomas Loehman and Deborah W. Loehman as garnishees. Isaac Kurtz, Sr., interposed a plea traversing the facts stated in the affidavit upon which the attachment, as against him, issued; and a jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellant and against both defendants for $2,480.80 and proper costs, in the principal suit, and in a verdict in favor of Isaac Kurtz, Sr., upon the issue formed in the attachment proceeding in aid, followed by a judgment that the attachment he quashed and that appellant pay the costs thereof.

Rachel Kurtz, wife of Isaac Kurtz, Sr., died in 1869, seized of the eighty acres of land attached in this case, and leaving as her heirs at law her children, Davis B. Kurtz, Edward T. Kurtz, Frances Me Meen, Deborah W. Kurtz, (now Loehman) and Isaac Kurtz, Jr. She had executed no deed to the land, and had signed no declaration of trust in writing with reference thereto; and she made no will.

She did, however, on divers occasions, both long before and shortly preceding her death, state that she wanted her daughter Deborah W. Kurtz to have the north forty acres, upon which the dwelling house was situated; and also wanted her to have the south forty acres upon her paying $1,000 to her other daughter, Frances McMeen, and $1,000 to Isaac Kurtz, Jr.; and wanted her husband to have a life estate in the land. Said Deborah W. was the youngest daughter and the offiy child unmarried and living at home with the parents; and the other children had received $1,000 each from the father, while she had received nothing. After the death of Rachel, his wife, Isaac Kurtz, Sr., who was ignorant the law east upon him a life estate in the premises, was anxious to procure from the heirs a conveyance of the land and proposed they should execute to him a quit-claim deed therefor; this, several of them at first declined doing, on the ground it was not in accordance with the declared intention of their mother with reference to the disposition of the land; but upon the promise of the father that he would make provision for Deborah W. and would give her the forty acres the buildings were on, and the other forty acres on her paying the §2,000, they all joined in a quit-claim deed to him bearing date April 6, 1870. The nominal consideration of one dollar was stated in this deed, and no consideration was paid or given therefor to any of the children, except as arises out of the circumstances and promise above mentioned.

After the decease of her mother, said Deborah W. continued to live upon the premises with her father until her marriage with Thomas Lochman, in August, 1870; after that she and her husband lived there with her father until the second marriage of Isaac Kurtz, Sr., in 1875, when said Kurtz and his second wife went to live in a house on a lot owned by him, at Walnut, in Bureau County, and Thomas and Deborah Loch-man remained on the farm, paying rent therefor.

In June, 1884, an arrangement was made between Isaac Kurtz, Sr., and Lochman and wife, whereby the former was to convey to them the land, and they were to execute three notes, one to Isaac Kurtz, Jr., for §1,000, payable at the death of Isaac Kurtz, Sr.; one for $1,000 to Frances McMeen, pay. able at the same time, and one of $300, payable annually to Isaac Kurtz, Sr., as long as he should live, for his life estate in the land.

Thomas Lochman and his father-in-law at once went to Princeton for the purpose of getting a lawyer to prepare the deed and papers, but the attorney told Kurtz, Sr., who was then over eighty-five years of age, that he was getting old and it was best to keep his farm in his own name. Thereupon the deed was not made, but on their way home Kurtz told Lochman to go on with the “ improvements,” and that he would make the deed. After that said Lochman built a barn and put fencing on the land, at a cost of some $500, and August 4, 1884, insured the house, barn, etc., in his own-name, for $3,000, and also paid the taxes of 1884 on the land.

Afterward, Isaac Kurtz, Sr., executed a deed to Thomas Lochman and Deborah W. Lochman for this real estate, which bore date February 9, 1885, was acknowledged on the 11th, delivered on the 12th, and filed for record on the 13th of the same month of February.

Dpon delivery of the conveyance, a note for $1,000, payable at the death of Isaac Kurtz, Sr., was executed and delivered to Mrs. McMeen, a like note to Mary Kurtz, wife of Isaac Kurtz, Jr., and a joint contract of the grantees in the deed for the payment to Isaac Kurtz, Sr., of $150, semiannually, first payment to be made June 1st, after date, second payment January 1st, after date, and so to continue in payments of $150 each successive June and January, so long as he should Jive; the obligation to cease at his death.

Isaac Kurtz, Jr., was a member of the firm of Kurtz & Wilson, and on the 16th day of February, 1885, and for some time prior thereto, both he and the firm were hopelessly insolvent, and on the last mentioned date the firm made an assignment for the benefit of creditors. His father was security for him, not only upon the indebtedness involved in this suit, but upon notes to other parties for very considerable amounts. The testimony makes it probable that the father and son saw each other almost or quite every day; but the-father testified the son never told him anything with reference to his business, and that he did not know he was in failing circumstances when he made the deed; that it was his habit to loan him money when he asked for it, and to sign notes and papers when requested by him without looking at or asking about them, and that the son was indebted to him five or six hundred dollars.

There are numerous other facts and circumstances in proof, both upon the one side and the other, bearing more or less directly upon the merits of this controversy; but in the view we take of the case, it is deemed unnecessary now to specify them.

It is manifest that neither the declarations of Bachel Kurtz made while she was the owner of the land, nor the promises made by Isaac Kurtz, Sr., to the heirs at the time they executed the quit-claim deed to him and thereby vested him with title, could have the effect to create a trust for the benefit of Deborah W. Lochman that could be enforced in the courts, and for the simple reason that neither such declarations nor promises were witnessed by any writing signed by the party competent to declare such trust; and to otherwise hold would be in contravention of the provisions of the Statute of Frauds.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tcherepnin v. Franz
457 F. Supp. 832 (N.D. Illinois, 1978)
Williams v. Fourth National Bank
1905 OK 62 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1905)
Weare Commission Co. v. Druley
30 L.R.A. 465 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ill. App. 213, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-kurtz-illappct-1887.