Fletcher v. Shepherd

51 N.E. 212, 174 Ill. 262
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 212 (Fletcher v. Shepherd) 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
Fletcher v. Shepherd, 51 N.E. 212, 174 Ill. 262 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

George W. Whipple died intestate on June 12, 1895, leaving him surviving his widow, the appellee Emily Whipple, and three children as his only heirs-at-law, to-wit, his daughter, the appellant Jane F. Fletcher, his daughter, the appellee Minnie B. Shepherd, and his son, the appellee George Whipple. In his lifetime he was the owner in fee of the forty acres of land involved in this controversy, but whether he was the owner thereof at the time of his decease is a disputed question in the case, and is the main, if not the only question, to be determined in order to settle the issues made by the pleadings.

On December 18, 1884, George W. Whipple executed a quit-claim deed, conveying the said forty acres to his daughter, the appellee Minnie B. Shepherd. At the same time Minnie B. Shepherd executed back to him a quitclaim deed, re-conveying the said forty acres. The deed from the deceased to Mrs. Shepherd was recorded on January 2, 1885. The deed, however, executed by Mrs. Shepherd conveying the property to the deceased, was never recorded during his lifetime. George W. Whipple remained in possession of the premises from December 18, 1884, when these deeds were executed, up to the date of his death on July 12, 1895, leasing the land, or parts thereof, in the meantime to other parties, and collecting the rents himself, and paying the taxes and exercising acts of ownership over the land.

The circumstances in regard to the execution of the deeds are substantially as follows: On December 18,1884, George W. Whipple went to the office of a justice of the peace, named J. M. Mullen, at Pesotum in said county, and requested the justice to execute two quit-claim deeds. The .justice wrote out both, quit-claim deeds, being the same which have already been mentioned, at the same time. The deceased signed and acknowledged the quitclaim deed from himself to Minnie B. Shepherd at the justice’s office. He then requested the justice to take the other quit-claim deed, which had been drawn up to be executed by Minnie B. Shepherd to the said George W. Whipple, to her house, which was half a mile distant from the justice’s office, and there have her .sign it, and bring it back, The justice took the deed to the house of Minnie B. Shepherd, where she signed and acknowledged it, and then carried it back to his office; and George W. Whipple took the deeds and carried them away with him.

No question seems to be made between the parties as to the delivery of the deed from the deceased to Minnie B. Shepherd. Certainly, the recording of the deed on January 2, 1885, was prima facie evidence of its delivery. The appellees take the ground that this deed was delivered to Mrs. Shepherd, because they now claim that the title to the whole of the property is in her. The appellant in her bill, although attacking the deed to Mrs. Shepherd as colorable, and as a cloud upon her title, admits that it was executed and delivered to Mrs. Shepherd.

As to the deed executed by Mrs. Shepherd to her father, the facts show, that there was a delivery thereof to the grantee therein. Mrs. Shepherd signed and acknowledged the deed before the justice of the peace at her house, and handed it to the justice, in order that he might deliver it to her father, the grantee therein; and it was so delivered on the day of its execution. When a party acknowledges before a proper officer the execution and delivery of a deed made by him, and allows the officer to hand the same to the grantee without objection, this will amount to a delivery. (Hewitt v. Clark, 91 Ill. 605.) If then the deed, executed by Mrs. Shepherd to the deceased, was delivered to him, the title passed from her to him. Prior to his death George W. Whipple never conveyed away the forty acres thus deeded back to him by his daughter, Mrs. Shepherd. It would, therefore, seem to follow, that, at the time of his death, the title thereto was in the deceased, and by his death passed by descent to his three children above named, subject to the dower of the appellee, Emily Whipple. The contention of the appellant is, that she is the owner of an undivided one-third part of the land upon the alleged ground that her father owned it when he died, and that the appellees, Minnie B. Shepherd and George Whipple, are also the owners each of an undivided one-third part thereof. The fact, that the quit-claim deed from Mrs. Shepherd to her father was not recorded, would make no difference, so far as the passage of the title from her to him is concerned, the deed having been duly executed and delivered.

No consideration was paid by Mrs. Shepherd for the deed executed to her by her father, nor did she ever take possession of the premises thereunder in his lifetime. The consideration named in the deed was one dollar. It is claimed by the appellees, that the deceased intended to give the land to his daughter, Mrs. Shepherd, and that the only object, sought to be accomplished by the execution of the quit-claim deed by her, conveying the land back to him, was, that he might hold such deed as a protection to himself, so as to give him the right to use and control the land and receive the rents thereof during his lifetime. In other words, it is said, that he deeded the land outright to his daughter, but intended only to retain a life estate in himself, with the right to use the land and draw its rents as long as he lived. He did not, however, reserve such life estate in express terms in the deed which he executed to her, and the deed which she executed back to him was absolute upon its face, and contained no provision whatever in reference to a life estate.

But it is said that, before the death of George W. Whipple, he surrendered the deed, executed by his daughter to himself, to her husband, with directions to the latter to surrender it to Mrs. Shepherd to be destroyed. It is claimed, that Shepherd took the deed from the deceased and handed it to his wife, and that thereupon she put it in the stove and burned it up. Where a conveyance of a tract of land is executed and delivered, the subsequent destruction or surrender of the deed will not re-vest the title to the land in the grantor. (Duncan v. Wickliffe, 4 Scam. 452; Oliver v. Oliver, 149 Ill. 542; Gillespie v. Gillespie, 159 id. 84). The mere fact of the destruction of the deed after it was delivered to the deceased would, therefore, be of no particular significance, so far as re-vesting the title in the grantor, Mrs. Shepherd, is concerned. It is said, however, that, when the deceased delivered the deed to Shepherd to be taken to Mrs. Shepherd, it was so delivered with the intention on the part of the grantee, George W. Whipple, that the deed should be destroyed, and with directions that his daughter should so dispose of it, in order that she might be fully reinvested with the title to the land. It has been held by this court in several cases, that, if the grantee, in surrendering* up an unrecorded deed that has been executed and delivered to him, does so with the intention, or with the request, that it be destroyed, for the purpose of re-vesting the title in the grantor, in that case the grantor acquires the equitable, though not the legal, title. (Happ v. Happ, 156 Ill. 183; Sanford v. Finkle, 112 id. 146; Gillespie v. Gillespie, supra). It is to be noted that, in the case of Happ v. Happ, supra, where an unrecorded deed was surrendered by the grantee to the grantor, the grantor was in possession of the land named in the deed. The grantor, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 212, 174 Ill. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-shepherd-ill-1898.