Frewin v. Stark

149 N.E. 588, 319 Ill. 35
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1925
DocketNo. 16870. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 588 (Frewin v. Stark) 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
Frewin v. Stark, 149 N.E. 588, 319 Ill. 35 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Complainant, John D. Frewin, trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Victor Stark, filed his bill to set aside certain deeds to real estate and to subject it to the claims of creditors of the bankrupt. Stark was on the petition of creditors adjudged a bankrupt December 28, 1922, and complainant was subsequently appointed trustee. Before the bankruptcy proceeding was begun Stark owned the record title to part of a lot in Rockford which was improved with a building and was subject to certain incumbrances. December 9, 1922, he and his wife, Wilhelmina, joined in a deed conveying the property to their daughter, Agnes W. Boden, and on the same day the daughter and her husband, Hjalmar, conveyed the same property to Wilhelmina. The bill alleged the deeds were shams and were a fraud upon the creditors of Stark and prayed that they be set aside. Victor and Wilhelmina Stark, Agnes W. Boden and her husband, Hjalmar, were made defendants, and answered that the property was bought with the money of Wilhelmina, and the deed.was improperly and without the knowledge and understanding of Wilhelmina originally made to Victor. Wilhelmina claims a resulting trust was created by operation of law, that she became and was the equitable owner of the property, and that Victor held the naked legal title as trustee for her.

We deem it unnecessary to set out the evidence upon the question of whose money paid for the property. Some of the facts are, that the property was purchased of Isaac Lindstrom in January, 1901, for $2400. Charles Stark, a brother of" Victor, was jointly interested in buying the property and the deed was made to him and Victor. A cash payment of $400 was made by the grantees, one-half of which was paid by Wilhelmina with money she had received from her father’s estate and the other half was paid by Charles. The Stark brothers also gave a note for $500, due in three months, and the balance of the purchase price ($1500) was secured by mortgage on the property. Payments were made on the $500 note, and it was renewed from time to time until it was paid off by Wilhelmina and Charles. Wilhelmina kept roomers and boarders in the property and rented the lower story part of the time for $15 per month and part of the time for $25 per month and received the money for the roomers and boarders and from the rents. In March, 1905, Charles conveyed his interest in the property to Victor. Victor and wife mortgaged the property for $2000, paid off the $1500 mortgage and paid Charles $500. In 1910 the $2000 mortgage was paid with $1000 borrowed from the Swedish Building and Loan Association by mortgage on the property and $1000 cash. Victor from the time he came to this country worked in a furniture .factory about ten years for one dollar per day. He then drove a wagon for a grocery store for $8 per week, then got a position as clerk in a grocery store at $10 per week, where he was employed ten years, and then started a grocery store for himself. It was not a profitable venture, and in 1922 he owed the Manufacturers National Bank about $1200. He was also indebted to the Cherry Valley Creamery Company about $500. His creditors were pressing him to pay, and he and Wilhelmina on December 8, 1922, gave Oscar Peterson a note, secured by mortgage on the property, for $1000, to pay Victor’s indebtedness. That mortgage, as we understand the testimony, was paid with $1000 Wilhelmina borrowed from Anderson, one of her boarders, on her note, signed also by her daughter. Wilhelmina testified lawyer Nelson told her the title was in her husband when she made the Peterson mortgage. The value of the property is approximately $4000, and it is encumbered by mortgage for $2000 and a homestead estate of $1000. According to the proof nothing was ever paid on the property by Victor, but all payments were made by Wilhelmina out of money she inherited and money she earned by her own labor. There is no proof that any of the earnings of Victor went into the property or the support of the ■ family. According to the testimony he paid his wife board, the same as other boarders did, and she supplied all the food and kept up the house. Receipts for the payment of the taxes were issued in the name of Victor, but both he and Wilhelmina testified the payments were made with her money and mostly by her.

The property having been purchased with the money of appellant, Wilhelmina Stark, unless she authorized the deed to be made to her husband a trust resulted and he held the legal title as trustee for the wife’s benefit as the equitable owner, and the existence of such a trust need not be evidenced by writing. In Baughman v. Baughman, 283 Ill. 55, the court quoted from Bruce v. Roney, 18 Ill. 67: “A resulting trust does not arise from or depend upon any agreement between the parties. Its very name implies that it is independent of any contract and is raised by the law itself upon a particular state of facts. It results from the fact that one man’s money has been invested in land and the conveyance taken in the name of another. It is immaterial whether the purchase was made and the money paid by the trustee or the cestui que trust. This may be done by either without the knowledge of the other. No matter how or by whom done, if the fact exists, — if it was done at all, — by mere operation of law a trust is raised in favor of the party whose money was used to purchase the land, either to the whole or his equivalent portion of the land.” A resulting trust arises from the original transaction and at the instant the deed is taken. Baughman v. Baughman, supra; Lord v. Reed, 254 Ill. 350.

When a husband takes the title to land purchased with his wife’s money the law raises no presumption of a gift to him, and in such case it is not necessary, in order to establish the trust, to prove it was the intention of the parties, at the time of the transaction, to create a trust. (Wright v. Wright, 242 Ill. 71; Crawford v. Hurst, 307 id. 243; Lutyens v. Ahlrich, 308 id. 11.) The conditions necessary to create a resulting trust may be proved by parol, but that must be proved by clear and satisfactory evidence, beyond reasonable doubt. (Strong v. Messinger, 148 Ill. 431; Briscoe v. Price, 275 id. 63; Katzing v. Wiegand, 286 id. 646.) While it is not essential to the creation of a resulting trust that the proof should show there was an agreement to that effect, it may be defeated by proof of an understanding between the parties that no trust should result. We are of opinion the facts necessary to the establishment of a trust were proved, unless it be that the proof showed the parties understood and intended that no trust should result from making the deed to Victor, if Wilhelmina knew and assented to the title being made to Victor for the purpose of assisting or benefiting him. The decree finds Victor is the owner of the property but does not find his money paid any part of the purchase price. We infer from a copy of the opinion delivered by the chancellor and printed in appellees’ brief that the decree is based on the finding, from the testimony, that Wilhelmina, who paid the purchase money, knew the deed was made to her husband, saw tax receipts and insurance policies made out in his name, joined with him in mortgaging the property to pay debts incurred in his grocery business, and not until she learned her husband was hopelessly involved did she set up any claim to the title by reason of the fact the property was bought with her money. The chancellor expressed a desire to protect Mrs. Stark, but also expressed the belief the law would not warrant him in doing so.

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149 N.E. 588, 319 Ill. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frewin-v-stark-ill-1925.