Friedman v. Verchofsky

105 Ill. App. 414, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 15
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 Ill. App. 414 (Friedman v. Verchofsky) 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
Friedman v. Verchofsky, 105 Ill. App. 414, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 15 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion, of the court.

It is contended that the decree in this case should be reversed, because, first, the chief issue under the creditor’s bill and the intervening petitions relates to the charge of fraud. It is alleged that the quit-claim deed from Mrs. Friedman to Mr. Hirsch, and the warranty deed from Mr. Flirsch and wife to the daughters of Mrs. Friedman were fraudulent as to creditors.

The chancellor who tried this case, heard the witnesses in open court. The evidence taken is voluminous and is sharply conflicting. The court having seen and heard the witnesses, was in a better position than we to judge of the truth of their statements and the weight that should be given to their testimony, and we will not reverse in such case except where it clearly appears that the evidence does not preponderate in favor of a decree. Fabrice v. Von der Brelie, 190 Ill. 460; Van Vleet v. DeWitt, 200 Ill. 153.

This case partakes of the bitterness of a family controversy. Most of the many witnesses called are related by blood or marriage. The hostility injected into this trial is phrased by counsel’s description of parties when he states that on the one side are “ the unprogressive, unwashed and unscrubbed,” and on the other “ the progressive, proud and cold,” unable to restrain a genuine distaste for the former branch of the family. So intense became matters during the hearing that it is charged that witnesses in behalf of appellee, Yerchofski, were told by the other side to leave the court and were given diamond rings to enforce the command; but the vigilance of complainant overcame the attempt to deprive him of witnesses and on the next day the tempted witnesses were in their places in court. The very aged, protesting a forgetfulness, and the young were called to the witness stand. The court appears to have taken an abundance of time to observe and study this family reunion or assemblage of parties and witnesses and their sharply conflicting testimony. With great care we have examined the record in this case and shall not extend this opinion with a detailed review of the evidence. Although appreciating, in a case like this, the unsatisfactory result of making reference only to certain circumstances of the evidence, we nevertheless, to make it apparent that there was a sharp conflict, will notice briefly some controlling features in the evidence.

Whatever may have been the reason, Mrs. Friedman appears not to have been prompt in paying her debts. She incurred the indebtedness to several of her creditors when she improved her property on or before the year 1890. Her property was worth, perhaps, not less than $15,000 and was incumbered for $7,500. In June, 1894, she quit-claimed this property to Jacob Hirsch, her sister’s husband, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for the consideration, as she alleges, of a cancellation of $5,000 of indebtedness held by Hirsch against her and the further consideration of $1,500 or $1,600 in cash. Her husband was engaged in buying and shipping horses and just priqr to the Columbian Exposition of 1893 was in the saloon business in Richland, Wisconsin, Mrs. Friedman says that her husband was unfortunate and she was compelled to assist him and thereby forced to borrow money. However, as opposed to this statement Verchofski states that the business of Mrs. Friedman’s husband was prosperous and that he sent her money. Mr. Hirsch is represented as being in the years 1894, 1895 and 1896 a man of large affairs and of wealth. To determine whether the conveyance from Mrs. Friedman to her brother-in-law was made in good faith, it is to be considered that he, the wealthy and obliging brother-in-law, should insist that his wife’s sister convey this property for which she had labored so long and for the improvements of which she had not fully paid, and as one of Mrs. Friedman’s witnesses testified, she went to Mrs.Friedman’s house and found Hirsch there, “ hollering for his money and she was crying and begging where she could get money.” In this connection it is to be remembered that Hirsch had such confidence in Mrs. Friedman that he left her in apparent possession of the property with full authority to manage the same and. to collect rents therefrom. When he took title thereto he did not procure nor cause to be examined an abstract of title. He did not even insist upon or' procure a deed from the husband of Mrs. Friedman. There is much in the record to which we will not refer, calling for a very careful weighing of the evidence to determine whether Mr. Hirsch was a bona fide purchaser of the property in question or whether he accepted title merely to accommodate his sister-in-law and to save her property from an attack of creditors. If the conclusion is reached that Mr. Hirsch was not a bona fide purchaser there was an abundance of evidence to justify the conclusion that the daughters of Mrs! Friedman were not bona fide purchasers and that they held the title for their mother. It is stated that the tenants of the property were so irresponsible and made such frequent removals that they were not required to sign a lease, yet one of the alleged owners moved away from the property and elsewhere rented premises, certainly not more desirable, and paid rent therefor.

There was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether Mrs. Friedman’s daughters or their husbands had the amount of $6,000 said to have been paid by them for the premises. One of the daughters, Mrs. Kalish, testified: “ I don’t know whether my husband had other means outside of his salary. He didn’t at the time I married him.” Again the daughters received a warranty deed of the property'from their wealthy relative, Mr. Hirsch. Soon after accepting such deed it was found that there were claims aggregating several hundreds of dollars which the mortgagee of the property insisted should be paid. These claims were paid by the daughters and they testified that they have never requested Mr. Hirsch under the covenants of his warranty deed to repay them said amounts. The daughters and their husbands testified that the alleged purchase price for the property of $6,000 was arrived at after a somewhat prolonged negotiation. It is a matter of comment that where the extreme amount was paid for the property that the purchasers would accept title without employing counsel to examine abstract of the same and then fail to require Mr. Hirsoh to pay any claims existing against the property, so abundantly able as he was to respond. An attempt was made to impeach one of the principal witnesses for appellee, but witnesses were called to sustain his general reputation for truth and veracity.

The record is replete with testimony and circumstances sharply in conflict. Ho good purpose can be served in further attempt to recall the evidence. Two distinct lines of irreconcilable testimony run through the entire record, and therefore we do not feel that we are called upon to pronounce one false and the other truthful, and in the premises we are not justified in disturbing the findings and the decree of the court.

Second. Counsel for appellants further claim that if the deeds were fraudulent as to creditors, still complainant and intervening petitioners are conclusively estopped from setting up such fraud in this proceeding upon the principle of res adjudieata.

Mrs. Friedman filed her petition in bankruptcy July 19, 1900, and specifications of objections were filed by one of her creditors, Shoemaker & Company, specifying substantially the same fraud as alleged in its intervening petition.

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Bluebook (online)
105 Ill. App. 414, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friedman-v-verchofsky-illappct-1903.