Funk v. Lawson

12 Ill. App. 229, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 179
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 9, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Ill. App. 229 (Funk v. Lawson) 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
Funk v. Lawson, 12 Ill. App. 229, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 179 (Ill. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

This was a creditor’s bill filed by appellant to subject to the satisfaction of hei; judgment against Robert Lawson and Samuel H. Shoop, certain lands alleged to have been fraudulently conveyed by the former and his wife to their sons, John and George, to hinder and delay his creditors, and especially the complainant. Shoop made default. The other defendants filed a joint and several answer, setting forth that at the time of the conveyance complained of the grantees therein had no “ personal ” knowledge of the existence of the indebtedness on which her judgment was founded — that said Robert was only a surety therefor and then believed it had been fully paid — and that the conveyance was made in good faith for valuable and adequate consideration, consisting, besides the amount therein mentioned as such, of the release by the grantees of certain claims they had against their father, their assumption of other debts owing by him, and their agreement to support him and their mother during their lives. This answer was signed by said Robert in his last illness and within twenty-four hours of his death; of course his deposition was not taken.

It was proved and admitted that some time prior to March 2, 1878, -he signed with Shoop a note of $1,000 to Theodore 0. Funk, the husband of complainant, for money loaned by the payee to Shoop, and on that day another of $700 to M. I. Funk, a brother of said Theodore, which was in part payment of the first and credited by indorsement thereon. These notes having been assigned to complainant were by her in October, 1879, put in judgment for $1,166.26, on which execution was duly issued and returned unsatisfied before the filing of this bill. Shoop had failed in business on the 3d day of May preceding, without making any provision for them, and on the 6th, which was about the time when they were assigned to complainant, the deed here in question was executed. It purports to convey absolutely, in fee, for the consideration of $2,330, several tracts composing one body of land containing about 240 acres, being the farm on which said Robert had resided continuously for over thirty years, and his sons all their lives.

At the same time he transferred to them all his personal property (excepting the household furniture and paraphernalia of himself and his wife), consisting of live stock, grain and farming utensils; most of which was scheduled, upon what appears to be a low estimate, at $790, and the residue is shown to have been reasonably worth not less than $350 — in all $1,140.

The consideration for the conveyance and transfer appears from the other papers executed at the same time, which were: 1, an article whereby, in consideration that their father sells to them the farm of about 239 acres upon which he now lives, and gives them a bill of sale of all his personal property thereon, said John and George agree to release him from all claim for wages which he now owes them, to “keep” him and their mother during their lives, and to pay all the claims against him or the farm, of the parties therein named (without specifying any amount as due to either or to all in the aggregate), and stated to be “all the debts he now owes”; 2, an itemized bill of sale from him to them of personal property estimated at $790, to which is appended a receipt of payment therefor “ in full in labor,” and 3, a statement of the amount claimed to be due them respectively for work on the farm — being to John for seven years and to George for six, at $240 each per year, making in all $3,120 — with a receipt of payment “ in full in personal property $790, and $2,330 (the consideration expressed in the deed) in land subject to incumbrance.”

It is admitted that they received other personal property besides that specified in the bill of sale, viz.: two brood sows, thirty winter pigs, forty bushels of oats, ten bushels of wheat and a quantity of corn not exactly known, but of which they immediately sold 1,000 bushels and 45 lbs.’ for $280.25, and afterward fed the residue — worth altogether, as above stated, $350.

The incumbrance on the farm was $2,400, and the personal liabilities assumed, although stated by John generally in an aggregate including said incumbrance at a larger sum, are shown by his own specification of every item thereof except a few which he said he could not then recollect but not exceeding in all $150, to have been $2,584.

Exclusive, then, of the agreement to support the grantors, the consideration for the transfer of the land and personal property was the release by the grantees of their claims for

Wages..................................$3,120

Their assumption of the incumbrance...... 2,400

And of the liabilities of the grantor........ 2,584 $8,104

Deducting the value of the personal property 1,140

There is left for the land.................. $6,964 which is at the rate of $29 per acre.

Robert Lawson was then fifty-nine years of age, had two younger sons who served him faithfully as they were able during their minority, and was liable as a principal to the creditors for about $2,000 besides the debts so provided for. Yet by this conveyance and transfer he appears to have divested himself absolutely of all his property that was subject to execution, and renounced all business and hope of business, with all means of acquiring anything to leave to his younger children or to satisfy these claims; while by an outside agreement he reserved or secured, as part of the consideration, beyond the reach of creditors, a support for himself and his wife diming their lives, and this support was doubtless expected to be furnished upon the land so conveyed and out of the products thereof.

Such an agreement, when it forms a substantial part of the consideration and of the real inducement to the transfer, is in the nature of a secret trust in the land conveyed, for the benefit of the grantor; and if the transaction leaves him indebted beyond his means of payment, will avoid the conveyance as to creditors not fully provided for. In such a case a court of equity will not enter upon the task of determining the value thus reserved or secured, but irrespective of its amount will hold the conveyance a nullity as between the grantee and such creditors, and the property liable for their demands. Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, pp. 246-7, with citations in note, and Moore v. Moore, 100 Ill. 451; in which the rule, with the authorities, is so fully presented that we here refer to no other. They hold further, that in the absence of proof to the contrary, an agreement to support the grantor will he presumed to have been a material part of this consideration. The conveyance in this case, then, is prima facie void as against such creditors.

But the grantees contend that when it was executed appellant was not a creditor — that the notes in judgment had not then been indorsed and were never delivered to her.

From the testimony on this subject we incline to think she was; holding that her husband’s possession of the one after notice to her of its indorsement, and his receipt at the post-office, of the other, indorsed and mailed to her by his brother, were her possession and a sufficient delivery; and further, that whensoever assigned, she succeeded, by virtue of their negotiability, to all the rights of the assignors therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Ill. App. 229, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/funk-v-lawson-illappct-1883.