Gannon v. Moles

111 Ill. App. 19, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 188
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 23, 1903
DocketGen. No. 4232
StatusPublished

This text of 111 Ill. App. 19 (Gannon v. Moles) 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
Gannon v. Moles, 111 Ill. App. 19, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 188 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. J tjstice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill by Bridget Gannon against Fred R. Moles and Jacob Haish in the Circuit Court of Kane County for the redemption of certain lands therein described. The land was a farm of 220 acres in Kane County, and the bill alleges that on the Í4th day of October, 1893, complainant being indebted to defendant, Jacob Haish, in the sum of $5,830.68, conveyed the land by a deed absolute on its face but in fact to secure the payment of said sum with interest at seven per cent per annum on or before two years from that date. That afterward Haish called upon complainant for payment of the amount due him and she thereupon applied to defendant Fred B. Moles, who was her son-in-law, to furnish her money to make the payment, and also loan her $3,000 at seven per cent interest, which he did, and to secure the payment of these sums to Moles she, on January 12, 1895, caused Haish to convey the land to him by a deed, absolute in form but which the bill charges was in fact but a mortgage and was so intended and understood by all the parties to the transaction. The bill further alleges that upon the payment to Moles of the amount he had paid Haish and the sum loaned complainant, he was to reconvey the lands to complainant, and that immediately upon the deed being made to Moles he took possession of the land and has retained it ever since. That in August, 1899, complainant offered to pay Moles the amount due him, by virtue of their agreement, less the rents and profits received by him from the farm, but that he refused to accept payment and refused to reconvey the land to complainant and denied that he held the title as security, but claimed he had purchased the farm and was the absolute owner thereof. Complainant in her bill averred she was ready and willing to pay Moles the amount due him and prayed that an account be taken of the principal and interest of her indebtedness to Moles and of the rents and profits of the lands during the time they were in his possession, that such rents and profits be credited upon complainant’s indebtedness and that a decree be entered that upon the payment, by complainant, of the amount due Moles after deducting the rents that he reconvey to complainant said land and deliver up to her the possession thereof.

Moles answered the bill denying he held the title as security or that the deed was made to him for any such purpose, but averred that he purchased the land from complainant for $12,000, and paid the full consideration for said purchase by paying complainant’s indebtedness to Haish, for which he held the title as security, amounting to $8,661.58, and at complainant’s request giving her two sons, E. L. and W. P. Gannon, his notes for $3,000 and paying them in cash $338.42. The answer denied all right of complainant to the relief prayed for in her bill or any part thereof.

Defendant, Jacob Haish, was defaulted. On the hearing, the court found that Moles did not hold thé title as security, that he never executed any agreement or paper to that effect, that he was an absolute purchaser, had paid the full consideration which was the fair cash value of the land, and dismissed the bill at complainant’s costs, and she appeals.

The principal question for our determination is, was the evidence sufficient to authorize a decree in complainant’s favor? There was much conflict in the testimony and we will not undertake to set it out fully but will refer to the most important features of it. That complainant applied to Moles to furnish the money to pay her indebtedness to Haish is not controverted, nor that Haish held the title to the land merely as security. At the time complainant made the deed to him, he gave her an acknowledgment in writing that he held the title as security and would reconvev to her upon the payment of the amount due him. The controversy is, as to whether she sold Moles the land to raise the money for Haish and to save to herself the value of her equity, or whether she borrowed the money from him and had the title conveyed to him as security. It appears from the evidence that, at Mrs. Gannon’s request, Moles met her and her two sons, Edward and William, at Haish’s bank in DeKalb, January 11, 1895, for the purpose of settling her indebtedness to Haish, Moles furnishing the money for that purpose. Mrs. Gannon took with her, also to assist in the settlement, her attorney, Judge Botsford. They were two days in effecting the' settlement. It was ascertained that Mrs. Gannon owed Haish $8,661.58. Moles gave him a certified check for $2,661.58 of this amount and gave his notes for the remaining $6,000 secured by a mortgage on the land in controversy. At the same time he paid complainant’s sons $338.42 and gave them his notes for $3,000, which were afterward paid. It appears Mrs. Gannon claims she owed her sons and had assigned them the agreement she held from Haish to reconvey as a kind of second mortgage to secure the payment. At the time of this settlement, another son of Mrs. Gannon, Thomas, had a judgment against her in the Circuit Court of Kane County, and to protect Moles against having the land subjected to the payment of said judgment, the notes to the Gannon boys were placed in Judge Botsford’s hands to hold until the matter was settled. Haish, upon receiving payment, at Mrs. Gannon’s request and direction, conveyed the land by deed to Moles. Edward and William Gannon, also, then and there assigned and transferred to Moles the written agreement from Haish to reconvey to their mother.

Mrs. Gannon and her two sons testified at the trial that after the settlement at Haish’s bank was completed and all papers drawn and executed, William Gannon said to Moles that he thought his mother ought to have something to show that she was to have the farm back when she paid him the money he had advanced, with interest; that Moles said he was willing she should have something of that kind and then and there, himself, wrote and signed a statement to that effect, read it over to Mrs. Gannon and then handed it to her son Edward to read. That after he read it he said to his mother she had better keep it, but she told him to give it to Moles and let him keep it with the rest of the papers, which he did. They each testified to their recollection of the substance of the writing and that it was an agreement by Moles that upon complainant paying him the money he had advanced for her he would convey the farm back to her.

John Stewart testified, that three or four years before the trial—which w7as had in January, 1903,—complainant applied to him for a loan on the farm if she could get it back from Moles and at her request he wrote Mr. Moles about it. The letter was introduced and the substance of it was, that Mrs. Gannon had asked him to assist her to save her farm; that it would require her to raise §12.000 to do so; that she had $1,000 and wanted to borrow $11,000 of the witness. Mr. Moles’ reply to this letter was introduced by complainant, in which he said he did not see how Mrs. Gannon could figure she could make anything by getting the farm back; that he purchased it under protest after Mrs. Gannon had pleaded with him to do so to save her equity in it; that he paid $12,000 for it and had since spent $1,250 in improvements, but that if Mrs. Gannon would repay him these sums he would convey her the land with the provision that she could not resell it, and stated that if Mrs. Gannon wished to do this she must close the deal immediately “as her option expired last Saturday.”

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Bluebook (online)
111 Ill. App. 19, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gannon-v-moles-illappct-1903.