Gay v. Parpart

106 U.S. 679, 1 S. Ct. 456, 27 L. Ed. 256, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1603
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1883
Docket99
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 106 U.S. 679 (Gay v. Parpart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gay v. Parpart, 106 U.S. 679, 1 S. Ct. 456, 27 L. Ed. 256, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1603 (1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

The issues raised by the pleadings in this- suit are so well stated in the opinion of the district judge, sitting in the Circuit Court where the decree was rendered, that we cannot do better than to state them in his language.

“ By the original bill the complainant, Elizabeth Flaglor, charged that she was the sole surviving child of Charles- D. Flaglor, deceased ; that one Augustus Garrett died in the city of Chicago some time in the year 1848, seized of lot 25, in block 9, in the Fort Dearbon addition to Chicago, together ydtli a large amount of other real estate, leaving Eliza Garrett his widow, and no children nor descendants of a child or children, and leaving a will, which was duly probated in Cook County, whereof said widow Eliza Garrett,' James Crow, and Thomas G. Crow; were duly appointed executors, in which will said Garrett duly disposed of and devised his estate, and among other devisees in said will was the said Charles D. Flaglor; that in the year 1851 a bill for partition was filed in the Circuit Court of Cook County by said Eliza Garrett, James Crow, and Thomas G. Crow against Letitia Flaglor, Frederick T. Flaglor, and Charles D. Flaglor, and Lucy Louisa Flaglor and Elizabeth Flaglor, children of said Charles D., all of whom, it was alleged, were interested in said will; that upon the answers of-th¿ defendants to said bill, proofs taken, and the report of commissions, a decree was entered - that partition be made of the- real estate of which said Augustus Garrett died seized, among the persons to whom the same was devised by said will, and said .lot 25, in block 9, was allottéd and set apart to said Letitia Flaglor during her life, remainder over to said Charles D. Flaglor for his life, remainder-in fee to his children him surviving,’ and on failure of children him surviving the fee to *681 said James Crow and Thomas G. Crow; that the parties entered into possession of the several parcels of real estate as set apart to them, and executed and delivered to each other interchangeably deeds of conveyance so as to invest each of the parties to said bill with the title in severalty, to the portions of said estate so set apart and allotted to them, and also a certain written contract in regard to the interests of the children of said Charles D. in the property set off to said'Letitia and Charles D.

“ The bill then alleged the death of said Letitia and Charles D. Flaglor, and that complainant Elizabeth was the sole surviving child of said Charles D., and entitled as such to an estate in fee to the lands so set off and allotted by said decree to said Letitia and Charles D., and prayed that said James and Thomas G. Crow, as surviving executors of the will of said Garrett, be required to execute proper deeds of conveyance of the fee to said lot 25 to said complainant Elizabeth, and that said Jessell and the other tenants in possession account for and pay over to complainant the rents, issues, and profits of said lot by them received after the death of said Charles.

“ The bill also charged that said Charles D. Flaglor, on or about the nineteenth day of August, 1857, made and executed to Frederick T. Flaglor, his father, a certain mortgage deed of said lot 25, to secure the payment of the sum of $20,000, on the first day of November, 1867, together with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, per annum, payable annually, and that said defendant Catharine Reid'was the holder 'of said mortgage.

“ Soon after filing the original bill, the said Elizabéth Flaglor, complainant, died, leaving a will, whereby she devised all her estate to her mother, Lucy C. Flaglor, and by order of court said Lucy C., who has since intermarried with one Gay,, was made complainant, and the suit Ijas since proceeded in her' name. James and Thomas G. Crow were served with process, but made no defence. Jessell appeared and answered. Catharine Reid, being a non-resident, was brought into court by publication, under the statute of Illinois, and.such steps were taken that the case on the original bill was brought to hearing before the Superior Court of Cook County, at the August Term, 1872, and a decree made directing said James and Thomas G. Crow, *682 as executors, to convey to complainant the title-in them, as surviving executors and trustees'of Augustus Garrett,' and thftt Jessell, who was a tenant of the premises under an unexpired lease from said Charles D. .Flaglor, surrender possession to complainant, and that the defendant Catharine Reid release the said mortgage made by said Charles D. to Frederick T. Flaglor, and that said mortgage be held void as against the estate, of said complainant in said premises. In October, 1873, said Catharine Reid, by the name of Catharine Parpart (she having intermarried with Lewis Parpart), appeared in said cause, and on her motion said decree was opened, and- she was let in to defend in said cause, whereupon she filed, her answer.

“ And afterwards, on the first, day of February, 1875, she filed her cross-bill, alleging that said Charles D. Flaglor made and- delivered said mortgage in fee to his father, Frederick T. Flaglor, and that„said Frederick T., on the first day of August, 1863,.duly assigned said mortgage and the indebtedness thereby -, secured, to her, the said Catharine, and that the same was then held and owned-by her, and that the whole of the principal sum of 120,000, together with interest from the second day of 1 June, 1862,- remained unpaid. To this cross-bill Arthur W. Windett, the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, and others were made defendants, and a foreclosure .of said, mortgage was prayed. To this cross-bill answers were filed by Mr. Windett and the Connecticut Mutual Life ‘Insurance Company, alleging, in substance, that, by the will of. Augustus Garrett, said Charles D. Flaglor, was only- devised a life estate after, the death of his mother, Letitia, Flaglor, in the ' lands devised to him by said will, and that it was agreed between said Eliza Garrett, widow, .and James Crow, Thomas G. Crow, and said Letitia Flaglor, Frederick T. Flaglor, her husband, and said Charles D., that-a-partition should be made among them of the property devised'by taid will, and that by such partition only a remainder for -life, after the death of said Letitia, should bé vésted in said CJharles D., and-that on his death the fee of , the property so-allotted to said Letitia and Charles should go to the children of said Charles .D.; that, in pursuance-of said agreement, the bill for partition -was filed in *683 the Cook County Circuit Court, and that said Charles by his answer appeared and consented to a decree, and'that the decree in said partition cause was made in pursuance of such consent, and that said Charles was bound thereby and precluded from asserting or claiming any other 'than a life estate in skid lands, and that said Frederick T. Flagler and said' Catharine Reid were bound by such decree. That said mortgage was given by said Charles to said Frederick without .consideration, and that said Catharine was not a bona fide h^ignee-aer. good or valuable consideration, and that said imottgage oiily conveyed the life estate of said Charles D. in t.hb mortgaged premises. ’ "

“ Before the answer-of the insurance company Was filed the •cause was, on petition of said company, removed' to thi's court; and oii the 5th of November, 1877, the said Catharine. by.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 U.S. 679, 1 S. Ct. 456, 27 L. Ed. 256, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gay-v-parpart-scotus-1883.