Gercke v. Gercke

163 N.E. 323, 331 Ill. 413
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1928
DocketNo. 18290. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 163 N.E. 323 (Gercke v. Gercke) 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
Gercke v. Gercke, 163 N.E. 323, 331 Ill. 413 (Ill. 1928).

Opinions

Plaintiff in error filed a bill for divorce from defendant in error, charging extreme and repeated cruelty. She also asked for temporary and permanent alimony and for solicitor's fees, and for an injunction restraining defendant from *Page 414 selling, assigning or otherwise disposing of his property and from collecting money due him on installments for the sale of certain real estate described in the bill. On the coming in of the answer defendant was granted leave to file a crossbill. It stated facts as grounds for setting aside the deeds made to him and his wife in joint tenancy, and to require her to refund money drawn by her out of banks, deposited in their names and subject to checks drawn by either. Issues were formed on the original and cross-bills and evidence was heard by the chancellor on the issue as to divorce. A decree for divorce was rendered in favor of plaintiff in error. The cause was referred to a master to take and report the evidence, with his conclusions on the issues as to property rights presented by the pleadings in the cause. On the hearing on exceptions to the master's report it was approved and a decree entered in accordance therewith against plaintiff in error, defendant to the cross-bill. To reverse the decree she brings the record to this court by writ of error. Frank Spalding, who held the legal title to the property, did not appeal.

Substantially the decree found that on January 18, 1917, William Gercke and Alvina Gercke were married and lived together as husband and wife until December 11, 1923, when she locked the door of the premises in which they were living and compelled him to live elsewhere. At the time of their marriage he was the sole owner, in fee simple, of certain premises, one described in the abstract as the 3104 Francisco avenue property, the other as the 3953 North Albany avenue property. The Albany avenue property was sold by Mr. and Mrs. Gercke, under an installment contract, to John T. Zahnen, and there was $1000 due on the contract at the time of the hearing before the master. Previous to the marriage Mrs. Gercke owned real estate known as 2951 North Oakley avenue, which was traded for the 2948 Fletcher street property. Complainant and defendant made an agreement that after their marriage the three pieces *Page 415 of real estate should be placed in their names as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, and the conveyances were made accordingly. At the time of their marriage, and previous thereto, Gercke owned and possessed twenty acres of land in the State of Florida, on which there was an $1800 mortgage, and twenty acres of land in the State of Michigan. After the marriage he desired to convey the Michigan property to his son by his first marriage. Mrs. Gercke joined him in deeding that property. At the time of the transfer she protested against deeding the property to his son unless Gercke would sign a contract providing that the Fletcher street property should at the death of Alvina, should she die before him, be conveyed in joint tenancy to Frank Spalding, her son by a former marriage, and to Gercke. He agreed to those conditions. Gercke could not readily understand, and did not speak, the English language. Upon signing the papers the conversation between him and Alvina with regard to it was in the German language, but the conversation between her and the agent who conducted the transaction was carried on in English, which Gercke did not understand. Instead of being an agreement to transfer in joint tenancy, as they had agreed, a deed from her and Gercke was made for the Fletcher street property to Spalding, as grantee. While the transfer was signed by Gercke, he believed it to be a contract for a conveyance as they had agreed.

For some time previous to the separation of the parties accounts were kept in their joint names in the Immel State Bank and in the Lake View Trust and Savings Bank, in Chicago. From April 4, 1921, to and including November 4, 1921, deposits aggregating $1027.05 had been placed to their account in the Immel State Bank. Gercke had provided most, if not all, of the money. On November 5, 1923, $1006 was drawn from the account, leaving a balance of $21.05, which was drawn out on December 3 and the account marked "closed." The withdrawals were all made by *Page 416 Mrs. Gercke. Some time previous to the separation of the parties the account in the Lake View Bank up to November 5, 1923, aggregated $805. On that date a withdrawal of $500 was made by Mrs. Gercke. On November 6 she withdrew $200 and on December 1 $100, leaving a balance of $5, which was withdrawn on December 3, 1923. Her bill was filed December 6, 1923. She collected all the rents on the Fletcher street property up to the time of filing the bill. About 1920 the Gerckes procured an extension of the loan which they had on the Fletcher street property, in the name of William and Alvina Gercke and not of Frank Spalding. She signed all the rent receipts to the tenants in her name. Spalding's name appeared nowhere in any of those transactions. Of the money withdrawn from the two banks she spent the sum of $1869, nearly all of which was for her own private use. She bought two washing machines, aggregating $289, the first of which seems to have been returned. She bought a cemetery lot for $200, which she testified was for herself. She paid her attorney $800 and paid other sums for her personal benefit. One item was a coat for Gercke, $45. So far as the record shows, that is all he ever received.

On cross-examination Spalding testified that the deed to him was kept in his overcoat pocket in a closet in his mother's home, where he lived. She testified to the same effect. It had been kept there since it was delivered. It was not filed for record until about a week before her bill was filed. He testified that he told his mother, at the time, he was going to have it recorded; that he knew she was going to file a bill for divorce, but that he "did not think about that." She filed the bill within a week after it was recorded. Her lawyer, to whom she had paid $800 of Gercke's money, took the deed to the recorder's office. It does not appear that he was connected with the trial of the case and he is not an attorney of record in the case in this court. *Page 417

The real estate agent who made the deed to Spalding had never transacted any business for Gercke previous to that time. He wrote and took the acknowledgment of the deed to Spalding. He testified "that we usually informed people of joint tenancy title when we transact the deal;" that he drew the deed to Spalding — made the whole document himself; that the grantor signed the paper and he took the acknowledgment as a notary public; that he had an independent recollection of the conversation that took place with reference to the deed. He translated it from English into the German language. He did not read the whole document to Gercke but "explained to him what it was, in German." He did not "really recall what reply Gercke made." When the document was signed Mr. and Mrs. Gercke were there. He did not remember whether there was anybody else present, nor whether anything was said with reference to a joint tenancy with Spalding, nor whether any of the matters to which complainant testified occurred or conversations were had at the time the deed to Spalding was made. He did not mean to say that the conversations testified to were not had but did not know what was said. Subjects of conversations testified to by complainant as having occurred in his presence he did not remember or did not recall. He was what Wharton characterizes as a non mi recordo witness, upon whose testimony little reliance can be placed. He did not read the "whole document to Gercke but explained

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Bluebook (online)
163 N.E. 323, 331 Ill. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gercke-v-gercke-ill-1928.