Hadley v. White

11 N.E.2d 813, 367 Ill. 406
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1937
DocketNo. 23873. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 11 N.E.2d 813 (Hadley v. White) 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
Hadley v. White, 11 N.E.2d 813, 367 Ill. 406 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shaw

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the time of the commencement of this litigation and prior thereto, Charles W. Hadley, Harry G. Weaver and John S. Woodward, were lawyers practicing at Wheaton, in this State, under the firm name of Hadley, Weaver and Woodward. For a number of years prior to the filing of the original complaint herein, this firm represented the defendant Jennie F. White, in various matters of investigation and litigation, and as a result of those services secured a judgment against her on December 16, 1932, for the sum of $2000, which was entered in the circuit court of DuPage county on a trial before a jury. Jennie F. White had been married to the appellant, George C. Sutton, in the autumn of 1921, which marriage was ended by annulment in 1927. She thereafter married one Frank M. White, from whom she separated in 1928 and was divorced in 1932, taking back her maiden name of Erickson. The real estate herein involved was purchased by Mrs. Erickson (by which name she will be called in this opinion) in 1922 or 1923, while she was living on the premises and where she has continued to live ever since, operating the property as a boarding and rooming house.

On June 19, 1932, Mrs. Erickson made a warranty deed to her former husband, the appellant Sutton, who appears to have been living at her house at the time, and the complaint in this case, in the nature of a creditor’s bill to set aside that conveyance, was filed in July of 1934. About ten days after this complaint was filed, Mrs. Erickson filed her voluntary petition in bankruptcy, whereupon the intervening plaintiff, Lee O. Farnsworth, was appointed trustee. He later was allowed to intervene and become a co-plaintiff in this litigation. Issues were joined on the complaint and intervening complaint, the cause was heard before the court without a jury and a decree entered from which Sutton alone has appealed. By that decree the court found that the conveyance by deed of June 18, 1932, was a sham and, with the knowledge of Sutton, fraudulently made to hinder and delay Mrs. Erickson’s creditors. It was ordered that the deed be set aside and be held for naught as against Mrs. Erickson’s creditors; that the real estate described in it be a part of her estate in bankruptcy, and it was further specifically ordered that she and the appellant' Sutton convey all of their right, title and interest in the premises to the intervening plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy, and that, in default of such conveyance, the same should be made by the master in chancery of the court.

Appellant contends that at the time this deed was executed Mrs. Erickson owed him the sum of $10,340; that her equity in the real estate in question did not exceed $5000, and that he accepted a conveyance of this equity, in good faith, as a cancellation of her indebtedness to him. The existence of such an indebtedness was sought to be established by certain promissory notes and receipts, ten in number, photostatic copies of which appear in the record and which, if genuine and representative of actual and bona fide transactions, would fully sustain this contention. The trustee contends that these transactions are for the most part fictitious; that except for about $1250 which is shown to have actually passed between the parties, the.ro is no credible evidence of any financial transactions between them, and that, as to these items amounting to $1250, they were mere gifts arising out of the relationship of the parties and never intended as loans or debts, the repayment of which would be exacted at all events.

We have long adhered to the rule that when a chancellor has heard the testimony in open court, has had an opportunity to see the witnesses and listen to their testimony from the stand, we will not reverse his findings of fact unless we are able to say that they are palpably contrary to the weight of the testimony. (Cook v. Wolf, 296 Ill. 27; Moore v. Moore, 335 id. 517; Hall v. Pittenger, 365 id. 135.) The rule applies in this case because the basically essential questions for the court to try were ones of fact, — i. e., whether or not there was a valid subsisting debt from Mrs. Erickson to the appellant Sutton, payment of which would be exacted regardless of the fortunes of the debtor, and whether the transaction was fraudulent. On the question of fraud it was the duty of the chancellor to consider the testimony of the witnesses and all facts and circumstances shown. As we said in Garlick v. Imgruet, 340 Ill. 136, “direct evidence is not always available to prove fraud and it must often be inferred from the facts and circumstances shown.” The briefs present no serious controversy as to any important question of law and we will, therefore, limit our review to such portions of the record as will permit us to determine whether or not the chancellor was manifestly or palpably wrong, or his conclusions manifestly erroneous. Hall v. Pittenger, supra.

It will be unnecessary to examine in detail all of the receipts and notes upon which the appellant relied to establish consideration for the transfer in question, because they are all very much alike and subject to the same comment. The first one in the record was a receipt dated December 15, 1927j given by Mrs. Erickson to Sutton, in the sum of $2700, which is stated to be a loan at six per cent interest, to be repaid on December 15, 1931, “secured by my property at 246 S. Kenilworth Av. Elmhurst.” As to this, Sutton testified that he gave Mrs. Erickson $2700 on Thanksgiving day, 1927, and that he withdrew most of it from a safety deposit box at the Drexel State Bank. As to the same item, he testified before the referee in bankruptcy, that he gave her this money a few days before December 15, the date of the receipt, and that approximately $2000 of it was from the safety deposit box, but that $400 or $500 of it came from his savings account in the Rockford National Bank. As to the same exhibit Mrs. Erickson testified on the trial that she received the $2700, in cash, about Thanksgiving day, but could not say what she did with the money. She mentioned various payments that she claimed to have made with it and stated repeatedly that she had books of account in her own handwriting, bank statements, checks, etc., which showed all of these items. The bank records in evidence showed that Sutton made only one withdrawal during the year 1927 from his savings account in the Rockford National Bank, which was for $190 on December 1; that the only withdrawals during that year from a savings account maintained jointly by Sutton and Mrs. Erickson at the Drexel State Bank, were $105 on March 29, and $200 on May 2. The safety deposit box which Sutton had prior thereto at the Drexel State Bank was surrendered on November 18, 1927. Mrs. Erickson produced no records showing the receipt or deposit of the $2700, nor any records showing any of the other payments she claimed to have made from that money. In Sutton’s first testimony he said he withdrew the $2000 from the Drexel State Bank deposit box on December 15, but at the later hearing, when confronted with the bank’s records showing that his box had been surrendered on November 18, he testified he took the money out of the box on that day. If this is true, he either carried it on his person or placed it in some undisclosed place of storage from that date until Thanksgiving, or until December 15, the date of the receipt.

The next note in the record claimed to have been given by Mrs. Erickson to Sutton is dated December 26, 1928, for the sum of $2200.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E.2d 813, 367 Ill. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-v-white-ill-1937.