Harrer v. Wallner

80 Ill. 197
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 80 Ill. 197 (Harrer v. Wallner) 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
Harrer v. Wallner, 80 Ill. 197 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Appellee and Herman Wallner intermarried some time in the month of February, 1852, and about that time, and soon after, her stepfather, Thomas Jaworski, conveyed to them two 20-acre tracts of land, one in section 26 and the other in 27, township 41 north, range 13 east, 3d P. M., in Cook county. As the evidence shows, Herman deserted Deborah within about three months after the marriage, and they have not lived together since.

There is no question in the case that Jaworski purchased the land from Tuthill King, the patentee from the government, and thereby became invested with the title in fee; but it is claimed that Herman and Deborah subsequently reconveyed the land to Jaworski, but in so doing, a mistake was make, in describing the grantee as “ Lawreski,” on the 24th of December, 1852, and that afterwards Jaworski conveyed these and other lands about the same time, to Hewkirk and Ward, from whom appellants claim, by mesne conveyances, to have derived title.

It is claimed, and we think the evidence shows, that appellee, at the time of her marriage, wTas not of age, nor was she when it is claimed she and her husband reconveyed to Jaworski in December, 1852, although there may be some criticism of the testimony of the witnesses as to other dates and facts connected with their testimony, as to her minority. She and her mother both testify that she was but fourteen years of age when she was married. She fixes the date of her marriage at the 24th of February, 1852. It appears that the deed from Jaworski to appellee and husband bore date on the 25th of March, 1852, and the mother says it was made about a month after the marriage. Thus this date is fixed with reasonable certainty.

As to appellee’s age, both s'he and her mother would be likely to have remembered. Marriage is always considered so important an event, that most persons always remember it with certainty, and also the age at which it occurs. These things are seldom forgotten whilst memory lasts, by even the most illiterate; and those who can neither read nor write generally know and seldom forget their own ages, and mothers of that description are believed to remember the ages of their children quite as well as the educated and more gifted; and although both may have mistaken other dates, we are satisfied that they were not likely to be mistaken as to that fact.

If this, then, be true, appellee was not fifteen when she is claimed to have joined in the execution of this deed to Jaworski by her and her husband, and if so, then she had the legal and undoubted right, within three years after coming of age, to repudiate the conveyance, even if it was made as claimed: Again, she was then under the disability of marriage, which did not cease until she obtained a divorce, on the 6'th of January, 1874. Mot being of the age, then, required by the statute, to convey by joining with her husband, the deed was unauthorized, and passed no title, for want of power to make the deed claimed by appellants as reinvesting the title in Jaworski, even if it was made as claimed.

The 17th section of the Conveyance Act of 1845, (R. S. 1845, p. 106,) provides that: “Whenever any husband and wife, residing in this State, shall wish to convey the estate of the wife, it ‘shall and may be lawful for said husband and wife, she being above the age of eighteen years, to execute any grant, bargain, sale, lease, release, foeffment, deed, conveyance or assurance in law whatever, for the conveying of such lands, tenements and hereditaments.” The remainder of the section relates to the execution and acknowledgment of the deed when so made, but has no relation to this case.

Have, then, these requirements been answered? The husband and wife were residents of this State, The wife had an estate in the land, but she was not eighteen years of age, and hence was not authorized to join with her husband to make the conveyance, but it was as declared, negatively, unlawful for her to do so before she was of that age. Married women were not then empowered to make a conveyance in any manner without joining with their husbands, and then only when they were of the age of eighteen years or upwards. This deed, if it was ever made, was without the pretense of power on the part of the wife.

This is better illustrated, and made more obvious by a reference to the common law on this subject. By it a married woman was utterly powerless to convey her real estate by deed poll, feoffment or other instrument. She could only accomplish that purpose by levying a fine or suffering a recovery. Hence, it is seen that there is no authority in the common law that can be invoked to aid the execution of this deed, or to render the conveyance operative. Hot being enabled by the common law to so convey, married women derive all of their power to convey from the statute alone; and a conveyance, to be valid, or to pass any rights, the party must conform to the substantial requirements of the statute; and that she should be of the age of eighteen years or upwards, is made by the statute absolutely essential to the validity of the deed, or to pass title. This deed, under the statute, was void, and, being void, she was not bound to repudiate it within three years after arriving at the age of eighteen.

Had she been under that age, and unmarried, and made a deed, it would have been only voidable, and she would have been required, within, three years after coming of the age of eighteen, to take the necessary steps, as this court has repeatedly held, to avoid it. But the statute having declared that it shall only be lawful for a married woman, who is over eighteen years of age, to make a deed to her property by joining with her husband in a conveyance for the purpose, a deed made contrary to its provisions is void, and not merely voidable.

This view of the question was not presented by appellee’s counsel, but it is so obvious and essential to a correct decision of the case, that we have deemed it proper to give it full weight in its decision.

There was much evidence on the question whether or not appellee and her husband made a deed reconveying the lands in controversy to JaworsM. All the evidence cónsidered, the question is left, we think, in great doubt. It is contradictory, uncertain, and perhaps irreconcilable. But from what we have said, it will be seen that it is wholly immaterial whether or not the deed was made, and hence we have not discussed the evidence on that question.

We now come to the question whether or not appellee has now the right to urge the invalidity of this deed against the claims of appellants. Or is she barred by laches or the statutes of Limitation, from asserting her rights? Appellants claim to deraign title by a connected chain from King to themselves, through Jaworski, he having subsequently conveyed to Hewkirk and Ward, from whom appellants derive title. And it is not questioned that they have claim and color of title made in good faith, with the requisite possession and payment of taxes to create an absolute bar under the act of 1839, if appellee is not within the saving clause of the statute. And she is barred under the act of 1835, appellants having regular connected chain of title in law deducible of record from the United States government, unless she is within the savings of that law.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ill. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrer-v-wallner-ill-1875.