Hart v. Randolph

32 N.E. 517, 142 Ill. 521
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 517 (Hart v. Randolph) 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
Hart v. Randolph, 32 N.E. 517, 142 Ill. 521 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The substance of the bill of complaint of Vienna Hart, plaintiff in error, is, that she is the widow of Thomas Hart, who died on the 25th day of May, 1881; that said Thomas was the owner in fee simple of lots 5 and 6, in block 176, in the city of Mattoon, Illinois, and on the 25th day of January, 1869, mortgaged them to one Samuel Neff, to secure a promissory note for $1000, given for borrowed money; that after-wards the said Thomas made and delivered to the said Neff a quit-claim deed for the premises, bearing date May 17, 1869, which deed was in fact a mortgage to secure said loan, and that under said deed .said Neff took possession of the lots as mortgagee, and remained in possession as mortgagee from thence to the time of his death, and that since his death, Elizabeth Randolph, his widow, in like manner remained in possession until plaintiff in error took possession of the property, and that she, plaintiff in error, is now in possession and -claims the property. The bill then avers that upon the back of the deed dated May 17, 1869, appears a certificate of acknowledgment, which certificate is set out in lime verba in the bill. Plaintiff in error alleges that she never signed nor acknowledged said deed, or any other deed for the premises, and charges that the certificate of acknowledgment is not sufficient in law to bar her of dower or of her homestead, and that at the time of the execution of the deed the premises were the homestead of her now deceased husband and herself. It is also stated in the bill that Samuel Neff afterwards died, and left as his sole heir and legatee, his widow, the defendant in error, who has since intermarried with one Eandolph; and that said defendant in error claims to be the owmer of said lots, and to be entitled to the possession of them under the pretended conveyance of May 17, 1869, and that she, said defendant in error, has instituted proceedings before a justice of the peace for possession of said premises, charging plaintiff in error with forcible detention. The prayer of the bill is, that the forcible detainer suit may be enjoined, and that upon the hearing dower and homestead in the premises may be assigned and set off to her, said plaintiff in error, and for an accounting of the rents and profits from the time of possession of said Neff, and that the same may be applied, after payment of taxes and necessary improvements, toward the discharge of the mortgage indebtedness, with interest thereon, and that should the same not be sufficient to fully discharge the mortgage indebtedness, then that plaintiff in error should be permitted to pay the remainder, and for other and further relief, etc.

The answer of defendant in error admits that plaintiff in error is the widow of Thomas Hart, that the latter was the owner in fee simple of the lots prior to May 17, 1869, and tliat a mortgage was given thereon to secure $1000 borrowed money, and shows that plaintiff in error joined in the execution of said mortgage, waiving and relinquishing her dower and homestead rights. Said answer states that on May 17, 1869, said Thomas Hart and plaintiff in error made, executed and delivered to Neff the quit-claim deed to the premises'in full satisfaction of the indebtedness secured by the mortgage and in satisfaction of other indebtedness, and denies that said deed was intended as a mortgage, and states that it was intended as an absolute conveyance of the title, and that said Thomas Hart and plaintiff in error removed from the premises and put said Neff in absolute possession of the property as grantee and owner under the deed, and not as mortgagee. The answer also denies that there was any intention on the part of plaintiff in error and her husband to return to the premises and occupy them as their homestead. It admits the death of Neff, and that defendant in error is his widow, legatee and sole heir, and stat'es that from the time of the making of the deed, and possession taken thereunder, said Neff and herself had continuous, open, peaceable and adverse possession of the lots, and made improvements oh the same, and paid all taxes assessed against them from year to year. It admits that plaintiff in error took possession, but claims that it was a forcible and unlawful possession; and the answer also avers that.if plaintiff in error ever had any right of dower or homestead right in the premises, the same has long since been barred in equity and by the Statute of Limitations.

Upon a hearing had upon the bill, answer, replication, exhibits and" proofs, a decree was entered dismissing the bill at the costs of the plaintiff in error.

The statements made by Mr. Hart, that are testified to by his widow and daughter, to the.effect that the deed was intended as a mortgage or security, and that he had turned the' property over to Mr. Neff to keep until he got his money out of it, and that Neff was then going to give it back, were very clearly incompetent testimony as against either Neff, or defendant in error, who claims under Neff’s title. The law does not permit one, by the mere pro.eess of making statements favorable to his own interests, to manufacture evidence for himself.

It is suggested.by counsel that some of the declarations were made while Thomas Hart was still in possession of the house and lots, arid that they are therefore admissible. We suppose reference is made to the testimony of the daughter that certain specified'declarations were made by her father “before we moved out of the property.” It may be, said statements were prior to the removal of the family from the house, but non constat that they were before the execution and delivery of the quit-claim deed. In fact, the form of the declaration, that “he had turned over the property,” etc., indicates that the title had already passed by the deed. It would be strange, indeed, if one could make declarations in derogation of the title that he had already conveyed, that would be evidence against his grantee, and upon the ground that the grantor had not yet surrendered actual possession of the premises to his grantee. But, besides this, the declarations made were not explanatory of the character of the possession held by the father, or in disparagement of his own title, and were therefore wholly inadmissible as evidence. It is well settled that the declarations of a grantor, made either before or after the execution of the deed, are not admissible for the purpose of impeaching the same. Dickie v. Carter, 42 Ill. 376; Massey v. Huntington, 118 id. 80; Guild v. Hull, 127 id. 523.

Other than is above indicated, there is no evidence whatever tending to prove that the deed was intended as a mortgage. On the other hand, the circumstances of the case, the fact that Neff and defendant in error were in actual possession of the premises for some twenty years, claiming and treating them as their own, making improvements from time to time and paying the taxes, and the fact that Thomas Hart lived for twelve years after the making of the deed, and in the immediate vicinity, and never claimed the property or called on Neff for an accounting, and that plaintiff in error made no such claim until about eight years after his death, seem to show quite conclusively that -the deed was made by Thomas Hart and received by Neff in full satisfaction and payment of the mortgage indebtedness, and this view is corroborated by the testimony of Mr. James W. Craig, who testifies that he was attorney for Neff, and that his recollection is that the deed was given to settle up matters between Mr. Neff and Mr. Hart.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 517, 142 Ill. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-randolph-ill-1892.