Hayes v. Miniter

139 N.E. 74, 308 Ill. 22
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1923
DocketNo. 14749
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 139 N.E. 74 (Hayes v. Miniter) 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
Hayes v. Miniter, 139 N.E. 74, 308 Ill. 22 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Ida Minott Hayes, appellee, recovered a judgment in the municipal court of Chicago on November 2, 1915, against her then husband, Dr. Edwin H. Hayes, in the sum of $2084.91 and costs. Shortly thereafter execution was issued on the judgment and was returned wholly unsatisfied. Hayes at that time owned a three-story stone-front brick building containing three flats of six rooms each, known as 5620 Normal boulevard. On April 20, 1914, he executed a trust deed to said premises to James L. Bynum to secure three notes, two for $1000 each and the third for $500, due, respectively, in one, two and three years from date, with six per cent interest. On November 4, 1915, there was filed in the recorder’s office of Cook county a quit-claim deed to Sarah Miniter to said premises, executed by Hayes, the deed reciting a consideration of $1500. On October 10, 1919, appellee filed her bill in the" circuit court of Cook county against Hayes, Bynum and Mrs. Miniter, setting up the foregoing facts and alleging that her judgment aforesaid still remained wholly unsatisfied, and alleging that she had been informed, so believes and states as facts, that the conveyances to Bynum and Mrs. Miniter were not real and bona fide but were mere shams and made with the intention of defrauding appellee and other creditors of Hayes; that no adequate consideration was paid by either of the grantees to Hayes for the conveyances, and that they now hold the premises in trust for him for his use and benefit and to prevent a levy and sale thereof by appellee, and that Hayes has no personal or other real estate liable to sale and execution. The bill prays for discovery and for a complete statement of the facts and circumstances of the alleged fraudulent conveyances and the amounts paid therefor and thereon and in what manner they were paid; that the instruments be set aside and declared void as to her, and that Hayes be decreed to pay and satisfy the amount due on said judgment and costs; that all property discovered and belonging to him be applied to the payment thereof. An injunction was prayed restraining further transfers, dispositions and incumbrances of the property, and there was a prayer for general relief. ' All three of the defendants answered the bill, denying that the judgment was obtained by the complainant, and averring that if it was obtained it was by forgery, perjury, fraud, deceit and viciousness. They did admit that the real estate in question was owned by Hayes and that the transfers by him to Bynum and Mrs. Miniter were made but denied all charge of fraud in connection therewith, and alleged that the transfers were bona fide, of the character they purported to be and for the consideration therein named. Issues were formed by replication and the cause was heard in open court before the chancellor. The court found against appellee as to Bynum. and that the trust deed and the notes to him were valid and in no respect fraudulent; that the other allegations in the bill are substantially true as alleged, and that the complainant did not join her husband in the execution of the trust deed or in the deed to Mrs. Miniter; that the latter deed, though absolute in form, is, in fact, only a mortgage to secure the re-payment of the amount of money therein named as consideration, and as to appellee is not a conveyanee in fee and was executed by the grantor with the intention of defrauding her and preventing her from collecting her judgment; that appellee’s judgment is a lien upon the property, subject to the lien of the trust deed, and also subject to the lien of the quit-claim deed, which is declared to be a mortgage. Hayes was decreed to pay within ten days the judgment to complainant, with five per cent interest thereon, and costs, and in default thereof that the premises be sold by the master in chancery after advertising the same, but subject to the lien of the trust deed to Bynum; that out of the proceeds of the sale the master pay, first, the cost of this proceeding, including the cost of sale and the master’s commission; second, to Mrs. Miniter the sum of $1500, without interest, the amount found due her on her mortgage; and third, to the complainant the amount of her judgment and interest and costs due on the same, and the surplus, if any, to Hayes. The decree also ordered that appellee, by apt conveyance and acknowledgment, shall release her right of dower to the purchaser, and that Hayes pay the costs of the proceeding, and execution was awarded to appellee for the same. Sarah Miniter has prosecuted her appeal to this court.

The facts concerning the obtaining of the judgment by appellee, of the ownership of the property by Edwin H. Hayes, and that he had executed the trust deed and notes to Bynum, and the quit-claim deed to Sarah Miniter for an alleged consideration of $1500, that the execution of the judgment was returned wholly unsatisfied, and that Hayes had no other property out of which the judgment can be made, were fully proved and are undisputed. The following facts are also established by the proofs in the record: Appellee was the second wife of Hayes, who was a practicing physician in the city of Chicago. Their relations as husband and wife were interrupted by misunderstandings between each other which resulted in separation and litigation. About January, 1911, she began a suit in the circuit court of Cook county for separate maintenance, which appears to have been very bitterly contested but with what result does not appear. Bynum was attorney for Hayes in that litigation, and the trust deed and mortgage executed to him by the doctor were in consideration of the services rendered him by Bynum in that suit and for cash money furnished him at different times pending that litigation. It appears that after that litigation, about August 28, 1912, appellee and Hayes began living together again, and that after that time they again separated, she going to what she called her home in Middleville, New York. In the fall of 1918 he secured a divorce from her while she was residing in New York, as she learned on her return to Chicago in the fall of 1919. She had previously obtained her judgment and on October 10, 1919, filed her present bill. The note upon which she recovered judgment was given to her by Hayes for money she had loaned him to remove an incumbrance upon the property, which is also the subject of this litigation. After they began living together in 1912 Hayes frequently had conversations with her about the note given to her by him, in all of which conversations he asked her to tear up the note, which she refused to do. At various times on such refusals he told her that he would never pay the note, and in one or more of these conversations he also told her that he would never pay a dollar on the note and that he would fix his property so that she could not collect it. None of these conversations concerning the note and the payment of it are disputed. In 1914, while she and Hayes were living in the property in question, he was getting $22 per month each for the first and second flats and $20 for the third, or $768 per annum. The value of the property at the time of the trial was $6000 or $6500. The quit-claim deed to Mrs. Miniter was executed by Hayes pending the suit by appellee against him for judgment on his note and about two months before that judgment was obtained. The deed was executed on September 3, 1915, in the office of Bynum, before his ■ stenographer, Edith L. Lundy, as notary public. At that time Mrs. Miniter paid to Bynum $1500, — $1450 for Hayes and $50 for Bynum for interest then due him from Hayes on the three notes and trust deed. Since that date, beginning, with October 21, 1915, and ending October 30, 1921, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
139 N.E. 74, 308 Ill. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-miniter-ill-1923.