Hinton v. Tyler

163 Ill. App. 454, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 468
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 14, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 Ill. App. 454 (Hinton v. Tyler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinton v. Tyler, 163 Ill. App. 454, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 468 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

It appears from the records that there were originally two cases pending in the circuit court of Vermilion county, with respect to the same transaction and the same subject-matter; and that they have become consolidated or so merged that one opinion and judgment 'will properly dispose of the whole controversy. The details with respect to the consolidation or merger of the two cases are of no consequence here.

Minerva H. Hinton, wife of appellee, was originally a co-complainant, but she having died atid her interest having thereby terminated, she was dismissed out of the bill. Henry M. Tyler, husband of appellant, Mary H. Tyler, was originally a party defendant, and his death having been suggested, the bill was dismissed as to him. The parties to the litigation as it now stands are: William M. Hinton, the appellee, and Mary H. Tyler and Perley E. Wiggins, the appellants.

The bill sets up at length and in detail the purchase of certain real estate, viz: The north half of the southeast quarter of section thirty-five, township seventeen north, range fourteen west of the second principal meridian, in Vermilion county, Illinois, by appellant Wiggins, from appellee, Hinton, and at length and in detail charges falsehood, fraud and deceit on the part of Wiggins with respect to the payment of the purchase price of the land. With respect to appellant, Mary H. Tyler, the bill charges that Wiggins contracted a sale of the land to her, after he had obtained a deed from appellee; that she had only paid a small part of the purchase price to Wiggins and then owed him a large part thereof, not represented by any note. The bill concludes with a general averment that by means of said fraudulent transactions, Hinton, appellee, was cheated and defrauded of a large part of the purchase price of said land and ought to have a vendor’s lien, and prays that Wiggins may be decreed to pay said sum within a short day, and in case of his failure to do so, that Tyler be decreed to pay the same from the balance of the purchase price due from her to Wiggins, etc., and for general relief.

To the bill appellant, Wiggins, filed answer in which he denies all the charges of fraud made in the hill, and appellant, Mary H. Tyler, filed an answer in which she sets out that she is an innocent purchaser without notice. See further reference to her answer, infra. Upon general replications being filed the cause was referred to a special master, who took and considered the evidence and presented his report to the court. The special master’s report, so far as it is involved in this appeal is as follows:

“I would further report the following finding:
“1. _ That prior to the 26th day of May, 1906, William Hinton was the owner of the north half (%) of the southeast quarter (%) of section thirty-five (35), township seventeen (17) north, range fourteen (14) west of the 2d P. M. in Vermilion county, Illinois, and occupied the same as a homestead, and on that day entered into a contract to sell the same to Perley E. Wiggins, one of the defendants herein.
“2. That said contract provided that as part payment for the land, Hinton would take a note made by F. W. Sickel, payable to P. E. Wiggins, for $3,383.7Í, with accrued interest, endorsed by P. E. Wiggins. That in reducing the contract to writing, the words ‘without recourse on me,’ were put into said contract without the knowledge of said Hinton.
‘ ‘ 3. That Hinton is a man of meagre education and failing faculties, unused to trading, and at the time said trade was closed, was, by the representations of Wiggins, persuaded to take said note endorsed without recourse, as part payment for his farm.
“4. That the note was a renewal note given to Wiggins by Sickel in payment of another note, and interest long past due, which Sickel was unable to pay, and that at no time since the making of the first note by Sickel has he been able to pay either of said notes, and that Wiggins was well aware of this fact when he traded said note to Hinton.
“5. That sometime previous to the trade between Wiggins and Hinton, Wiggins had endorsed the note without recourse, and attempted to have it traded to another party, one of the witnesses whose deposition was taken at Homer, and at the time of trading it to Hinton the same endorsement was on the note.
“6. That Wiggins and Sickel have had dealings covering a period of fifteen years prior to the time of the trade between Wiggins and Hinton, and Wiggins well knew the inability of Sickel to pay the note in controversy when it would come due.
“7. That the complainant, William Hinton was induced to enter into and execute said contract of sale, and accept the note in controversy indorsed without recourse as part payment for his farm, by the representations of Wiggins that Sickel was a man of property, and able and willing to pay said note when it became due: that such representations were false; that Wiggins knew them to be false, and that they were made for the purpose of deceiving Hinton; that Hinton relied on such representations, and was deceived and injured thereby.
“8. That the complainant is entitled to recover the sum of the note and interest retained by Wiggins from the purchase price of said farm, viz: $3,503.06, with interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum from the date of closing the trade to the date of the decree herein.
“I am of the opinion that the equities are with the complainant and that the representations and actions of the defendant Wiggins in connection with the trade contained all the elements of fraud, and that the prayer of the bill herein ought to be granted.
“I therefore recommend that á decree be entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and the foregoing findings. ’ ’

Objections and exceptions were filed by appellants to the master’s report. The objections were argued before the master and by him overruled. The exceptions were argued before the court and overruled, and the court entered a decree in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The decree as abstracted by counsel for appellant is as follows:

“Decree filed November 9, 1910, shows dismissal of suit as to Henry M. Tyler, that cause was heard upon exceptions by defendants, Perley E. Wiggins and Mary H. Tyler to Master’s Eeport, and finds that the court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matters, and that the equities are with the complainant, and that he is entitled to the relief prayed, and that defendant Wiggins was guilty of fraud, as found by the Special Master in his findings.
“It was therefore ordered that the exceptions of each of said defendants be overruled, and the findings of the Master are approved and confirmed, and that defendant Perley E. Wiggins pay to complainant William M. Hinton within ninety days from the rendition of this decree, $3,503.06, with interest at 5 per cent per annum, from May 26, 1906, and that complainant have a lien upon the interest of Mary H. Tyler in the land traded by complainant to said Wiggins, and by said Wiggins to Henry M. Tyler and Mary H.

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Related

Strey v. Buehl
265 Ill. App. 554 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 Ill. App. 454, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinton-v-tyler-illappct-1911.