Houdek v. Ehrenberger

72 N.E.2d 837, 397 Ill. 62, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 366
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1947
DocketNo. 29613. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 72 N.E.2d 837 (Houdek v. Ehrenberger) 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
Houdek v. Ehrenberger, 72 N.E.2d 837, 397 Ill. 62, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 366 (Ill. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court :

On December 5, 1942, the plaintiff, Norma Houdek, filed her complaint in the superior court of Cook county seeking the declaration of a resulting trust in favor of her father’s estate as to three different parcels of real estate conveyed by or at the direction of her father during his lifetime to the principal defendant, Fleanor Ehrenberger, hereinafter referred to as the defendant. The cause was heard before a special commissioner, who found for defendants and, accordingly, recommended that the complaint be dismissed. The chancellor sustained plaintiff’s exceptions to the report of the special commissioner, found that a resulting trust existed, and entered a decree requiring defendants to execute and deliver to plaintiff quitclaim deeds to a one-half interest in each parcel. Defendants prosecute a direct appeal to this court, a freehold being necessarily involved.

Plaintiff and defendant are sisters, the only children of Joseph and Anna Nerad, and the sole heirs-at-law of their father, who died intestate on August 9, 1942. Decedent left an estate consisting of personal property valued at approximately $50,000, but held no real property in his own name when he died. The real estate involved in the present controversy is worth about $30,000. Parcel I, the Nerad family residence, located at 7104 Riverside Drive, Berwyn, was purchased by Joseph Nerad, in 1930, for $23,000, paid out of his own funds. On May x, 1937, he executed a quitclaim deed to parcel I to defendant and caused it to be recorded.

Parcel II is located on Haas avenue, in Lyons, and is improved with a two-story frame building having a tavern on the first floor and an apartment above. Foreclosure proceedings had already been instituted when Nerad purchased the mortgage note in the spring of 1940 for $1500. At Nerad’s direction, the note and mortgage were assigned to defendant and she was substituted as party plaintiff in the foreclosure action. Arthur Thy fault, Nerad’s attorney, purchased the property at the foreclosure sale in the name of defendant and, upon the expiration of the period of redemption, a master’s deed was issued to her.

Parcel III, a vacant lot on Maple avenue, in Berwyn, was purchased by Nerad on December 23, 1938, for $250 and back taxes. He took title in the name of Marie Henja, secretary of his real estate adviser, Frank Topinka, and, subsequently, at Nerad’s direction, title was transferred to defendant by a deed dated March 2, 1942.

The real estate transactions here involved must be considered in the light of Nerad’s domestic circumstances. Title to parcel I was taken by Nerad in the names of his wife, Anna, and himself in joint tenancy. On August 2, 1935, Anna Nerad obtained a divorce from her husband. Plaintiff testified in behalf of her mother in the divorce action. Nerad was ordered to pay $150 a month as alimony and his wife waived all interest in his real estate. On December 1, 1935, plaintiff and her husband, Albert Houdek, got into a brawl with Nerad and Fred Stechter in a local tavern. As an aftermath, plaintiff and her husband brought an action against Nerad and Stechter for assault and battery, asking $50,000 damages, and Albert Houdek was discharged from his employment at the Nerad Brothers Coal Company. Norma and Albert Houdek were represented by the law firm of Faxon and Wiggins. The latter had represented Anna Nerad in her divorce action. Nerad and his codefendant in the tort action filed an answer alleging that they acted only in self-defense after Houdek and his wife had struck the first blows. Subsequently, on June 17, 1936, this action was dismissed and Houdek was re-employed by the coal company. The attorneys’ fees incurred by Norma and Albert Houdek were paid by Nerad and his former wife, Anna.

In 1936, defendant and her husband moved onto parcel I and lived there with Nerad until November, 1938. Plaintiff and her husband lived rent free in a two-flat frame building on Park avenue, South Riverside. These premises, purchased by Nerad with title in defendant, were sold to Joseph Thuma in October, 1940, and, shortly thereafter, plaintiff and her family vacated their apartment and moved in with Nerad on parcel I where they continued to reside rent free until Nerad’s death.

On April 6, 1937, a supplemental decree was entered in the 1935 divorce action, under the terms of which Anna Nerad received the sum of $20,000 in lieu of future alimony and executed a quitclaim deed to parcel I and other real estate not involved here. Less than a month later, Nerad transferred title to parcel I to defendant.

In January, 1938, Nerad sold his interest in the Nerad Brothers Coal Company for more than $35,000 and retired from business. In April of the same year, Joseph and Anna Nerad married each other again. Fred Stechter, codefendant in the tort action, and his wife accompanied the remarried couple on a trip to Europe. Parcel III was purchased and taken in the name of the secretary, Marie Henja, shortly after the party’s return.

Decedent purchased the mortgage indebtedness on parcel II in the spring of 1940 and the foreclosure proceeding was carried through to a master’s sale before the end of the year, the certificate of sale naming defendant as purchaser. In February, 1941, Anna Nerad obtained a second divorce from her husband. She again waived alimony and, also, dower and homestead rights. In the uncontested divorce action, defendant refused to be a witness, while plaintiff testified that her father became intoxicated two or three times a week.

In March, 1942, while sharing the occupancy of parcel I with plaintiff and her family, Nerad caused the title to parcel II to be transferred to defendant. Nerad’s death occurred in the same year. No will was found. With the consent of plaintiff and defendant, defendant’s husband, Emil Ehrenberger, was appointed administrator of the estate. A bitter family dispute ensued with respect to the ownership of all the parcels of real estate, the legal aspects of which are the subject of the present proceedings.

The law relating to resulting trusts has long been well settled. A resulting trust arises, by implication of law, from the acts of the parties. (Cook v. Blazis, 365 Ill. 625; Dorman v. Dorman, 187 Ill. 154.) Where land is purchased with the money of one person and title is taken in the name of another, the law raises a resulting trust in favor of the purchaser. The burden of proof is upon the party seeking to establish a resulting trust and the evidence must be clear, strong and unequivocal and must establish the payment by the claimed beneficiary beyond a doubt. (Jones v. Koepke, 387 Ill. 97; Heineman v. Herman, 385 Ill. 191; Curielli v. Curielli, 383 Ill. 102.) Where land is purchased by a husband and title is taken in the name of his wife or child a presumption obtains that the property was conveyed to the wife or child as a gift or advancement, but this presumption is not conclusive and may be rebutted by proof, it being purely a question of intention whether a resulting trust arises in such a case. (Nickoloff v. Nickoloff, 384 Ill. 377; Walker v. Walker, 369 Ill. 627; Cook v. Blazis, 365 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.E.2d 837, 397 Ill. 62, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houdek-v-ehrenberger-ill-1947.