Hush v. Reaugh

23 F. Supp. 646, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2008
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 7, 1938
Docket864
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 F. Supp. 646 (Hush v. Reaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hush v. Reaugh, 23 F. Supp. 646, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2008 (illinoised 1938).

Opinion

LINDLEY, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, residing in Columbus, Ohio, brought this suit in equity against defendants, residents of Clay County, Illinois, to set aside a quit claim deed executed by plaintiffs and delivered to Richard S. C. Reaugh, the deed having been made at the latter’s request to DeLong, and to vacate likewise subsequent conveyances by DeLong to Richard Reaugh, son of Richard S. C. Reaugh, and by him to Riggle, and a tax deed held by defendant Dill-man. The land, consisting of 140 acres, is located in Clay County, Illinois.

Plaintiffs aver that the deed was obtained by the elder Reaugh by means of his fraudulent concealment and misrepresentations, for the sum of $100; that the land is of the value of $20,000; that as a result of the fraud, the conveyances should be rescinded and the tax deed set aside, as void under the statutes of Illinois. Plaintiffs also attack an oil lease executed and delivered by the elder Reaugh to the Pure Oil Company, subsequently ratified by Riggle, nominee of Reaugh, on the ground that the Pure Oil Company’s title is invalid because of the fraud of Reaugh. Reaugh' and his associates deny fraud in the procurement of the deed and the Pure Oil Company avers that it had no knowledge of any fraud; that it is not bound by the fraud, if' any existed, and that its oil lease, therefore, is impervious to attack.

Hush, prior to 1926, had been employed on a railroad and had lost one of his hands. In 1926 he purchased, first, a 17 *648 acre tract of land lying near Clay City, on which he made his home and, second, the 140 acres three and one-half miles from Clay City in Section 26, assuming a mortgage, later paying approximately $1,000 thereon and reducing it to approximately $1,100. He lived in Clay City from February, 1926, to August, 1934. During this period he raised fruit and poultry on his home place. Of the 140 acre farm, 120 acres were largely timber and approximately 20 acres only were cleared and fit for cultivation. During these years, he cut and sawed most of the marketable timber. He knew the elder Reaugh, employed him as an attorney for the purpose of examining an abstract and says that he supported Reaugh in the latter’s candidacy for public office. Reaugh served as county judge and has been state’s attorney. He was disbarred from the practice some years ago, the report of the proceeding appearing in People ex rel. v. Reaugh, 224 Ill. 541, 79 N.E. 936.

While Hush still lived in Clay City, suit for foreclosure was begun against him by the bank which held the mortgage upon the 140 acres. He and his wife were served with process and the cause proceeded to a decree of foreclosure and sale. However, no sale was ever had. The 17 acres upon which he lived, he surrendered to the mortgagee. When he left Illinois he had no means. He had sold the, marketable timber on the land, had lost his home and the foreclosure proceeding against the 140 acres was pending.

In this condition, in 1934, Hush moved to Columbus, Ohio, where he has since lived. His wife did not follow immediately but joined him within a few months. They lived together for some two years thereafter, then separated and finally were divorced. She has been an invalid, seriously afflicted with arthritis, for the past six-years. Hush, since his removal from Illinois, has had no steady employment but has worked a portion of the time on WPA -projects. He apparently considered the 140 acres of no value over and above the mortgage and gave no further attention to it or to the decree. The bank had taken a judgment against him upon a note, in addition to the mortgage indebtedness, for some $1,-400 and this judgment stood as a lien upon the land, subj ect to the mortgage.

Sometime in the year 1935, the inhabitants of Clay County became interested in the prospects for oil and from that time thence the interest grew and persists. As the activities progressed, paying wells came in. The time of this development is significant in this litigation. Reaugh was an abstracter and prepared numerous abstracts of title for the Pure Oil Company, who obtained many oil leases upon lands in the county. Ordinarily, drilling was not begun until the abstracts, were completed. In 1936, in the fall, Reaugh made an abstract on the Weiler land southeast of Clay City, one and a quarter miles northeast of the Hush land. He knew, then, that there was a derrick on it. He made abstracts for other tracts on various sides of and-near the Hush land including properties in Sections 26, 27 and 28. He made eight or ten abstracts of titles for land in this territory in the fall of 1936, kepf a set of abstract records and entered all recorded transactions therein, including leases and conveyances of minerals. Oil scouts approached him for an oil lease on the land conveyed by Hush in the early part of 1937. One Kelly asked if he would accept $30 per acre for the lessor’s royalty. He replied that he would consider $50. He knew that in the fall of 1936, Mrs. Chaffin, whose land adjoined that of Hush, had received $10 an acre for one-half of the ’ royalty ' on her land. He represented Mrs. Chaffin when she executed the lease in his office. He knew of the Travis oil lease in Section 28. He knew of the sale of one-half of the one-eighth royalty in Section 28 in October, 1936, and knew that in January and February, 1937, one-half interest in the royalty in the Shannon Holman farm south and east of Clay City sold for $10 per acre, and that a one-half interest in the royalty in the Taylor farm of 240 acres in Section 27 was sold in the summer ,of 1937 for $24,000. This land joined the Hush land and the purchase was on the basis of $48,000 for the entire one-eighth royalty interest, or $200 per acre. He knew of the sale of a one-half royalty interest in 240 acres in Sections 28 and 29 on July 10, 1937, to the Standard Oil Company of Ohio, on the basis of $72,000 for one-eighth royalty interest, and of various other, leases and sales of'royalty interests in the fall of 1936 and early in 1937. The Weiler well, approximately one and a quarter miles from the Hush land came in as a producing well on February 26, 1937. He says he did not know at first that it was a paying profitable well but was aware of *649 the fact that it had been reported that oil had been found.

From all the testimony it appears that Reaugh had opportunity to know and did know of the beginning of the interest in land, in Clay County for oil purposes; knew that it began in 1935; that it progressed in 1936 and that oil had been found in paying quantities. He had participated in the execution of some of the contracts and had prepared abstracts for many of the lands covered by leases.' All of this knowledge and information came to him prior to the execution of the deed. Hence it is an established fact that when the deed was delivered to him, he knew that oil had been found in paying quantities on farms not remote from this land.

Further, Reaugh had negotiated with the receiver,of the bank which held the decree of foreclosure and the judgment against Hush, in 1935, and by approval of the Comptroller of the Currency, on September 19, 1935, for the sum of $100, he procured an assignment of the foreclosure decree to himself and a release of the judgment against Hush. So from that time hence, he stood in the position of a mortgagee holding a decree of foreclosure against the land in which Hush had merely an equity of redemption.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Supp. 646, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hush-v-reaugh-illinoised-1938.