Illinois Land & Loan Co. v. Bonner

75 Ill. 315
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 75 Ill. 315 (Illinois Land & Loan Co. v. Bonner) 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
Illinois Land & Loan Co. v. Bonner, 75 Ill. 315 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, filed June 23d, 1873, in the Cook Circuit Court, by William B. Bonner, against The Illinois Land and Loan Company, The Cook County Land Company, and L. B. Otis and others, for partition of part of lot 4, in block 96, in school section addition to Chicago, fronting 16 feet on Monroe street, and 198 feet on La Salle street. Complainant alleges that he is entitled to two undivided ninth parts of the premises, or to some other portion thereof, as one of the heirs at law of his late nephew, Percy W. Bonner, whose father, James D. Bonner, died in 1855, seized of the premises intestate, and left, surviving him, three children, G-alila, Bosalia, and Percy. It appears that Gralila died in 1856, and left a will, which was duly probated, devising her estate to John Jones, to hold in trust for certain specified purposes; that Bosalia died in 1860, and her interest in the lot was sold, by order of court, to pay her debts, and is now owned by The Cook County Land Company, one of the defendants. On January 20th, 1870, Percy, being then a minor, executed a deed of his interest in the lot to The Blinois Land and Loan Company, one of the defendants, for the expressed consideration of §10,000. Percy died July 26th, 1870, before arriving of full age, intestate as to real estate. Among the heirs he left, complainant claims to be one. The interests of the others have all been conveyed to the above named Illinois Land and Loan Company, and Cook County Land Company.

The cause was heard by the court below, upon proofs taken, and a decree rendered, finding for complainant, setting aside the deed from Percy to The Illinois Land and Loan Company, as having been obtained for an inadequate consideration, through imposition, undue influence and fraud on the part of the company, directing partition to be made, and one-ninth of the property to be set off to complainant, free from all liens and incumbrances, out of the portion of the lot claimed by The Illinois Land and Loan Company, under a prior partition which it had made with the other defendants. Twenty-two and a half feet were accordingly set off to complainant out of such portion of the lot belonging to the Illinois Land and Loan Company. The complainant, and The Illinois Land and Loan Company, both appealed from the decree to this court.

It is first objected that the allegation of heirship on the part of the complainant has not been proven.

It is said that, to sustain the claim of heirship, it was incumbent upon complainant to prove the marriage of Percy’s grandparents, and that complainant was their lawful offspring. There was an abundance of proof, by competent testimony, that the grandparents lived together as husband and wife for a long time, until the death of-the grandfather; that they reared a family of several children, among whom were James D. Bonner, the father of Percy, and the complainant; that among the members of. the family, the relatives, and intimate family acquaintances, the complainant was ■ always recognized and treated as a child of such grandparents, and a brother of James D. Bonner. This was sufficient prima facie evidence of the marriage, and of the legitimacy of complainant, and cast upon the defendants the burden of their disproof.

There was evidence that the grandparents resided in ¡North Carolina; that the complainant and James D. Bonner were born there; that their mother, the grandmother of Percy, was an Indian woman; and it is claimed that such marriage is thus shown to be an unauthorized one, under a statute of ¡North Carolina, of 1819, which forbids the intermarriage of a white person and an Indian. Mrs. Anderson, a witness, testified that she was a sister of complainant and James D. Bonner, Percy’s father; and that at the time of giving her testimony, in 1874, she was 57 years of age; and that she was not the eldest child; consequently, her parents, the grandparents of Percy, must have been married prior to 1817, two years before the law was enacted. We cannot see that the statute has any bearing upon the validity of the marriage.

It is claimed that complainant has African blood in his veins, and that, as James D. Bonner, Percy’s father, was the offspring of a white man and an Indian woman, and complainant was born of the same mother, he, consequently, cannot be the son of the father of James D. Bonner. All the testimony upon this point is that of the witnesses King and Jones, and is as follows : King having been asked whether complainant was a colored or a white man, answered he was a colored man.

Jones stated he thought complainant had African blood in his veins. On cross-examination, he said he did not claim to know that there was African blood in the complainant. As there was the presence of Indian blood, we are not satisfied, from such evidence, that the color spoken of by the witnesses meant any thing more than the tinct which had been derived from the red man.

The testimony of two witnesses connected with the Illinois Land and Loan Company — one as attorney, the other as an agent and officer—through whose instrumentality the deed from Percy to the company was procured, was introduced to prove statements made by Percy in conversations had with them after the deed had been obtained. They testify that in such conversations, Percy repeatedly stated that he did not regard complainant as his uncle, though he had been called such; that it was well understood in the family that complainant was an illegitimate child. They testified further, that Percy brought to the office of the attorney two bibles, one of which he said was his father’s, and the other that of his grandparents; that they contained their respective family records; that the name of the complainant did not appear in either of the records, and that Percy wished the attorney to keep the books, so as to show, in case of his death, who were his heirs; that the bibles were burned in the October (1871) fire of Chicago. This is the sole evidence of this character which the record con tains; not a syllable against the legitimacy of the complainant falls from the lips of any other witness.

Uniformly, at all other times, as testified to by a large number of witnesses, Percy had recognized and called complainant his uncle, and so addressed him in correspondence with him. Although the declaration of Percy, testified to, was that the thing was well understood in the family, not a word of it comes out in any other testimony, although a member of the family — a sister—was examined as a witness, and other relatives and intimate acquaintances of the family. Mrs. Anderson, the sister of complainant, testifies to her knowing of her father’s family having a family bible; that her mother’s bible was destroyed, stating the circumstances of its destruction; that she does not know what became of her father’s bible, if he had one.

Notwithstanding, according to this testimony, the extreme care which had been taken to preserve the evidence of who were the heirs of Percy, and that complainant was not one, by depositing the two bibles with the attorney for safe keeping, yet, after the death of Percy, this same attorney, in a letter to Mrs. Peterson, of October 20, 1870, recognizes complainant as an heir of Percy; and in a letter to complainant, of August 19, 1870, he says:.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ill. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-land-loan-co-v-bonner-ill-1874.