Jackson v. DBR Jackson Partnership

2016 IL App (3d) 150229, 70 N.E.3d 641
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 7, 2016
Docket3-15-0229
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 IL App (3d) 150229 (Jackson v. DBR Jackson Partnership) 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
Jackson v. DBR Jackson Partnership, 2016 IL App (3d) 150229, 70 N.E.3d 641 (Ill. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

2016 IL App (3d) 150229

Opinion filed September 7, 2016 ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

BARRY JACKSON, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the 10th Judicial Circuit, ) Stark County, Illinois, Plaintiff, ) ) ) v. ) ) DBR JACKSON PARTNERSHIP, an ) Illinois Partnership; RUSSELL E. JACKSON; ) Appeal No. 3-15-0229 DEBRA JACKSON; and IRMA JEAN ) Circuit No. 12-L-2 JACKSON, ) ) Defendants, ) ) ) (Cheryl Jackson, Counterplaintiff-Appellee; ) Russell E. Jackson, Counterdefendant- ) Honorable Appellant). ) Michael P. McCuskey, ) Judge, Presiding. ____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Wright and Carter concurred in the judgment, with opinion. ____________________________________________________________________________

OPINION

¶1 Russell E. Jackson appeals from an order of the circuit court of Stark County denying his

motion for summary judgment and granting a cross-motion by his sister, Cheryl Jackson, for

summary judgment. In granting her cross-motion, the court held that Cheryl had acquired a one- fifth interest in the family farm by way of a gift from their father, Dean Jackson. The court held

that Cheryl had acquired the one-fifth interest as a gift from Dean when he executed a purchase

agreement for the property in question on which he listed each his children and himself as

purchasers. Cheryl maintained that, even though her name was not included as a grantee when

the deed was delivered many years later, she nonetheless held an equitable interest in the

property. Russell maintained in his motion for summary judgment that whatever gift Dean may

have intended when the purchase agreement was executed in 1997 was incomplete and subject to

revocation at any time prior to delivery of the deed. The trial court agreed with Cheryl and

granted summary judgment to her. Russell appeals from that judgment.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 Dean and his wife Irma had four children: Barry, Russell, Cheryl, and Janet. Dean was by

all accounts a very successful farmer. In addition to several hundred acres he owned outright, he

farmed several hundred additional acres under various agreements for purchase. In 1970, Barry

joined Dean in the farming operation, and Russell joined them in 1978.

¶4 In 1977, Dean negotiated an agreement to purchase 320 acres of farmland from Margaret

J. Dixon for $1,334,000 to be paid with interest in annual installments until 1997, when the

balance would be paid and a warranty deed would be issued by the seller. The land came to be

known as “the Dixon 320.” The purchase agreement listed Dean and each of his four adult

children as purchasers. On April 1, 1977, Dean brought the agreement to each of the four and

instructed each to sign it. It is undisputed that none of the children had any role in procuring the

Dixon 320. The terms of the Agreement required each purchaser to “first make payments, and

perform the covenants herein mentioned” before the seller would convey title to the land.

2 ¶5 After executing the purchase agreement, Dean farmed the Dixon 320 along with Barry

and Russell. The grain harvested from the Dixon 320 was commingled with grain from other

farms owned or controlled by the Jacksons, so it was impossible to determine what cash proceeds

were generated by any specific acreage. Each year, Dean would deposit the proceeds from the

farming operation into a savings account at the Wyoming Bank and Trust Co. in Wyoming,

Illinois, which was titled “DBR Farm Account.” That account was jointly owned by Dean, Barry,

and Russell. Each year Dean would distribute enough money from the DBR account into Barry’s

and Russell’s individual checking accounts to allow them to each pay one-third of the annual

payment to Margaret Dixon, with Dean paying the other one-third. Dean, Barry, and Russell took

net income from the DBR account for their personal living expenses. Neither Janet nor Cheryl

ever received money from the DBR account or made any payments pursuant to the Dixon320

purchase agreement.

¶6 On March 9, 1992, an addendum to the purchase agreement was executed, which

decreased the annual payment from $50,000 to $35,000 and extended the completion date from

1997 to 2009. As with the original agreement, Dean negotiated the addendum and then took it to

each of his four children for their signatures. Russell testified that he believed that at the time the

addendum was executed, it was Dean’s intent to take Janet and Cheryl off the agreement, due to

their lack of participation in the farming of the Dixon 320 and their lack of contribution to the

annual payment. Barry testified that he also believed that the two sisters would not receive an

interest in the Dixon 320 but “were going to get an equivalent value of that acreage somewhere

along the way when it was paid for.”

¶7 After the addendum was executed, the arrangement regarding the Dixon 320 continued as

before, with Dean, Barry, and Russell participating in the farming and making the annual

3 payment. Shortly after the addendum was executed, Dean began to turn more of the day-to-day

operations over to Russell.

¶8 In 1995, Barry was involved in divorce proceedings, and Dean decided to decrease

Barry’s involvement in the farming operations. This resulted in a reduction in Barry’s income

share of the farm partnership. Despite his decreased role in the farming operations, Barry

continued to pay one-third of the payments on the Dixon 320 purchase agreement until 2007. By

the late 1990s, Dean was no longer involved in the operation. Dean’s mental condition began to

deteriorate around the time of his eighty-third birthday in 2004. Within a year, he no longer

recognized people and would forget how to get home. By this time, Russell was in complete

control of the partnership operations.

¶9 On February 6, 2007, Barry executed a deed conveying his “undivided interest” in the

Dixon 320 to Dean and Irma, husband and wife, as tenants in common.

¶ 10 On March 13, 2009, Margaret Dixon executed a warranty deed to the Dixon 320 to

Russell E. Jackson. Margaret would later testify that the deed was executed with Russell as the

only grantee pursuant to the specific instruction of Dean. Russell signed the tax revenue sheet

(PTAX) and caused the deed to be recorded. Russell did not inform Cheryl of the existence of

the deed.

¶ 11 Dean died in May 2011. Shortly thereafter, Barry went to the courthouse and discovered

that the Dixon 320 had been conveyed to Russell alone in 2009. Sometime in 2012, Barry told

Cheryl about the deed. Barry then brought suit against the DBR Jackson Partnership, as well as

Russell, Debra, and Irma Jean individually. Barry’s complaint sought an accounting for all the

partnership operations and a portion of partnership assets. One of the counts in the complaint

concerned the Dixon 320 transaction. On November 8, 2013, Cheryl intervened filing a counter-

4 claim against Russell regarding the Dixon 320 transaction, claiming either an equitable interest

in the property, or in the alternative, seeking the imposition of a constructive trust over a one-

fifth interest in the property. On competing motions for summary judgment, the trial court

entered judgment for Cheryl and against Russell, finding that 1) Cheryl had been excluded from

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2016 IL App (3d) 150229, 70 N.E.3d 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-dbr-jackson-partnership-illappct-2016.