Johnson v. Fleming

133 N.E. 667, 301 Ill. 139
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1921
DocketNo. 14235
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 133 N.E. 667 (Johnson v. Fleming) 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
Johnson v. Fleming, 133 N.E. 667, 301 Ill. 139 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is from a decree of the circuit court of Du-Page county setting aside two deeds made by the grantor,— one to a daughter and the other to two daughters and a grand-daughter of the grantor. Emily R. Johnson was the grantor. She was a widow, residing on her property in Glen Ellyn, DuPage county. She died at the age of 77 years, on October 27, 1915. She left surviving two sons, Oscar and Alvin E. Johnson; three daughters, Lillian Fleming, Viola Craw and Meta Bowker; and a grand-daughter, Ava Johnson Frazer. The deeds bear date September 5, 1915, but were executed September 6. The complainants in the amended bill to set the deeds aside are Oscar F. Johnson and Viola Craw and their respective spouses, and the bill alleges the grantor was ill from August, 1915, until her death and suffered great pain; that morphine, opiates and other drugs were given her, and that because of her age, illness and drugs given her, her mind became so impaired as to render her wholly incapable of transacting business from August until her death. The bill also charged Lillian Fleming with unduly influencing her mother to make the deeds, and further charges the deeds were never delivered during the lifetime of the grantor. After answers and replications were filed the cause was referred to the master in chancery to take and report the testimony and his conclusions. The master reported that the grantor at the time the deeds were made did not have sufficient mental capacity to make them, and that they were never delivered. No evidence appears to have been heard on the allegation of undue influence. The court sustained exceptions to the master’s report that the grantor was of unsound mind but sustained the report and conclusion that the deeds were never delivered. The decree finds the grantor was of sound mind and sufficient mental capacity to make the deeds, but that the deeds were never delivered, never became operative, are void, and they are ordered canceled and set aside. Lillian Fleming has appealed.

The evidence upon which the question whether the deeds were delivered depends is the testimony of John LeMessurier, who prepared the deeds, took the acknowledgment to them and into whose custody they were delivered by the grantor, where they remained until after her death. The witness had been engaged in the real estate business thirty-five years, lived in Glen Ellyn and was acquainted with Mrs. Johnson. He testified she came to his office in June or July, 1915, and brought him the title deeds to her property and requested him to prepare a deed conveying the property to the same persons named in the two deeds she later made. A week or ten days later witness met Mrs. Johnson on the streét and told her the deed was ready. Later, about the month of August, Mrs. Johnson went to witness’ office, read the deed over and said it was what she wanted; that she had done well by her boys and wanted the girls to have the rest of the property. She handed the deed, with her two old deeds, back to witness with instructions to keep them until she sent for them. She did not then sign the deed. September 5 Oscar Johnson called at witness’ office and said his mother wanted the papers she had left with witness, and he delivered them to Oscar. The evening of the same day Oscar called at witness’ house and said his mother was very ill and wanted witness to come to her house. He went there and saw Mrs. Johnson in her bed-room. She requested the other persons in the room to leave it and then told witness she wanted to make some changes in the deed witness had previously prepared; that she wanted the house she lived in to go to her daughter Lillian and the rest of the property to the other three women mentioned in the deed. Witness told her that would necessitate writing new deeds. The land Mrs. Johnson wished to dispose of by deed is an irregularly-shaped plot, described as lot 2 in block 10. Mrs. Johnson’s residence was near the southwest corner of the plot, and there was a small, cheap house located near the north end of the plot but farther toward the east boundary than the residence. She said she was not certain whether fifty-five feet of the west part of the lot would be sufficient to cover the residence, and witness suggested she make it sixty feet, which she accepted and told witness to prepare two deeds, — one conveying to Mrs. Fleming the west sixty feet of the lot and the other conveying the rest of it to the other three women. Witness testified Mrs. Johnson seemed weak and said she had been told she might not live through the night. She signed and witness acknowledged the deed he had previously prepared conveying all the property to the four grantees, and she requested the witness to prepare the two deeds and return to her home the next day, when she would execute them. The witness prepared the deeds and returned to Mrs. Johnson’s house the next afternoon, bringing with him the two new deeds he had prepared and the deed Mrs. Johnson had executed the night before. Mrs. Johnson was in her room, fully dressed, sitting in a rocking chair. She requested all other occupants of the room to vacate it, one of whom was Mrs. Fleming. She then sat up to a table, put on her glasses and read the two deeds witness had prepared. She said that was what she wanted, and she signed and acknowledged the deeds before the witness as notary public. Witness then spoke to her about the deed she had signed and acknowledged the evening before and asked if he had not better destroy it. Mrs. Johnson told him to tear it up, and he tore it into scraps in her presence. She gave him the two deeds and told him,- as he testified on direct examination, “to hold them until the person she would send for them after her death called,” and as testified to on cross-examination, “she said you will give them to the person who will call for them after my death.” Witness took the deeds and kept them in his possession until Mrs. Fleming called for them, about a week after her mother’s death, and they were afterwards filed for record, as the master reports, “by some one or more of the grantees therein.”

Appellees have not assigned cross-errors on that part of the decree finding the grantor was of sound mind when she made the deeds but have argued at length that branch of the case and insist that portion of the decree is erroneous and should be reversed. It is claimed the deeds should have been set aside on that ground as well as on the ground they were never delivered.

It would serve no useful purpose to set out the evidence on the question of the sufficiency of the grantor’s mental capacity to make the deeds. The evidence was conflicting, but it appears very clear to us that the weight of the proof did not sustain the allegation of the bill that Mrs. Johnson was of unsound mind when she executed the deeds.

As to whether the deeds were delivered, the testimony of LeMessurier, the notary who prepared the deeds and took the grantor’s acknowledgments to them, is the only evidence in the record which throws any light on that question. Questions of a similar character have been frequently passed upon by this court, and it has always been held that the question of delivery depends on the grantor’s intention in such cases as this, evidenced by what he said and did at the time. From these things it must clearly appear the grantor’s intention was, when the deed was delivered to a third party, that it should presently become operative and that the grantor intended to divest himself of all control ■over the deed afterwards. (Callerand v. Piot, 241 Ill. 120; Nofftz v. Nofftz, 290 id.

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Bluebook (online)
133 N.E. 667, 301 Ill. 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-fleming-ill-1921.