Jones v. Jenkinson

147 N.E. 123, 316 Ill. 264
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
DocketNo. 15715. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 N.E. 123 (Jones v. Jenkinson) 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
Jones v. Jenkinson, 147 N.E. 123, 316 Ill. 264 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

On April 26, 1922, appellee, Alice Sinclair Jones, filed her bill in the circuit court of Cook county against appellant, Eliza J. Jenkinson, praying that the court declare the interests of the parties respecting a joint investment in certain lots in the city of Chicago and for an accounting between them. The defendant filed her answer to the bill, and on a hearing the chancellor entered a decree granting the relief prayed and ordering defendant to convey a half interest in four certain lots to complainant. The defendant prosecutes this appeal.

On July 23, 1919, Abraham S. Silverman was the owner of 493^ lots in Fred C. Bendle’s subdivision of block 3 of Murray’s Wildwood addition in the southeast quarter of section 28, township 37, north, range 14, east of the third principal meridian, in Cook county, and on that day, through his agent, Israel Simons, contracted to sell said lots to appellant for $10,000, $1000 of which was to be paid in a twenty-acre tract of land in Wisconsin owned by appellant. On all of these lots except lot 62 there was a mortgage securing an indebtedness of about $2100, which was to be assumed by appellant. It appears from the testimony of Benjamin Wolf, an attorney who drafted the deeds, of Silverman, who contracted the lots to appellant, of Simons, who closed the deal between Silverman and appellant, of Florence Carlson, a stenographer in Wolf’s office, of Margaret E. Shanks and of James J. Hoch, that appellant received the deed to her and appellee from Silverman to 45^2 of the lots on August 11, 1919; that at appellant’s suggestion the consideration named in the deed was $16,000, although she had contracted to pay Silverman only $10,000 for the entire 49^2 lots; that she asked Silverman to deed the other four lots (18, 19, 61 and 62,) to Miss Carlson, and that he so made the deed to her on August 11, 1919, the consideration named in this deed being $10; that Miss Carlson deeded lots 61 and 62 to appellant on August 15, 1919, and that later she deeded lots 18 and 19 to her; that on February 15,-1921, appellant deeded the four lots to Margaret E. Shanks, and on April 26, 1921, Margaret E. Shanks deeded the lots to appellant; that no consideration passed between either appellant and Miss Carlson or between Margaret E. Shanks and appellant for any of the deeds. The only explanation that appellant gave for these various deeds of the four lots was, in substance, that it would save her money; that she considered them very valuable and wanted to keep them; and that she had a suit pending against her and did not want to have any more in her name than necessary.

Appellee testified, in substance, that in the first part of August, 1919, she sold a house and lot in which she had been conducting a rooming house, for about $6000 cash, and that she had $8887.70 in the Bank of Montreal, concerning which facts she informed appellant, with whom she was then quite friendly. Appellant had been in the real estate business in the city of Chicago for several years and was well acquainted with real estate values but appellee knew very little about the valuation of real estate. Appellant told her about the Silverman lots and persuaded her to go out to see them. She said it was a wonderful buy and that the lots could be purchased for $16,000, clear of all encumbrance, and suggested that they each put in $8000 and buy them and they could sell them for a large profit. They went out to the lots and walked over,and looked at all of them. Appellant specifically pointed out lots 18, 19, 61 and 62 and said that those corner lots could be sold for $8000 or $10,000. She also pointed out another lot with a shack on it, which was not included in the deal. Appellee had never seen the lots before. Relying upon appellant’s representations and without any investigation upon her part she assented to appellant’s proposition and gave her a cashier’s check for $8000 on said bank, and at appellant’s suggestion left the matter of consummating the purchase and getting the deed to appellant. A few days later appellant told her that she had made the transaction and that the title to the lots was in their names. About two weeks after appellant told her that she had closed the deal she told appellee that she had purchased the lots cornering on Michigan avenue and 127th street and upon Indiana avenue and 127th street, being lots 18, 19, 61 and 62. Appellee protested that these lots were included in their joint purchase but appellant stated that they were not, and although asked by appellee appellant refused to state how much she had paid for those four lots. A few days later appellant told appellee that the lots they had purchased were subject to a mortgage which would have to be paid. Appellee told her that she understood that the lots were free from encumbrance and that she was not prepared to pay her half of the mortgage. Appellant offered to, and did, lend appellee the money to pay appellee’s half of the mortgage and took her note for $1067. About six months later appellant loaned appellee about $1000 more and took her note for $2000 and a trust deed, for the full amount owed her, on appellee’s half interest in 45^ of the lots. When the $1067 fell due appellee told appellant that she could not pay it and appellant started suit against her. The note was later extended and the suit dismissed. The South Side Bank is suing her now on the $2000 note. She paid some taxes on the 45 y lots. through appellant. She told appellant frequently that she had a half interest in the four corner lots. Appellant always said no, — they were not included in the deal. It appears from appellee’s testimony and other evidence in the case that she did not.learn of the fact that appellant contracted for the 49 lots for a consideration of only $10,000 until after the bank began the foreclosure proceedings against her for the $2000 loan, or after March 12, 1922.

Appellant’s testimony was in substance the following: She and Mrs. Jones were very friendly before August, 1919. Mrs. Jones had bought several vacant lots from her, near Pullman, and had bought through appellant an eight or ten-flat building in Chicago in 1920. On August 9 Mrs. Jones came to her office and she told Mrs. Jones that she had bought the property about which she had told heir about three weeks before that. Mrs. Jones then asked her why she did not let her in on some of “these good things.” She then asked Mrs. Jones to go out and see the lots in question. She pointed out lots 61, 62, 18 and 19 and told her that she was not going to sell those but was going to hold them. She told Mrs. Jones that it would cost her $8000 for a one-half interest in the other 45% lots. Mrs. Jones agreed to that proposition, gave her a check for $8000 for her half interest, and told her that she did not care to be present when the deal was closed because she knew appellant was capable. When the deeds were executed Wolf suggested that it would be a good thing to make the consideration in the deed $16,000 or more, and she said that they would make the consideration for said amount,— that that would be all she would want to buy stamps on.

The testimony in the record amply supports the court’s findings in favor of appellee. Appellant and appellee are the'two main witnesses, and about the only witnesses, as'to their contract, but the circumstances testified.' to by' them and the other witnesses are in the main corroborative of appellee- in her -testimony. The encumbrance .that appellee helped-to-pay-Was on.áH'the lots, in question...

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.E. 123, 316 Ill. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-jenkinson-ill-1925.