Kirkpatrick v. Clark

8 L.R.A. 511, 132 Ill. 342
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 8 L.R.A. 511 (Kirkpatrick v. Clark) 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
Kirkpatrick v. Clark, 8 L.R.A. 511, 132 Ill. 342 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of ejectment, brought by Frank H. Clark against Susie Kirkpatrick, to recover lot 27, in Tilton & Cassell’s addition to Jacksonville. A trial was had on a plea of not guilty, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the-plaintiff, and the defendant now appeals to this court.

The plaintiff, at the trial, made proof, under the twenty-fifth section of the statute in relation to ejectment, that he claimed title through one Matthew Ashelby, a common source of title-with the defendant, and then read in evidence a warranty deed-from said Ashelby and wife, duly acknowledged and recorded, conveying said lot to him. The defendant’s counsel then called the defendant as a witness in her own behalf, and after she had testified that she had been acquainted with the plaintiff for about eleven years, and that when she first became-acquainted with the lot<,in question, it was the property of Mr. Ashelby, she was asked the following questions:

“State whether or not, at the time this, deed was made to-Mr. Clark, you were in a controversy with your husband, and whether or not the deed was made to Mr. Clark by arrangement between you and Mr. Clark, so as to prevent any-claim-your husband might have on the property if the deed was in-you?

“You may state whether or not Mr. Clark at any time in-fact was the owner of and in possession of that property ?”

These questions being both objected to by the plaintiff’s-counsel on the ground of incompetency and immateriality, were excluded, and thereupon the defendant’s counsel made to-the court the following statement and offer:

“We expect and offer to prove by this witness, and two-other witnesses, Mr. and Mrs. Kogers, who have been sworn and are now in court, that they heard a conversation between Mr. Clark and Mrs. Kirkpatrick, in which it was stated that Mr. Clark had no interest in the property and never had any; that the deed was made to him for the purpose of hindering, and defrauding creditors and the husband of Mrs. Kirkpatrick, and that Mr. Clark then admitted that every cent that Mrs. Kirkpatrick ever owed him had been paid, and that he had no-claim to the property—no right to it, and that the property in controversy in this case was held by him only for the purpose-of hindering and delaying creditors; that she asked him to give her a deed to the property and he refused to do it, hut admitted that he had no title to it, and that he only held it to cover it up so that the creditors could not get it, and also to prevent her husband from having any right to it.”

The evidence thus offered being objected to as incompetent, was excluded, and counsel then further offered to prove by Mrs. Kirkpatrick “that she went in company with Mr. Clark to Mr. Ashelby and requested Mr. Ashelby to make the deed to Mr. Clark for the property, but did not tell Mr. Ashelby the reason for its being made to Mr. Clark; that Mrs. Kirkpatrick paid in full the consideration of said deed.” This evidence also being objected to for the same reason, was excluded. Exceptions were duly preserved by the defendant to the rulings of the court excluding said evidence, and said rulings are the-only errors now assigned upon the record.

A considerable portion of the evidence offered was clearly incompetent or immaterial or both. Thus, the question put to the witness as to whether the plaintiff had ever been in fact the owner of the property in question, if understood as calling-for the legal ownership of the lot, was incompetent, as the legal title to lands can not be proved in that mode. If understood as calling for the equitable title, it was immaterial, as in this form of action, only legal titles can be investigated.

So of the question whether the deed was not made to the plaintiff by arrangement between him and the defendant, with a view to keeping said lot free from any claim the defendant’s husband might have thereon in case the title was taken in her name. The evidence called for by that question would simply have tended to show that the plaintiff took and was holding the title to said lot as trustee for the defendant. Her equitable title thus attempted to be shown was quite immaterial, since it constituted no defense to the action. The rule is well settled that a trustee may recover in ejectment the lands affected by the trust, even as against the cestui que trust. In Reece v. Allen, 5 Glim. 236, this court said: “A court of law may indeed investigate some questions of fraud, and when proved, treat a deed as a nullity and conveying no title, as where a party was induced to execute a deed supposing it was another qiaper, but in general it will not go behind the naked legal title and inquire where the equities are. Even in a case of a naked trustee, the law is so strenuous for the legal title, that it enables the trustee to recover in ejectment against the cestui que trust. See also Kirkland v. Cox, 94 Ill. 400; Sedgwick & Wait -on Trial of Title to Land, sec. 222, and cases cited in notes.

If it be said that the purpose of said question was to elicit evidence tending to show that said conveyance to the plaintiff was a fraud upon the rights of the defendant’s husband, it may he answered that, even admitting that proof 'of such fraud would have been material, said evidence would have had no tendency to prove it. If the lot in question had been conveyed directly to the defendant, it would have vested in her husband -no right or interest except an inchoate right of dower, and it was no fraud upon him if his wife, in purchasing the lot had -the title conveyed to a trustee for the express purpose of preventing such right from attaching. Even at common law where the husband was entitled to the possession and enjoyment of his wife’s lands during their joint lives, it was never .supposed to be a fraud upon his rights for his wife to have lands purchased with her separate means, or derived from sources other than her husband, conveyed to a trustee, for the sole purpose of placing them beyond his control and having them held for her separate use, and such trusts were habitually resorted to for that purpose. "But under our statute a married woman is entitled to the sole possession and enjoyment of her lands, free from the interference and control of her husband, the husband’s right of dower, even after it has become vested, being imperfect and incapable of assertion or beneficial enjoyment until after her death. How then can he be said to have rights in lands which his wife does not yet own, but which she contemplates purchasing, which it wo-uld be a fraud upon him to deprive him of? Dower in lands which the wife does not yet own is an interest to which the husband has neither a legal, equitable or moral right, and the wife is entirely at liberty to so manage her purchases made with her own means, if she can, as to prevent his acquiring such right.

A more difficult question is raised by that portion of the offer of the defendant’s counsel in which they proposed to prove by said witnesses, that the lot in question was paid for by the defendant, but that by arrangement between her and the plaintiff, the conveyance was made by Ashelby to the plaintiff with intent to hinder and defraud the defendant’s creditors," such intention being participated in by both the plaintiff and defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
8 L.R.A. 511, 132 Ill. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkpatrick-v-clark-ill-1890.