Kriegel v. Miedema

155 N.E.2d 815, 20 Ill. App. 2d 235
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 19, 1959
DocketGen. 47,487
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 155 N.E.2d 815 (Kriegel v. Miedema) 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
Kriegel v. Miedema, 155 N.E.2d 815, 20 Ill. App. 2d 235 (Ill. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

JUSTICE SCHWARTZ

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from an order sustaining a motion to strike the amended complaint and dismissing the suit. Suit was brought to establish the heirship of Charles L. Klima, Sr. (hereinafter called Senior) and Charles L. Klima, Jr. (hereinafter called Junior); to set aside transactions between Senior and Junior; to distribute property to be recovered from the heirs of Junior for the benefit of the heirs of Senior; to establish a constructive trusteeship in defendant Sylvia Ann Miedema; to require her to account for certain insurance premiums collected from 1941 to date and for the value of business furniture and equipment conveyed in 1941; and to account for the difference between the price paid for a building sold by Senior to Junior in 1941 for $27,000, and sold by Junior in 1950 for $75,000.

The transactions in question took place in 1941. The principals are both dead, the father having died August 29,1945, and the son on September 17,1951. After Junior’s death, his widow Sylvia married one Miedema. Thereafter, this suit was commenced in 1955. Plaintiffs are the widow and two daughters of Senior. Defendants are Junior’s widow and children. The transactions sought to be set aside appear to be the following:

(1) A bill of sale (not attached or pleaded in haec verba) sometime in March or April 1941 to office furniture and equipment used by the Clyde Building and Loan Association (Association) in the conduct of ifs business; (2) A transfer, apparently oral, of an insurance business; and (3) A deed made six months later, October 18, 1941, from Senior to Junior to a building occupied by the Association. It is also stated, as if it were part of the bill of sale, that management of the Association was transferred from Senior to Junior, but this is negatived by a' later averment that the Board of Directors did not elect to put him in charge.
With respect to the furniture, equipment and management of the Association, plaintiffs charge an, oral promise by Junior to convey the same back to Senior when Senior returned from treatment in a hospital. With respect to the real estate, they charge that the price was “wholly inadequate.” A general charge is made of “fraud, undue influence, obtaining property by betrayal of a fiduciary relationship and . . . taking advantage of their [Junior’s parents] necessities. J?

The charges of the complaint are made in vague and general language and at times are confusing and contradictory. It appears that in 1941 Senior was 74 years old and had been afflicted with stomach ulcers for about thirty years; that he had been in charge of the business of the Association which he had organized years before; that Junior and his wife, by persistent argument and persuasion sought to have Senior turn over to Junior the business of the Association and the insurance business; that in March 1941 Senior had to go to the hospital for ulcer treatment, and he then gave Junior a bill of sale to furniture and equipment used by the Association, placed him in charge of the business of the Association, and gave him the insurance business upon Junior’s promise to give them all back wben Senior returned.

What is meant by tbe business of tbe Association is not clear. The Board of Directors was in control of tbe Association, and tbe complaint, alleges tbat they did not appoint or elect Junior to be tbe executive bead of tbe business. This inconsistency is not explained.

Senior returned from tbe hospital in April 1941 and, according to tbe complaint, demanded of Junior to be reinstated in tbe insurance business and in tbe operation of tbe Association and demanded tbe return of tbe office furniture and equipment, but Junior refused to comply with those demands. Six months later, in October 1941, Senior sold tbe building in which tbe Association was located to Junior and bis wife for $27,000, but tbe deed of conveyance named tbe price as $35,000. At another point in the complaint tbe language makes it appear tbat tbe real sales price was tbe amount stated, $35,000. On July 3, 1950, nine years after tbe transaction and five years after Senior’s death in 1945, Junior sold tbe building to tbe Association for $75,000. On September 17, 1951, Junior died and left as bis heirs bis wife Sylvia, now Sylvia Ann Miedema, and a minor son and daughter.

A court of chancery has jurisdiction to distribute an intestate estate to tbe rightful heirs wben all debts of tbe deceased and tbe funeral expenses have been paid and tbe only question involved is a determination of tbe rightful heirs, their respective interests, and distribution accordingly. Moore v. Brandenburg, 248 Ill. 232, 93 N. E. 733 (1911); Jordan v. McGrew, 400 Ill. 275, 288, 79 N.E.2d 622 (1948); Ludewick v. Ludewick, 279 Ill. 26, 116 N. E. 709 (1917). Defendants base their defense on tbe ground that the complaint fails to show any actual fraud or undue influence or tbat a fiduciary relationship existed or was violated, and tbat tbe complaint on its face shows laches.

The first item to he considered is the bill of sale, so-called. This is stated in the complaint to have been of the business furniture and equipment used by the Association and the insurance business, and the placing of Junior in charge of the business of the Association (sic). What was meant by the insurance business and placing him (Junior) in charge as the subjects of a restitutional process are so indefinite as not to be comprehensible. Nothing is said as to the character of the business furniture and equipment, what it consisted of, or its value.

Plaintiffs’ theory is that an oral promise was made by Junior to convey those things back to Senior when he came out of the hospital; that Junior had no intention at the time to reconvey the property, and that the making of a promise with a present intention not to perform can be made the basis for fraud. All that is advanced to support the charge is that Junior’s failure to keep the promise in itself reveals that he never had any intention of so doing.

Something more than failure to keep the promise must be shown to prove a fraudulent intent. In Luttrell v. Wyatt, 305 Ill. 274, 137 N. E. 95 (1922) cited by plaintiffs, the court said that where the subsequent conduct of a promisor raises a presumption that the contract was fraudulent in its inception and shows that he had no intention of carrying out his promise, and when the promise was accompanied by false representations, the court could regard the promise as a part of the fraud. In Kreger v. Hart, 271 Ill. App. 352 (1933), also cited by plaintiffs, the court found that the evidence showed that the defendant had embarked on a well-charted course of deception and cajolery and falsely represented to her father that by giving her a deed his estate would avoid payment of inheritance taxes and that it would facilitate the distribution of the estate to all his children. In the other cases cited by plaintiffs there were facts and circumstances of far greater amplitude to support the charge of fraud than are here presented.

There is nothing in the instant case to support the charge, except the fact that Junior did not keep his promise.

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Bluebook (online)
155 N.E.2d 815, 20 Ill. App. 2d 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kriegel-v-miedema-illappct-1959.