Lingle v. Bulfer

153 N.E. 589, 322 Ill. 606
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
DocketNo. 16722. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 589 (Lingle v. Bulfer) 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
Lingle v. Bulfer, 153 N.E. 589, 322 Ill. 606 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill in chancery filed November 29, 1918, in the circuit court of Cook county by the defendant in error, Alice A. Lingle, individually and as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Charles A. Lingle, to cancel and set aside two deeds dated June 29, 1918, purporting to be executed by herself and husband, each conveying certain property in the city of Chicago to Joseph R. Knipe, and also two deeds to the same properties dated October 5, 1918, purporting to be signed and executed by Knipe to Grace J. Bulfer; that an accounting of the rents be had and that a receiver be appointed to collect the same. The master on hearing reported in favor of the relief asked for, and the chancellor approved the recommendation of the master and decreed that the deeds be canceled and the title be declared to be in the heirs-at-law of Charles A. Lingle, and that the money collected be divided between the complainant individually and as administratrix as in the decree provided. The cause is here on writ of error by Grace J. and Philip Bulfer.

The principal questions raised here are questions of fact, all of which have been decided adversely to the contentions of plaintiffs in error by the master and also by the chancellor.

Charles A. Lingle owned the two pieces of property in question when he married defendant in error. Marital troubles had arisen between the Lingles and a separation threatened. On June 30, 1918, Lingle secured the signature of his wife to two separate deeds. Mrs. Lingle testified that the deeds were blank at the time she signed them, both as to description of property and as to grantee. In this she is corroborated by the testimony of William J. Albright, a former brother-in-law of Lingle, and Chris P. Anderson, a friend of Lingle, both of whom testified that after the separation of the Lingles, on July 13, 1918, Lingle asked each to take the title to the property in his name. H. G. Coney, who held the mortgage on one of the pieces of the property, testified that he saw a deed signed by Lingle and wife and that it was blank and contained no acknowledgment of the signatures; that Lingle showed it to him and wanted him to fill it in, transferring it to someone, which he refused to do. The deeds as recorded and introduced in evidence here, bear the date of July 6, 1918, and cover the two pieces of property, with Joseph R. Knipe as grantee and Philip Bulfer, one of the plaintiffs in error, as notary public taking the acknowledgment. These deeds were recorded on July 29, 1918. Bulfer, his wife, Grace J. Bulfer, the other plaintiff in error, and their daughter, Florence, all testified that the Tingles came to the Bulfer home and in their presence acknowledged their signatures to the two deeds. On this point Mrs. Tingle testified that she had never been to Buffer’s house and did not know or meet Buffer until after her husband’s funeral. In this she is supported by the testimony of Mrs. Moore, who said that Buffer asked her at the Tingle funeral if the lady that he pointed to was Mrs. Tingle, and that Mrs. Moore replied that it was. Albert Watts testified that in August, 1918, as a representative of Mrs. Tingle, he called upon Buffer to discuss the settlement of the marital difficulties, and that in response to one question put by Watts as to how long Buffer had known Mrs. Tingle, Buffer replied, “I never met the lady.” The claim of Mrs. Tingle is that her signature to the deed and the purported transfer to Knipe were but efforts to defraud her of her interest in her husband’s property upon their separation and intended subsequent divorce. Her contention in this regard is, that the title was put in Knipe’s name by her husband without consideration from Knipe and that he was merely holding the property for her husband on a secret understanding. There is evidence in the record to uphold such claim. Several witnesses testified that repairs to the property were made by Tingle after the date of the deed and up to the time of his death. In making out an application for a renewal loan on one of the properties in August, 1918, both Knipe and Tingle signed the application, the witness testifying to the transaction stating that Knipe said at that time he was only holding the property for Lingle. The renewal notes were signed by both Lingle and Knipe. On July 30, 1918, Lingle and Knipe both signed a contract for a warranty deed to one of the properties, with Heito Suk as purchaser thereof on a payment plan. Suk paid down $600 on this transaction, making the payment to Bulfer, who appears to have made the sale. Bulfer kept $125 for himself and drew his own check for $475 on August 3, 1918, payable to Lingle and not to Knipe, which check was turned over to the loan company. All of these transactions were had after the date appearing in the deeds and after the date of their recording. Thereafter, on October 5, 1918, Knipe was injured by a street car and died in January following. Deeds to the two pieces of property in question herein were recorded on October 21, 1918, the same day Lingle was buried, said deeds bearing date of October 5, 1918, (the day of Knipe’s injury,) purporting to have been signed by Knipe, transferring the properties to Grace J. Bulfer. In these two deeds Bulfer is also the notary public taking the acknowledgment. The bill herein questioned the signature of Knipe to such deeds, claiming it to .be a forgery, and an expert on handwriting testified that in his opinion, after comparing the original deeds with acknowledged genuine signatures of Knipe, the signatures on the deeds were not those of Knipe. This is also testified to by Knipe’s relatives. Bulfer, his wife and Edward Bish testified that Knipe was at Bulfer’s house the night of the accident and that they all saw him sign the deeds. An assistant bank cashier testified that in his opinion the signatures on the deeds were the same as on the other exhibits shown him, admitted to contain genuine signatures of Knipe.

The claim of the plaintiffs in error is that the various transactions from the Lingles to Knipe and then to Mrs. Bulfer represented a purchase by Bulfer of the properties from Lingle, the transfer being first made to Knipe to hold title for Bulfer, Bulfer testifying that he did not want to take title for the reason that he did not want to execute the loan renewal notes. As proof of the consideration therefor, Bulfer testified that he made several loans to Lingle running from $150 up to $800, the loans being prior to the transfer of the property. It was shown Bulfer had very little property or money. He testified that he loaned Lingle money that he received from his mother’s estate in Marshalltown, Iowa, and from savings of his wife, who had several years before been a school teacher. He had not given Lingle the money from any checking account in a Chicago bank. ' He testified that he sometimes gave Lingle cash out of a box at home and usually just turned over to Lingle the drafts or checks he received from Marshalltown. He was unable to tell whether the money he received was in the form of bank drafts or bank checks and could not say whose names were signed thereto or tell how much he got or the dates thereof. The bank account of Lingle showed no deposits of any such amounts, but showed, on the other hand, that at the time of some of the loans Bulfer testified he made to Lingle the latter had money in the bank and was both depositing and drawing out small sums. There is no evidence showing any disposition of such amounts or investments made by Lingle during or after the times of such claimed loans.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 589, 322 Ill. 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lingle-v-bulfer-ill-1926.