McDonnell v. Holden

185 N.E. 572, 352 Ill. 362
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1933
DocketNo. 21749. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 185 N.E. 572 (McDonnell v. Holden) 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
McDonnell v. Holden, 185 N.E. 572, 352 Ill. 362 (Ill. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Cook county dismissing for want of equity a bill filed by appellant, Patrick E. McDonnell, against Elizabeth J. Holden (hereinafter called the appellee) and the Mutual Real Estate Improvement Corporation, praying that two certain quit-claim deeds, absolute on their face and covering the premises herein involved, be held as having been given as security for a loan, and, in fact, mortgages, and also praying for an accounting and leave to redeem upon payment of the amount found to be due.

This is a suit between appellant, a man aged eighty-eight years, the father of ten living children, and his daughter. It was entirely a family affair, as nine of the children, or their spouses, testified on one side or other of the case, some of them on both sides, and no other witnesses were heard. As frequently happens in a case of that character the evidence was very conflicting, but certain salient facts are outstanding which seem to be conclusive. In 1912 appellant was the owner of the property involved, it being a triangular-shaped tract of land, with a frontage of 800 feet on Kedzie avenue, in the city of Chicago, with a depth of about 500 feet to the base of the triangle and containing 126,270 square feet, with, a perpetual privilege of free water from the city mains. The property was improved with a fourteen-room residence, equipped with a heating plant and electric lights. There was a machine shop on the property, which was about 30 by 40 feet in size, which appellant used for his mechanical work. Some time previous to 1912, Patrick McDonnell, Jr., a son of appellant, who appeared herein as a witness for appellee, conceived the plan of utilizing the water rights connected with the land by erecting and operating a laundry. He wanted his father to deed him part of the land. His father refused but did rent part of it to him. Patrick, Jr., formed a corporation and put $4000 into laundry buildings on the land. He or the corporation bought some lumber for the construction work from the Hines Lumber Company, and when default was made in the payment for it the lumber company foreclosed its lien in the amount of $1505 and the entire property was ordered sold to satisfy the debt. Appellant was unable to pay the judgment, and his son-in-law, Dr. Richard Haley, bought the certificate of sale from the purchaser of the property at the master’s sale and took title by master’s deed, which he held for eleven years. During that time appellant occupied the property, collected the rents and paid the taxes, except three times, when he borrowed the money from Haley with which to pay them. On August 5, 1924, Haley and his wife made and delivered two quit-claim deeds to the premises in question and gave them to appellee. She did not record the deeds until April 16, 1926, nor were they acknowledged until April 10, 1926, by the makers thereof. After the making of the deeds by Haley to appellee, appellant rented parts of the property to various tenants, collected the rents therefor, managed it and up to the time of the trial was occupying it. Appellee was a single woman until September 1, 1926, when she was married to Henry Holden. After her marriage appellant requested appellee to give him a quit-claim deed to the property and offered to give her a mortgage thereon for the amount of her investment and interest. She refused, and on November 19, 1928, he filed his bill of complaint herein. Thereupon appellee on the 20th day of November, 1928, deeded the property to the Mutual Real Estate Improvement Corporation, a corporation formed by appellee, her husband and her sister, Gertrude Dunn, in which the shares of stock were of five dollars par value, of which appellee held all the stock except five shares held by her sister Gertrude and about the same number of shares held by Henry Holden. On the books of the Mutual Real Estate Improvement Corporation is an inventory in the handwriting of appellee: “Real estate situated on S. Kedzie avenue and old Ill. and Mich, canal approximately at 126,270 sq. ft. as per incorporation papers. Valued at $80,000.”

The testimony is undisputed that during the period when appellant might redeem from the mechanic’s lien judgment he was attempting to procure a loan for that purpose, and that Haley offered to make appellant such loan and hold the title to the property as security for the loan. Haley did not redeem from the master’s sale but purchased the certificate of sale and at the expiration of the redemption period took title in himself. Haley testified on this subject: “I took' over the property. At the time I took it over it was not understood that I was to make a trust deed. I only held a mortgage — not a trust deed. The time specified when Patrick McDonnell was to take back his property was when I got the money. I understood I was to hold the property for him. I never exercised any ownership over it.” The evidence clearly shows that appellee knew that appellant had an interest in the property while the title was in Haley. Prior to Haley’s making the deeds to appellee he had a conversation with her in which he stated that he would like to get his money out of the premises, and she offered to pay him therefor. No price was fixed. Haley requested appellee to bring appellant with her when the amount which she was to pay was to be fixed and the arrangement made for the transfer of the property, as appellant had to be satisfied. The price which she was to pay was fixed by Haley and appellant, and consisted of the amount which Haley had paid for the master’s deed and interest thereon and some taxes which he had paid and interest thereon, altogether amounting to $3389.55, at which time appellee gave to Haley a check dated July 10, 1924, for $3389.55. Later, Haley called appellee and informed her that he had found another receipt for taxes which he had paid, and she sent him on July 22, 1924, her check for $147.74 in payment therefor. The next day he again informed her that he had found another receipt for taxes which he had paid amounting to $146.50, and she sent him on that date her check in payment therefor. In a private book kept by her in which the items were entered in her handwriting, were two pages upon each of which appeared an account with reference to the property, containing the amount she had paid, each item of taxes thereafter paid, with interest thereon, and the total amount “due” to different dates. On one of these pages the account was crossed out by two lines drawn diagonally through it, and the other account evidently contained some erasures. No good reason appears why appellee should have kept an account in this manner. if she considered herself the owner of the property, but it is consistent with appellant’s claim that she was holding the property in trust, to be turned over to him upon the payment of the amount “due.”

Appellant’s claim is enhanced by the fact that the consideration for the deeds was entirely out of proportion to the value of the property. The amount which Haley paid for the master’s deeds was $1500. The amount that appellee paid Haley was $3683.79. Whether the value of the property be taken as $80,000, as carried on the books of the corporation; $63,135, a price which appellant testified appellee told him was a fair price; $43,994.50, an offer which appellant testified was made to him for the property and refused, or $12,627, the value placed thereon by a brother of appellee and the only one of appellee’s witnesses who placed a value on the premises, the price paid by both appellee and Haley was grossly inadequate.

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Bluebook (online)
185 N.E. 572, 352 Ill. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonnell-v-holden-ill-1933.