Mehan v. Mehan

67 N.E. 770, 203 Ill. 180
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 770 (Mehan v. Mehan) 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
Mehan v. Mehan, 67 N.E. 770, 203 Ill. 180 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

The record in this case discloses that in 1890 Thomas Mehan, the ancestor, resided in Chicago on a tract described in the bill as lot 12. He then had a wife, Elizabeth, and six children. Five of these children were by a former marriage, and one of them, the appellant, was the issue of his second marriage by the wife Elizabeth, and was then about four years old. The marital relation between him and Elizabeth was not pleasant. His former wife had been divorced from him, and there was such relation between him and Elizabeth as forecast a divorce proceeding on her part, and in order that he might continue to accumulate property and at the same time so shape his affairs that when the litigation between him and Elizabeth should come he would be better prepared to defeat her reasonable claim to a share of his property, he conceived and carried out the plan of purchasing the property known as lot 4, and in order to do so mortgaged the property in which he dwelt, being lot 12, and raised $6000 of the purchase price of lot 4 in that manner. He then negotiated the purchase from Martha Wellington, the owner of lot 4. The consideration paid for this lot is not clearly shown by the evidence, but the value of it is shown to be about $10,000. When the purchase was made he caused the conveyance from Martha Wellington to be made to his eldest son, James, but Thomas, the ancestor, took immediate possession of the property and leased and controlled it, and paid the taxes and assessments upon it until in October, 1892, when it appears that his marital relation became still more strained and legal proceedings more imminent. He then caused his son James to convey this property to Ellen M. Clarkson, who seems to have been a friend of his, and who, under the evidence, was holding the property under some sort of trust for his use and benefit. The consideration stated in the deed for this conveyance was $10,000. The evidence is not clear in point of time, but it shows that some time after acquiring this lot 4 Thomas Mehan moved into the property and continued to occupy it thence until his death. It shows that he paid the taxes and assessments on this property during the years 1890, 1891, 1898, 1899 and 1900; that he and his wife, Elizabeth, a short time before the time of the conveyance to Ellen M. Clarkson, separated, and that she afterwards brought suit for separate maintenance, and, pending suit, amended her bill, praying for divorce upon the ground of cruelty, and in December, 1898, obtained a decree for divorce and alimony. During the time of the separation and until the obtaining of the divorce by Elizabeth from him, Ellen M. Clarkson, in whose name the property stood, appears to have paid the taxes, but before the separation and after the divorce Thomas Mehan paid the taxes. During all the time he had control of the property and substantially all the time he lived in and occupied a portion of it, and what was done in the name of Ellen M. Clarkson in reference to payment of taxes, insurance, etc., during" the struggle between Thomas Mehan and his wife, was done principally by Thomas Mehan, he using care during that period to state that he was acting as her agent. At the time James Mehan made the deed to Ellen M. Clarkson, she madfe and delivered to Thomas 'Mehan a quit-claim deed for the expressed consideration of one dollar, conveying" lot 4 to Mary E., Katy, Thomas, Alice and James Mehan, the five children of Thomas Mehan by his former wife, which deed was never recorded and is not shown to have been delivered by James Mehan to any of the grantees therein named. There is also evidence tending to show that after the divorce proceeding had ended, Ellen M. Clarkson made a deed of these same premises to Thomas Mehan. Lot 12 above referred to was the home of Thomas Mehan at the time he borrowed the $6000 to buy lot 4. This money was borrowed of one Milan, and when the trouble came on between Thomas Mehan and his wife, Mehan permitted the mortgage given to be foreclosed and a master’s deed to be issued to Milan, but after the divorce proceedings had ended Milan quit-claimed or conveyed back to Thomas Mehan the same property and took a mortgage for the amount of the original loan remaining due. Neither the mortgage nor the quit-claim deed was recorded, but they were held in secret until after the death of Thomas Mehan, and their existence was first disclosed by the answer of Milan, when the bill was amended according to the facts disclosed. Thomas Mehan died intestate December 13,1900, and left the five children named as grantees in the quitclaim deed above mentioned, and also appellant, as his only children and heirs-at-law.

Appellant’s bill for partition charges that these conveyances, through James Mehan to Ellen M. Clarkson, of the property bought by Thomas Mehan, being lot 4, was to defraud Elizabeth Mehan and the creditors of Thomas Mehan. This allegation was not denied in any of the answers and is expressly admitted of record by appellees, and seized upon by them as a ground which would preclude the right of appellant to maintain the bill. Appellees invoke the rule that a fraudulent conveyance to defeat the claims of creditors is binding alike upon the grantor and those claiming under or in privity with him, and that equity will not grant relief from such conveyance,—and such is unquestionably the rule. It has been announced by most of the courts in this country and in England and has long been the rule of this court. The rule is founded in a wise public policy, and is designed as one of the most effective means by which the law seeks to prevent fraud and to enforce the observance of honesty and good faith, and furnishes an example of the very rare instances under our jurisprudence wherein the*sins of the father are visited upon his children. In the case at bar, the purchase of lot 4 in question with the moneys of Thomas Mehan and the taking of the title in his son James would, without the taint of fraud, operate as a resulting trust, and the children of Thomas Mehan would have been entitled to enforce and have the benefit of such trust. There is no question, under this evidence and the admission of counsel, but that Thomas Mehan exercised dominion over this property and controlled every movement and disposition of it from the time he negotiated for its purchase to the time of his death, and the record abundantly shows, if effect is to be given to his acts, that he had the dual purpose of defrauding his wife of her proper allowance in case of a divorce proceeding and to prevent her prog'eny from in any .manner becoming the beneficiaries in the property. Looking at the situation from the standpoint of morality and justice, as commonly accepted, it seems a hardship that appellant, whom Thomas Mehan, because she was the child of a wife that he despised, through a fraudulent means common to both seeks to deprive of any interest in Ms property, should be held, in law and equity, in privity with his estate and bound by his acts. But the law must be general in its application, and when once established it is better for the interests of society that its rules be adhered to, even though there may be occasional instances where hardship is wrought.

It seems most unjust and inequitable that the son James, who was a co-conspirator and an active instrument in carrying out the fraud of his father, should after its consummation be permitted to stand in the attitude of an innocent party and enjoy even more than his full share of his father’s estate. But if it be true and the evidence shall fully disclose that Ellen M.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 770, 203 Ill. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mehan-v-mehan-ill-1903.