Miller v. Whelan

42 N.E. 59, 158 Ill. 544
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 59 (Miller v. Whelan) 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
Miller v. Whelan, 42 N.E. 59, 158 Ill. 544 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal taken by A. H. Miller from a decree rendered by the circuit court of Moultrie county in a cause in equity wherein Margaret Whelan was complainant and said Miller and numerous other persons were parties defendant. Both errors and cross-errors have been assigned.

Margaret Whelan, and Harvey M. Whelan, her husband, were owners and tenants in common of a farm in Moultrie county containing ninety-eight and one-half acres of land. They resided on this farm with their family, and it was encumbered by a mortgage given by them to one A. H. Antrim, to secure an indebtedness of §500 and the interest thereon. Said Harvey died intestate in March, 1888, leaving said Margaret as his widow and their seven children as his heirs-at-law. He left only §30 in cash on hand and but little personal property, and his widow became the administratrix of his estate. She continued to live on the farm with her infant children, and seems to have been hard pressed to realize enough of income therefrom to maintain the family, pay taxes and keep down the accruing interest on the mortgage, which was payable semi-annually. She arrived at the conclusion that it would be better to sell enough of the land to pay off the mortgage, and keep the rest of the farm to live on with her children. With this end in view she went to Sullivan, the county seat, to get a lawyer to fix it up. She called at the law office of Smyser & Miller, and the result was, that on July 30, 1889, a bill for the partition of the undivided one-half interest in the ninety-eight and one-half acres of land of which Harvey M. Whelan had died seized, was filed, in the circuit court, the said Margaret Whelan, and the infant children and heirs of the deceased, who sued in that behalf by Margaret Whelan, their next friend, being joined as parties complainant. (See Roodhouse v. Roodhouse, 132 Ill. 360.) Such proceedings were had in the partition suit as that a final decree was rendered therein at the November term, 1889, for the sale of the undivided one-half interest therein, subject to the homestead of said Margaret Whelan.

It may here be stated, by way 'of explanation, that A. H. Miller, the appellant, was one of the two members of the co-partnership that transacted law business under the firm name of Smyser & Miller; that he was never admitted to the bar or had any license to practice law, either in this State or in any other State, and that at ■ the time the co-partnership was formed, in January, 1889, he had never read a single law book. And it may also be stated, for like purpose of explanation, that at the time of the transactions involved in this case appellee was wholly ignorant of business and legal matters; that it appears, both from her own testimony and that of other witnesses, that she has a good memory for facts and for' details, and that it appears, both from the expert testimony of physicians and from the testimony of her neighbors, that she is lacking in judgment, and is regarded as mentally weak and incapable of transacting and conducting business affairs. As one of the witnesses, Dr. Kellar, who at the time of'his examination was a physician and surgeon sixty-three years of age, expresses it, her mind could be impressed so as to retain details, yet was too weak to comprehend relations.

After the decree, and after the master had advertised the land for sale, appellee had an interview with appellant at his office. He testifies : “I asked her if she had the money to purchase the farm in case it sold for less than its worth. She said she did not have any money. I told her then that I would furnish the money—buy the farm for her; would buy it in my own name, and would sell it and give her the proceeds outside of what money I was out, and the interest on the same, but before I would do that she would have to deed to me her interest in said premises. I told her I would enter into a contract to do what I above have stated.” She testifies in regard to the contract: “It was written out. I knew nothing about it until Mr. Miller called on me to sign it. I asked him if it could not be fixed any other way, so I could buy it in myself. He said no—not unless I had money. He said he would buy it in for me and make it all right.” And further testifies: “He said it could not be done in any other way. I told him I didn’t understand it. He said it was the only right way to do it.” And in regard to the deed that she executed on the day of this conversation, she testifies that appellant said it was “nothing but a sham'deed, for the purpose of protecting the land for me. * * * He said it was not to be recorded. It was simply a form, so he could buy the land in for me.” Samuel Whelan, a son of appellee, fourteen years old, testifies that he was present at the conversation, and that appellant “said that it was a sham deed to protect him,- for she didn’t have the money to buy it in with. She said that she didn’t think that there was any use of making that deed, but he said that that was the only way it could be done, for he knew the law and she didn’t. She said if it had to be done, all right.”

On the day of this interview, December 23, 1889, appellee executed and delivered to appellant a deed conveying all her interest in the land and waiving and releasing her homestead, and at the same time the parties signed a certain agreement in writing. By said contract appellant agreed to buy the land at the master’s sale on January 4, 1890, and take control of the same for six months, for the sole and only purpose of effecting a sale thereof on the best terms practicable, such sale to be subject to the approval of appellee. It was further agreed that if a sale was made within the six months, then out of the moneys thereby realized appellant was to retain all the money paid out by him for the purchase made at the master’s sale, with eight per cent interest thereon, and also reasonable compensation for making the sale, and pay the balance of the proceeds to appellee. It was further agreed that in case appellant was unable to effect a sale within the six months, then, at the expiration of that time, appellee was to pay to appellant all moneys paid out by him in the transaction, with eight per cent interest thereon, and appellant was to convey the premises to appellee. And it was also provided in the agreement, that if appellee was unable to refund the moneys and interest at the end of the six months, then and in that case appellant was to take the note of appellee for such moneys and interest, said note to bear eight per cent interest, and to run not less than two years from the date thereof, and to be secured by a mortgage on the premises.

At the master’s sale made on January 4, 1890, under the decree in the partition suit, the undivided one-half interest in the lands that was vested in the husband of appellee at the time of his death was struck off and sold to appellant at $620, that being the amount of the An-trim mortgage plus the costs and expenses in said partition suit, and $50 of these costs was the fee of Smyser & Miller. Appellant did not pay to the master the money to settle the mortgage, nor did he or any one else ever pay or satisfy said mortgage, but it remained a lien upon the premises until April, 1893, when it was foreclosed by the mortgagee, and so it is plain appellant never paid to the master, on his bid of $620, to exceed $70 in money.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 59, 158 Ill. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-whelan-ill-1895.