Murphy v. Nilles

46 N.E. 772, 166 Ill. 99
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 772 (Murphy v. Nilles) 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
Murphy v. Nilles, 46 N.E. 772, 166 Ill. 99 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a creditor’s bill brought by Theodore Nilles and Henry P. Kransz, against John C. Murphy and his wife, Lizzie M. Murphy, Robert R. Sampson and his wife, Mary A. Sampson, and Henry Wulffi, to subject certain property standing in the name of Mrs. Murphy to certain judgments recovered by the plaintiffs against John C. Murphy, and on which executions had been returned milla bona. The property sought to be subjected to these debts consists of nineteen lots in Murphy’s addition to Rogers’ Park, in Cook county, and lots 20 and 21, and the east seventeen feet of lot 22, in Huntoon’s addition to South Evanston.

In the fall of 1876 John C. Murphy borrowed §800 from Nicholas Kransz, and to secure the same gave a trust deed on four lots in Murphy’s addition. In the spring of 1877 he borrowed §600 from Theodore Nilles, and secured the payment thereof by a trust deed on three other lots in the same addition. At that time he owned the nineteen lots in controversy free from incumbrance, and also five other lots in the same addition which were mortgaged to one Pearson to secure §2600 previously borrowed. He also owned the south part of lot 9 in block 11 and lot 2 in block 5, in said addition. After the making of all these trust deeds, and on July 19,1877, Murphy married his present wife and took her to live with him in a house on one of the lots he had previously mortgaged to Pearson. On March 14, 1878, being indebted as aforesaid, he, his wife joining, conveyed to his brother-in-law, Robert R. Sampeson, the nineteen lots before mentioned, for the consideration, as expressed in the deed, of §500. On August 31, 1878, Nilles foreclosed his trust deed on the lots therein described and bought them in at the sale for §175, and took judgment for the deficiency, §555, in the Superior Court of Cook county. Execution was issued and returned unsatisfied. On October 5,1888, the judgment was revived and execution was issued, which was returned unsatisfied January 4, 1889. The Kransz note and trust deed were assigned to Henry P. Kransz, who foreclosed in 1884 and took a deficiency judgment for §1290 on March 27, 1889, in the same court. Execution was issued on the same day and returned unsatisfied. On March 27, 1889, a creditor’s bill was filed for"the same purpose and on the same grounds as the present one, but was dismissed for want of prosecution in June, 1893. On December 1, 1893, the present bill was filed. On August 3,1878, John 0. Murphy and his wife conveyed to Pearson his equity of redemption in the five mortgaged lots, and also the south part of lot 9 in block 11, which was unincumbered, for a note for $1000 and mortgage of Edward Murphy on two lots in the vicinity, containing a dwelling house. In 1882 the house was burned, and Mrs. Murphy claims that she collected the insurance of $1000 thereon. Out of this insurance money and profits made on the same by Murphy in speculating, it is claimed they bought the South Evans-ton property for $3000, taking title to Mrs. Murphy. On November 19, 1885, Sampson conveyed the nineteen lots aforesaid to Mrs. Murphy for $500, and all the testimony is that no interest was paid him during the more than seven years that he held the title, and during all which time he claims to have paid the taxes, amounting to $135.25, as found by the master. Lot 2 in block 5, which seems never to have been conveyed away by Murphy, was sold for taxes, and in 1886 Murphy bought the tax titles from the holder.

The cause was referred to the master for a hearing, and a number of objections were filed to his report by-appellants, which were overruled. On the hearing before the court appellants filed seventeen exceptions, which were overruled, and the court entered a decree finding the conveyance to Sampson fraudulent as to creditors, and that the $500 paid for the reconveyance of said lots was the money of John G. Murphy, and that the conveyance to Mrs. Murphy was in fraud of creditors, and that said nineteen lots should be subjected to the payment of said judgment; that the $1000 realized by Mrs. Murphy from the insurance on the house upon which she held the Pearson mortgage was the property of Mrs. Murphy, but that the $2000 realized by Murphy in speculating therewith was his own, and that in equity Murphy was the owner of two-thirds of said South Evanston property, and that it ought to be subjected to the payment of said judgments, and a decree was entered accordingly. The defendants appealed to the Appellate Court, assigning numerous errors, and the complainants filed cross-errors as to that part of the decree giving Mrs. Murphy the $1000 and one-third interest in the South Evanston property. The Appellate Court affirmed the decree. The appellants have taken this further appeal, appellees insisting here on their cross-errors.

The complainants called Mrs.

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Related

Rowe v. Drohen
262 F. 15 (Second Circuit, 1919)
Bennett v. Boshold
123 Ill. App. 311 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 772, 166 Ill. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-nilles-ill-1897.