Newman v. Youngblood

69 N.E.2d 309, 394 Ill. 617, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 419
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1946
DocketNo. 29427. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 69 N.E.2d 309 (Newman v. Youngblood) 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
Newman v. Youngblood, 69 N.E.2d 309, 394 Ill. 617, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 419 (Ill. 1946).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a direct appeal, involving a freehold, to this court from a decree entered October 18, 1945? in the circuit court of Cook county and an amended decree entered November 6, 1945, both of which dismissed plaintiff’s complaint and amendment thereto for want of equity. The cause was submitted to a master in chancery and the decree approves the master’s report and overrules the exceptions filed thereto. In the complaint as amended plaintiff is seeking partition of certain real estate allegedly possessed by May R. Kenney Youngblood at her death.

The deceased May R. Kenney Youngblood was married twice during her lifetime and upon the death of her first husband she inherited his share of a paint business in which they were interested together, as well as two parcels of improved real estate located in Cook county, Illinois, and a tract of land in the State of Wyoming, which is not here in question.

On May 22, 1943, subsequent to the death of her first husband, the deceased married Charles D. Youngblood, one of the defendants herein, who owned certain real estate in Cook county, Illinois, and in Lake county, Indiana.

From December 6, 1943, to January 15, 1944, May R. Kenney Youngblood was confined to the Mercy hospital for an operation from which she never fully recovered. Her condition after her discharge from the hospital became such that she was confined to her home entirely from April 19, 1944, until the time of her death on May 31, 1944.

Sometime during the latter part of January or the first part of February, 1944, in an attempt to iron out their marital difficulties, the deceased and her husband, Charles D. Youngblood, decided to make joint wills in which each would leave all of his property, both real and personal, to the other. To put said plan in operation they visited the offices of William E. Rodriguez, an attorney in Chicago, Illinois, and one of the defendants herein, on February 6, 1944. Rodriguez suggested that the best way for them to effectuate the purpose they had in mind was to place all of their property in joint tenancy rather than make joint wills.

In accordance with this suggestion, deeds bearing the date of February 17, 1944, were prepared by Rodriguez conveying all the real estate owned by both May R. and Charles D. Youngblood to the defendant Annie Moir, as nominee who was merely to act as title holder of record for the purpose of making a reconveyance to Mr. and Mrs. Youngblood in joint tenancy. On February 19, 1944, defendant Annie Moir executed the necessary deeds reconveying the property to the Youngbloods. All these deeds, fourteen in number, were acknowledged by the respective grantors before defendant Rodriguez, a notary public of Cook county, Illinois, on the dates on which they were executed, and revenue stamps were affixed to all of said deeds and duly cancelled. The deeds were then placed in the vault of defendant Rodriguez, but were removed on February 25, 1945, for the purpose of having certificates of magistracy affixed to those deeds relating to certain properties in Indiana and Wyoming. They were then replaced in the vault.

No transactions were undertaken by the parties relative to the personal property owned by each, although a power of attorney was executed by May R. Kenney Youngblood giving her husband, Charles D. Youngblood, the right to sign checks on the account maintained by the paint business. This power of attorney was later revoked.

Difficulties arose between husband and wife, and on April 19, 1944, they separated, due to disagreements relative to financial matters.

On April 26, 1944, prior to her death, May R. Kenney Youngblood caused a letter to be written to Rodriguez stating:

“William E. Rodriguez 160 N. LaSalle Street Chicago, Illinois
Dear Sir:
I would like to have you consider as naught all papers, deeds and documents pertaining to my property both real and personal, and not to register or record any papers pertaining thereto.
Yours truly,
(Signed) May R. Youngblood”

On the day prior to her death May R. Youngblood was visited at her home by Frank J. Burke, vice-president of the Chicago City Bank and Trust Company. She had requested that he come to see her regarding the making of a will. Mrs. Youngblood handed Burke a memorandum in her own handwriting regarding the disposition which she wished to make of her property by will. The memorandum states:

“To my sister entire estate both real and personal, incl all monies in bank and stock, jewelry and furnishings of my home, my automobile. The only exception is the paint business and the building in which it is lodged. This I bequeath to Marion Jahn, my bookeeper and Girard McGillen now in Italy in U.S.A. Also one dollar to my estranged husband, Charles D. Youngblood.”

Following the death of Mrs. Youngblood, the deeds held by defendant Rodriguez were recorded.

The appellant, Hazel C. Newman, who is named in this opinion as the plaintiff, was a sister of May R. Young-blood, and contended before the master that Rodriguez had no authority to record the deeds; that they were at no time delivered to him by the grantors with the intention and for the purpose of conveying title; that May R. Youngblood executed the deeds .to her property in Chicago conditionally with the understanding that Rodriguez would await further instructions from her; and that the agreement between Mr. and Mrs. Youngblood was never consummated because none of the personal .property was ever placed in joint tenancy.

The sole issue involved in this cause, as agreed by both plaintiff and defendants, is whether there was good delivery of the deeds conveying the properties in question.

The appellant contends that because the deeds were in the possession of a third party at the time of the death of May R. Youngblood, that fact creates a presumption against delivery, and it is incumbent upon the grantee to overcome the prima, facie case against a valid delivery by the weight of competent evidence. She places much emphasis upon that well-established principle followed in the cases of Scott v. Cornell, 295 Ill. 508; Selby v. Smith, 301 Ill. 554; Huber v. Williams, 338 Ill. 313; McClugage v. Taylor, 352 Ill. 550; Smith v. Pelz, 384 Ill. 446. In all of those cases it was held that delivery is essential to the operation of a deed and must be made during the lifetime of the grantor. Scott v. Cornell was a suit to set aside a deed from a wife to a husband, which, after the wife’s death, was found in the possession of a third person in an envelope with another deed to the same property from the husband to the wife, and it was held that because there was no evidence to show that it was left with the third party to be delivered to the grantee, the latter acquired no title. In that case the party with whom the deed was deposited was also dead and there was no proof or evidence showing any instructions as to a delivery whatsoever.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.E.2d 309, 394 Ill. 617, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-youngblood-ill-1946.