Oliver v. Oliver

9 N.E. 891, 119 Ill. 532
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 N.E. 891 (Oliver v. Oliver) 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
Oliver v. Oliver, 9 N.E. 891, 119 Ill. 532 (Ill. 1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This case is now before us for the second time. The former opinion, filed May 19, 1884, is in 110 111. 119. Since the reversal and remanding of the cause, an amended bill has been filed, alleging that the original deed, claimed to have been, executed by Amoretta Oliver to Eevilo Oliver, has been discovered, and charging, that the recorded deed from Amoretta Oliver to Franklin Oliver Sr. is a forgery. The question involved is purely one of fact. The record is very voluminous. We shall not attempt to analyze, compare and discuss the testimony of the numerous witnesses on both sides. We have examined it all, and weighed it carefully, and shall only give, in general terms, the conclusion, which we have reached. Wre are of the opinion, that the recorded deed is not proven, by a clear preponderance of the evidence, to have been a forgery.

June 11, 1879, Amoretta Oliver obtained a decree of divorce from Franklin Oliver Sr., her husband, and was awarded the 400 acres in controversy, as alimony. The defendant in error, Eevilo Oliver, is their son. John L. Oliver, hereafter mentioned, is another son. In 1879 Franklin Oliver Sr. was ninety-three years old. A bitter animosity existed between himself on the one side, and his wife and her two sons, Eevilo and John on the other. The record teems with exhibitions of cruelty and hatred, springing from an unnatural family feud.

On October 21, 1.879, Franklin had some negotiations with his former wife with reference to an exchange of the 400 acres he had given her for another tract, owned by him, which contained 765 acres. On that day, they had a meeting at her house, at which Minnerly, a justice of the peace, and the main witness for defendant in error, was present. Minnerly swears, that he made out two deeds, one from Franklin to Amoretta for the 765 acres, and one from Amoretta to either Franklin, or two nieces- of his in New Jersey, for the 400 acres. The negotiations, however, fell through. Mrs. Oliver refused to carry out the exchange. Franklin Oliver was angry about it, and threatened, that he -would set aside the divorce, if his former wife should not execute the deed to him of the 400 acres.

On October 25, 1879, a second meeting took place, at which Franklin, Amoretta, Eevilo and Minnerly were present. Minnerly states, that, when he came to the house on this second occasion, Franklin said to him: “I think it will not be a failure this time; we have agreed and there will be no controversy.” It is undisputed, that two deeds were then executed. Franklin made a deed to Amoretta, conveying to her 845 acres, having added an 80-acre tract to the 765 acres, already mentioned. Franklin Oliver who has since deceased, swore, on the former hearing, that Amoretta then executed to him, in exchange for the 845 acres, a deed conveying to him the 400 acres, and that he took the last named deed away with him, and, on October 28, 1879, went to Pontiac and recorded it. On the other hand, Amoretta Oliver, and her son, Bevilo, swear, that the deed of the 400 acres, which she then executed, was to Bevilo Oliver and not to Franklin Oliver. The” only question in the case is: Did Amoretta Oliver make a deed-of the 400 acres to Franklin Oliver or to Bevilo Oliver?

The records of Livingston county show, that a deed from Amoretta to Franklin Oliver, conveying the 400 acres, was recorded in the recorder’s office of that county on October 28, 1879. After its record and on or about October 30, 1879, it was delivered to Franklin Oliver. On the morning of January 3, 1880, Franklin Oliver was found in the house, in which he lived alone, in his bed with his hands and his feet tied and a gag in his mouth. His clothes and his papers were scattered upon the floor and his trunk had been rifled. He swears, that, at this time, the deed, which he had recorded, was stolen from him. The evidence points very strongly to Bevilo Oliver, as the person, who committed this outrage upon his aged father.

The evidence, introduced upon the first hearing, has already been commented upon in our former opinion. Upon the second hearing, a deed of the 400 acres, dated October 25, 1879, signed by Amoretta Oliver, and jrarporting to have been acknowledged before A. B. Minnerly, justice of the peace, on October 25, 1879, running to Bevilo Oliver, as grantee, was introduced in evidence, as the original deed, that was executed by Amoretta on October 25, 1879. It is argued, that,.as she then made this deed to Bevilo and as she made no other deed of the 400 acres except this, the deed to Franklin Oliver, which was recorded, must have been a forgery. The deed, thus produced, comes attended with so many circumstances of suspicion, that it can not be allowed to -weigh against the solemnity of a public record.

It shows upon its face, that it was never recorded. Bevilo Oliver swears, that he drew it, and the proof tends to show, that the writing in the body of it is in his handwriting. The signature is Mrs. Oliver’s. Eevilo and liis mother were interested parties. The certificate of acknowledgment has no seal. It is signed “A. B. Minnerly J. P.” It “is a printed blank, and the few written words which it contains appear to be in Minnerly’s handwriting. Minnerly has left the State of Illinois and is now living in Texas. The testimony introduced by defendant in error to explain the loss of this document, is not satisfactory.

Eevilo Oliver says, that, after the deed ivas executed and delivered to him on October 25, 1879, he laid it down on the table in the room, where his father and mother then were, and went to the timber. Mrs. Oliver says, that her husband, who remained in the room some time after Eevilo left, wanted the deed and she let him take it, and he said he would carry it to Pontiac and have it recorded. It is difficult to understand, why Franklin Oliver should be so desirous of recording a deed, conveying to a son, between whom and himself there existed such a feeling of hostility, that very tract of 400 acres, which he had been so anxious to get on October 21, in exchange for the 765 acres. He did not take away the deed of 845 acres, which he had made to his wife, to have that recorded. She recorded it herself a few days after. He could have had no possible interest or object in carrying off and agreeing to record a deed to Eevilo. The theory of an exchange of lands, and the conveyance of the 400 acres to Franklin in pursuance of such exchange, explain the consideration, which the latter received for deeding away the 845 acres.. Nothing else furnishes an adequate explanation of his parting with the 845 acres, in view of the state of feeling, which then existed between the parties.

McDowell, an attorney, swears, that Eevilo once asked him, “if he could not get the old man’s land away from him by having two deeds, one over the other in some way, when the old man read the same, and then, when the old man came to sign the same, slip it or change it, so that he would in fact sign a deed different from the one he had read.” Sears swears, that old Mr. Oliver once said to him, in speaking of the exchange of the 845 acres for the 400 acres, that “he thought they were playing sharp on him, that she had deeded 400 acres * * * to Eevilo, and he thought their calculation was for Eivilo to get his deed on record first.

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Related

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227 Ill. App. 511 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1923)
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35 Nev. 319 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1912)
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46 Ill. App. 75 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1892)

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.E. 891, 119 Ill. 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-oliver-ill-1887.