Parks v. Hooper

147 N.E. 44, 316 Ill. 158
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
DocketNo. 15237. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 N.E. 44 (Parks v. Hooper) 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
Parks v. Hooper, 147 N.E. 44, 316 Ill. 158 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. ChiBB Justicb Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees, Nellie M. Parks, Lloyd Kell and Edward Kell, only heirs of Nancy E. Wright, deceased, filed their bill in the circuit court of Cook county against appellant, Mary E. Hooper, to set aside two deeds made by Mrs. Wright in her lifetime to appellant to two parcels of real estate situated in Chicago and for an accounting as to rents, and as to certain bank accounts, bonds and other property belonging to Mrs. Wright, and for the appointment of a receiver. The bill charged that there was a confidential relationship existing between appellant and Mrs. Wright, and that the latter was also of unsound mind, and that appellant obtained the real estate and the other property by means of fraud and undue influence and without consideration. Appellant answered the bill, denying all of the material allegations. Upon a hearing the cause was referred to a master in chancery to take and report the evidence with his conclusions as to the law and as to the facts. The master reported that the deeds made by Mrs. Wright to appellant were obtained by means of fraud, undue influence and false representations, and that Mrs. Wright was mentally unsound at the time the deeds were made, and that appellant obtained her personal property by the same means. He also found that while appellant had received considerable of the personal property of Mrs. Wright in the same manner, she had expended money for her and had rendered her such care and assistance that he considered it equitable that appellant be only required to account for the rents and profits of the real estate. He recommended that the deeds be declared null and void and be set aside as clouds on the title of appellees. Objections to the master’s report were overruled and allowed to stand as exceptions before the court. The court approved the report of the master, entered a decree in accordance with his recommendations, and appointed a receiver to collect the rents and profits of the real estate. Appellant has prosecuted this appeal.

In 1919 the deceased, Nancy E. Wright, and her son, Charlie Wright, owned the real estate involved in this suit in. joint tenancy. The property consisted of premises at 4130 West Harrison street, improved with a two-flat building of the value of $7500, and premises at 4407 Gladys avenue, improved with a house of the value of $5000. Mrs. Wright and her son lived on the first floor of the Harrison street property, and Maud and John White lived on the second floor as tenants. Mrs. Wright and her son also had a joint bank account. Charlie Wright became seriously ill and died December 31, 1919. There was a distant relationship existing between Mrs. Wright and appellant, and after the death of Charlie appellant came from her home in Gary, Indiana, to Mrs. Wright’s home in Chicago. While appellant was at the home of Mrs. Wright she went to the office of a real estate firm and represented to that firm that she was buying the property of Mrs. Wright and desired that a deed to her be prepared for the purpose of conveying the real estate on Harrison street and Gladys avenue. The work of preparing the deed was turned over to Herbert T. Younger, a clerk in the firm’s office. After the deed had been prepared, Younger on February 20, 1920, went to the home of Mrs. Wright with the deed. When he arrived there he found appellant and Mrs. Wright alone. Maud White was called down to the apartment of Mrs. Wright. In the presence of the three women Younger read the deed to Mrs. Wright and thereafter took her acknowledgment to it. After the deed had been executed by Mrs. Wright appellant handed to Younger a check for $6000 drawn on the Garfield Park State Savings Bank, payable to the order of Mrs. Wright. Appellant did not at that time have $6000 in that bank but only had a balance of about $660, which had been transferred to her by Mrs. Wright previous thereto, which sum was the remainder of the joint bank account of herself and her deceased son. Younger called to the attention of Mrs. Wright the fact that the check was not certified, and after some conversation, in which appellant admitted that she did not have a balance large enough to cover the check, she stated she would have to get some bonds and money from Gary to take care of the check. Younger then delivered the deed and check to Mrs. Wright, with the direction that she hold the deed until the check was certified. Mrs. Wright then placed the deed and the check in a table drawer. After the execution of the deed appellant began collecting the rents from the real estate and has continued to collect the same and manage the property since that date. In the latter part of February, 1920, Mrs. Wright was taken by appellant to the latter’s home in Gary, where she remained until her death, May 31, 1920, at the age of seventy-eight years. The $6000 check was never paid, and the testimony in the record is to the effect that while Mrs. Wright was at the home of appellant she tore it up and remarked, “Now, this will make no one any trouble.” On the trial of the cause it was shown that a second deed to appellant of the Gladys avenue property was made April 8, 1920, by Mrs. Wright.

The contention of appellees that on February 20, 1920, and prior thereto and thereafter until her death, Nancy E-Wright was of feeble mind and mentally incapable of transacting her business affairs, that appellant occupied a confidential relation towards her, and that by reason of such confidential relationship and by means of fraud and undue influence she induced and procured Mrs. Wright to execute the deeds without consideration, is amply sustained by the evidence in the record. All of the witnesses for appellees had been acquainted with Mrs. Wright for over five years. They had. seen her often and noticed her mind weaken with her increased age, physical decline, and grief and sorrow caused by the death of her husband and son. After the death of her son her mental incapacity became very noticeable. She asked the witness Maud White to telephone her husband on several occasions, although he had been dead for several years. She stated that her husband was at the hospital with her son, and that her son was getting better and that her husband would soon bring him home. This also occurred after the death of her son. She mumbled to herself constantly and rambled in her conversations. On one occasion she gave a newsboy a ten-dollar bill in payment of a newspaper bill of less than a dollar. She turned the gas on but failed to light the burner and held her hands over it and explained that she was warming her hands. She did not know where she had been or what she had done when she was taken by appellant to the bank and her bank account transferred to appellant and her safety deposit box opened and the contents delivered to appellant. She said to the witness Maud' White, upon her return from the trip to the bank, that she had been out riding and looking into the store windows. Four witnesses testified that appellant said to them after the death of Charlié Wright, and immediately prior to the time of the execution of the deeds to her, that Mrs. Wright did not know what she was doing and was mentally incapable of looking after herself or her property. Appellant said to the notary public at the time of the execution of the first deed to her, that there was no use for him to read the deed to Mrs. Wright as she did not know what he was reading. The facts corroborate this statement of appellant, as it is shown by the evidence that while Younger was reading the deed to her she was looking out of the window and paying no attention to what he was reading.

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Related

People v. Young
100 Ill. App. 2d 377 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1968)
Danaher v. Phillips
149 N.E. 302 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.E. 44, 316 Ill. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-hooper-ill-1925.