Parks v. Parks

2019 IL App (3d) 170845
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 19, 2019
Docket3-17-0845
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2019 IL App (3d) 170845 (Parks v. Parks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parks v. Parks, 2019 IL App (3d) 170845 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL App (3d) 170845

Opinion filed June 12, 2019 ________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

RAYMOND PARKS; CHARLES PARKS; ) ARLENE PARKS, as Special Representative ) of the Estate of Robert Parks; GEORGE R. ) MUELLER; KATHLEEN REASON, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Personally and as Special Representative of the ) of the 14th Judicial Circuit, Estate of Anna Mueller; DON P. MUELLER; ) Rock Island County, Illinois. MICHAEL MUELLER; and JAMES ) MUELLER, ) ) Appeal No. 3-17-0845 Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) Circuit No. 12-MR-44 ) v. ) ) The Honorable JAMES D. PARKS, Personally and as the ) Mark A. VandeWiele, Executor of the James C. Parks Estate and the ) Judge, presiding. Successor Trustee of the William Parks Jr. ) Revocable Living Trust; and JOHN L. PARKS, ) ) Defendants-Appellees. ) ________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE McDADE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Schmidt and Justice O’Brien concurred in the judgment and opinion.

________________________________________________________________________ OPINION

¶1 Plaintiffs filed a complaint for the ejectment of defendant James D. Parks (James

D.), arguing that they are entitled to possession of a farm under the will of Laura Parks

(Laura). Both parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The trial court denied

plaintiffs’ motion and partially granted defendants’ motion, determining that (1) James D.

had possessory rights to the farm through a contractual agreement between William Parks

Jr. (Will Jr.) and Laura and the subsequent conveyance of Will Jr.’s interest in the farm

and (2) plaintiffs’ claim was barred by laches. Plaintiffs appealed. We affirm.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 In a two-step transaction on April 8 and 9, 1943, William Parks Sr. (Will Sr.)

effectively conveyed 332 acres of land in Rock Island, Illinois (Parks Farm), which he

had previously solely owned, to himself and his wife, Laura Parks, in joint tenancy. The

two deeds effecting this conveyance were recorded on April 12, 1943.

¶4 The couple had five 1 children: William (Will Jr.); John D.; Robert; Anna; and

Donald. Will Jr. had one son, James C. John D. predeceased his parents, leaving three

children: John L., Charles, and Raymond. John L. had one son, James D. Donald, who

died without children, predeceased Laura.

¶5 Sometime during 1946-47, Will Sr. and Laura moved from Parks Farm to a house

on another farm. Around the same time, Will Jr. returned from the war, and he and his

wife, Edythe, moved into Parks Farm and farmed the land. In 1960, Will Sr. and Laura

purchased and moved into a home in Aledo, Illinois. Aside from a brief stay in an

1 The trial court’s order states there were four children, but Laura’s handwritten correction in “SECTION TWO” of her October 23, 1988, will established there was a fifth child who had also predeceased Laura. -2- assisted living center, Will Jr. lived and worked on Parks Farm from the time he and

Edythe took possession in the mid-1940s until his death in 2002.

¶6 In October 1960, Laura wrote separate letters to her other surviving children,

Robert, John D., and Anna, informing them that she and Will Sr. intended to sell Parks

Farm to Will Jr. Specifically, in her letter to Robert, Laura explained that they were

contracting to sell Parks Farm to Will Jr. for $60,000 ($80,000 minus an advancement of

Will Jr.’s anticipated $20,000 inheritance from their estates) and Will Jr.’s commitment

to co-sign on and to solely pay a mortgage on Parks Farm to help his parents purchase

their house in Aledo.

¶7 In conformity with the letter, in September 1960, Will Sr., Laura, Will Jr., and

Edythe signed a $17,000 mortgage provided by Prudential Insurance Company on Parks

Farm. (Will Jr. paid the mortgage in full in May 1978—29 months early.) Will Sr. and

Laura moved to the house in Aledo. In February 1961, again in conformity with the letter,

Will Jr. entered into an agreement with Will Sr. and Laura to purchase Parks Farm for

$60,000. The agreement states, in relevant part:

“The said Parties of the First Part hereby covenant

and agree to convey the said premises above described, or

cause the same to be conveyed, to the said Party of the

Second Part by a good and sufficient Warranty Deed

executed by the Parties of the First Part in due form of law,

which Deed shall be delivered to the said Party of the

Second Part upon payment being made as hereinafter

provided.

-3- ***

It is agreed by and between the parties hereto that

the taxes on said premises for the year 1960 payable in the

year 1961 are to be paid by Parties of the Second Part.

Possession of said premises shall be delivered to the said

Party of the Second Part on or before the 1st day of March

1961.

On his part the said Party of the Second Part agrees

to pay to said Parties of the First Part, or the survivors, the

sum of Sixty Thousand ($60,000.00) Dollars in the manner

following: Assuming by him of real estate mortgage now a

lien upon said premises in favor of The Prudential

Insurance Company of America in the principal sum of

Seventeen Thousand and no/100 ($17,000.00) Dollars, it

being understood that said mortgage lien draws interest at

the rate of six (6) per cent per annum and the Party of the

Second Part is to pay installment of principal and interest

due on said mortgage lien March 1st, 1961; and the

remainder of the purchase price being the sum of Forty-

three Thousand and no/100 ($43,000.00) Dollars, on or

before Ten (10) years from the March 1st following the

date of the death of the survivor of the Parties of the First

Part, together with interest at the rate of four (4) per cent

-4- per annum, payable annually, from March 1st, 1961, to the

March 1st following the date of the death of the survivor of

the Parties of the First Part, and with interest at the rate of

four (4) per cent per annum payable annually, from March

1st two (2) years after the March 1st following the date of

the death of the survivor of the Parties of the First Part, it

being the intention of the parties hereto that Party of the

Second Part shall be relieved from paying any interest for

two (2) years immediately following the date of death of

the survivor of the Parties of the First Part.”

¶8 According to the agreement, Will Jr. had an interest payment due annually in the

amount of $1720 ($43,000 x 4%), beginning on March 1, 1961. On the last page of the

agreement, there were handwritten notes apparently showing interest payments made

from 1962 to 1977. There was no notation for the year of 1972 nor for any year after

1977. No deed conveying Parks Farm from Will Sr. and Laura to Will Jr. was ever

recorded. The record contains no document from Laura and/or Will Sr. advising Robert,

Anna, or John D. that Will Jr. had either completed or defaulted on the purchase of which

she had previously advised them. Nor is there any allegation that such information had

ever been conveyed to them.

¶9 Will Sr. died in March 1985. Laura died four years later in October 1989. If the

terms of the purchase agreement had not previously been completed, by its terms, Laura’s

death fixed the final payment date on the farm as March 1, 2000.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 IL App (3d) 170845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-parks-illappct-2019.