Pittenger v. Pittenger

70 N.E. 699, 208 Ill. 582
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 70 N.E. 699 (Pittenger v. Pittenger) 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
Pittenger v. Pittenger, 70 N.E. 699, 208 Ill. 582 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The issues, presented by this record, are principally issues of fact. On September 14, 1898, the father and mother of appellant executed to him a deed of their homestead farm, consisting of eighty acres, upon condition that he would support -them during their natural lives, and furnish and supply them with the reasonable comforts and necessaries of life,, suitable to their condition, including such medicines and medical attendance as they might require, giving them the right to retain the possession of the premises as their home free of charge, to be kept by them until their death, unless by further agreement thereafter some other arrangement for their home should be made; and also that he would pay them the sum of $100.00 in money per year.

The main question of fact is, whether or not the appellant has fulfilled the contract, so made by him.

One of the charges in the bill is, that the deed in question was procured by fraud and undue influence. We find no evidence whatever in the record to sustain this charge. The fraud or undue influence, which will avoid a will or deed, must be directly connected with the execution of the instrument. (Guild v. Hull, 127 Ill. 523; Francis v. Wilkinson, 147 id. 370). The evidence shows that the deed was executed voluntarily by John Pittenger, Sr., and Julia A. Pittenger, his wife, on September 14, 1898. At that time the fee of the property was in John Pittenger, Sr., and Julia A. Pittenger had only the interests of homestead and inchoate dower. John Pittenger, Sr., lived, after the execution of the deed, until February 1, 1900, at which time he died still owning the fee. There is no testimony whatever in the record that the appellant failed to properly support and maintain his father and mother during this period. The testimony, introduced for the purpose of showing appellant’s failure to carry out the contract, is in relation to his alleged treatment of his mother after his father’s death. The contract did not provide for the support of the heirs of John Pittenger, Sr., but only for the support of himself during his lifetime and of his wife during her lifetime. When he died, therefore, the contract was ended so far as he was concerned. The complainants below have only sought to prove that appellant failed to properly support his mother, and pay her $100.00 a year, after the death of the father on February 1, 1900. The questions involved, therefore, which relate to the manner, in which the contract was carried out after the death of the father, divide themselves into two parts: First, was the appellant at fault in not furnishing his mother proper support and maintenance after the death of his father? and second, was he at fault in not paying her $100.00 a year in money, as it was provided that he should do in the original contract of September 14, 1898?

First—Appellant lived with his wife and children— he having been married some twenty-six years and being over fifty years of age—on his farm about a quarter of a mile distant from the farm here in controversy, being the home of his mother. By the terms of the contract she had a right to remain upon the home farm free of charge, and occupy it until her death. But the contract contemplates that, by agreement with her, some other arrangement might be made for a home for her. The proof shows that the appellant offered her a home at his house, and tried to persuade her to come and live with him, instead of living alone upon the farm here in controversy. She did once or twice, go to his house and remain there a month or more, but left and went back to her own home because of the noise made by appellant’s children, or others concerned in the management of his farm. She also stated that her husband had requested that she should remain upon the home farm. Her determination to remain upon the farm, instead of living with the appellant, required him to furnish her with the necessary supplies for living at her own home, and also to furnish her with company, or somebody to stay with her and look after her in her old age. We think the proof shows by an overwhelming preponderance that the appellant fulfilled his obligations in this regard. The appellee, Julia A. Pittenger, remained at the home farm, with the exception of an occasional visit for a few weeks to the appellant’s house or to the house of her brother, from the time of her husband’s death up to the time of the beginning of this suit in February, 1902, and subsequently thereto. Charles Pittenger, her son, had not lived with his father and mother for a number of years, and had not .visited the old home for a number of years until the death of his father, when he came to the latter’s funeral. He had received, as the evidence shows, a considerable amount of money from his father during the latter’s lifetime, but contributed nothing to his mother’s support after his father’s death. In the fall or winter of 1901, he came back and visited his mother; and the evidence tends strongly to show that the dissatisfaction, which she then began to show, was due to the influence of her son, Charles. She asked of the appellant that he give or lend to her son, Charles, the sum of $400.00, which he refused to do. In the recent case of Huffman v. Sharer, 191 Ill. 79, which was similar in many respects in its facts to the case at bar, this court said (p. 84): “The testimony of the plaintiff in error demonstrated that his mind has been greatly impaired by age and his memory and judgment much weakened, and his testimony, together with the other proofs in the case, fully warranted the finding of the master, which was approved by the court, that his present dissatisfaction with the terms of the conveyance was inspired by other interested parties who have ulterior designs to forward, which it is not to the best interest of the plaintiff in error should be promoted.” While all of this language may not be applicable to the facts of the present case, yet a portion of it is so applicable, that is to say, the dissatisfaction of the appellee, Julia A. Pittenger, with the contract, made by her son for her support, and with the execution of the deed, is shown by the testimony to have been inspired by interested parties, who had ulterior designs to promote.

While'the evidence in this case does not show that there was any fraud or undue influence exercised over the grantors in procuring the execution of the deed here sought to be set aside at'the time of the execution of the same, yet the doctrine, laid down in McClelland v. McClelland, 176 Ill. 88, and the cases therein referred to and commented upon, is invoked for the purpose of carrying back the testimony in regard to what occurred after the death of John Pittenger, Sr., and making it apply to the intention of the appellant at the time the deed was made. The doctrine thus sought to be invoked is that, where there is a failure to perform contracts of this kind, a court of equity will entertain jurisdiction to set aside a deed, upon the ground that the circumstances justify the inference of an abandonment of the contract, and a presumption of a fraudulent intent in entering into the contract. In other words, it is claimed by the appellees that the appellant failed to properly maintain and support his mother after the death of his father, and that his conduct .in this regard gives rise to the presumption that he entered into the contract originally, and obtained the deed, with a fraudulent intent.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Musgrave v. Casey
235 P.2d 729 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1951)
Mruk v. Mruk
41 N.E.2d 490 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1942)
Kramer v. Mericle
195 Iowa 404 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1923)
Di Rosa v. Sammarco
115 N.E. 838 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1917)
In re Peck's Estate
88 A. 568 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1913)
Russell v. Robbins
93 N.E. 324 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1910)
Meyer v. Meyer
93 N.E. 341 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1910)
Johnson v. Paulson
114 N.W. 739 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.E. 699, 208 Ill. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittenger-v-pittenger-ill-1904.