Pyott v. Pyott

90 Ill. App. 210, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 777
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 Ill. App. 210 (Pyott v. Pyott) 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
Pyott v. Pyott, 90 Ill. App. 210, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 777 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant filed her bill in equity against James M. Pyott, Senior, for separate maintenance, alleging that she was lawfully married to him on October 20, 1898, and that they lived and cohabited together as man and wife until November 21, 1898, when, without just or reasonable cause, he deserted and abandoned her, and that she is now living separate and apart from him without fault on her part.

The bill also alleged that the agreement or engagement to marry was entered into by the parties on October 12 (shown by the evidence to be October 14), 1898, and that on that day he represented to her that he was the owner of much valuable real estate and other property, situated in Chicago and elsewhere, particularly specifying some of it, and that she relied upon said representations, among others, as inducements to marry him.

It is also alleged that after the marriage she learned for the first time that her husband, in fraud of her marital rights, had pretended to convey by warranty deeds unto three of his children by a former marriage, naming them, a certain large part of his property, specifying it; that said deeds purported to have been executed on October 15, 189S, and to have been recorded on October 20, 1898, but that they were not delivered until after the marriage was consummated; and that the total value of his real and personal property equaled $230,000.

The prayer of the bill, besides asking for support and maintenance of appellant, asks that the said conveyances may be decreed to be null and void, and set aside as in fraud of appellant’s rights, and that the premises be reconveyed to said Pyott, senior, or that the grantees therein named may be directed to hold the premises in trust to secure the rights of appellant. All the defendants united in a,joint and several answer to the bill, the said Pyott, senior, answering by his next friend, James M. Pyott, junior, and a cross-bill was also filed by them.

Omitting mention of intervening matters, the court subsequently, by an order duly entered upon a sworn petition therefor, appointed James M. Pyott, junior, guardian ad litem and next friend of said James M. Pyott, senior, to defend and prosecute said cause in the name and for said Pyott, senior, and gave leave to amend and refile the cross-bill already filed. The order making such appointment expressly reserved the question of the sanity and soundness of mind of Pyott,- senior, until the final hearing, and it was agreed in open court and made a part of the order that if on the trial if should appear that Pyott, senior, was not insane, the answer and cross-bill filed for him by next friend and guardian acl litem should stand as his own.

Substantially the same matters were set up, in both answer and cross-bill, to wit, that at the time of the claimed marriage and for a long time prior thereto, and up to the filing of said answer, the said James M. Pyott, senior, was not of sound mind and memory, but was insane; that he was seventy-two years of age, and in his dotage, and his mind and memory were so impaired as to render him incapable of entering into any contract of marriage; and that the marriage was null and void for that reason; and alleged that the complainant, one James C. Whiteford, and E. Erskine McMillan, fraudulently combined, confederated and conspired, by unlawful means, to induce the said James M. Pyott, senior, to participate in said pretended marriage ceremony with the complainant; that the said James M. Pyott, senior, in participating in said marriage ceremony, was under improper restraint and undue influence of Jannett C. Pyott, the appellant, James C. Whiteford and E. Erskine McMillan; that James C. Whiteford had been for many years prior thereto the warm and confidential friend of the said James M. Pyott, senior, and had by his acts and prot-. estations of friendship gained the entire confidence of the said James M. Pyott, senior, and owing to the unsoundness of mind and memory of the said James M. Pyott, senior, at and before the said marriage ceremony, had by fraudulent misrepresentations and undue and wrongful influences, completely subjugated the mind of the said James M. Pyott, senior, to the will of the said James O. Whiteford; that Whiteford was an uncle of the appellant and the appellant was a near relative to the wife of E. Erskine McMillan; that the appellant prior to her said marriage was a woman of bad moral character, lewd and unchaste; that she was the mother of a bastard child; that she had led the life of a prostitute in the city of Chicago; that she was a woman of low character and wholly unfit to be the wife of James M. Pyott, senior; that such facts were known to Whiteford and McMillan, and, knowing these facts, they represented to James M. Pyott, senior, that she was a good and virtuous woman, and a fit and proper person to be the wife of James M. Pyott, senior; that the marriage was brought about in secret; that it was concealed from the children, relatives and disinterested friends of James M. Pyott, senior; that James M. Pyott, senior, had then living five children—James M. Pyott, Jr., Addie J. Robison, Albert E. Pyott, William C. Pyott and George W. Pyott, all of whom are of mature age; that James M. Pyott, senior, had always heretofore lived with the said children on the most intimate and affectionate terms; that the fact of his marriage was concealed from his children; that James O. Whiteford and E. Erskine McMillan, in pursuance of said conspiracy, caused said marriage to be secretly and clandestinely performed at the residence of E. Erskine McMillan. The answer admits that James M. Pyott, senior, was seized in fee simple of the valuable real estate described in the bill of complaint on the 15th day of October, A. D. 1898; that the property was valuable property, of the value of $100,000; but by reason of his advanced age and mental unsoundness he became utterly incapable and indifferent to the proper management of his property; .that the children became alarmed lest he should incumber or make some disposition of his property which would unduly affect his interest and perhaps squander the same; that they did not wish the mental unsoundness of James M. Pyott, senior, exposed in the Probate Court by having a •conservator appointed, and being desirous of preserving the property of James M. Pyott, senior, the same as if a conservator was appointed, they induced him to execute a deed of his property to James M. Pyott, Jr., Addie J. Robison and Albert E. Pyott, as trustees,"and that at the time of the execution of the deeds they executed a declaration of trust, declaring that they held said property in trust for James M. Pyott, senior, and that they had no knowledge or intimation that he was about to be married.

The cross-bill further alleged that the appellant, James C. Whiteford and E. Erskine McMillan, in pursuance of said conspiracy, did procure Samuel T. Baker, a person in the employ of Mr. McMillan, to obtain the marriage license and to swear that James M. Pyott, senior, was sixty-five years of age, when in fact he was seventy-two years of age, and that the said James M. Pyott, senior, was led to believe that he was getting a housekeeper, and not a wife; and the affirmative relief prayed that the marriage might be declared null and void and of no effect, and that the conveyance of the property referred to, might be declared to be good and valid.

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Bluebook (online)
90 Ill. App. 210, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyott-v-pyott-illappct-1900.