Rhodes v. Meredith

102 N.E. 1063, 260 Ill. 138
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 1063 (Rhodes v. Meredith) 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
Rhodes v. Meredith, 102 N.E. 1063, 260 Ill. 138 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Kane county dismissed appellant’s bill for partition for want of equity, and the record has been brought to this court by an appeal.

The real estate involved formerly belonged to Joshua Rhodes, and all parties in interest claim, in one way or another, from him. Rhodes died in Kane county, Illinois, December 19, 1910, leaving Addie M. Rhodes as his widow, and Martha Sheldon Rhodes, who claims to be his daughter by adoption. He also left John F. Rhodes, a brother, and a number of sisters and descendants of deceased sisters, as his collateral heirs. On April 25, 18S5, Rhodes and his wife, Addie M., conveyed a portion of the premises in controversy to Maria H. Severance, and within a few days thereafter- Maria Severance re-conveyed the same premises to Addie M. Rhodes. Neither of these deeds was recorded until the 10th day of January, 1911. No change was made in the possession of the premises in pursuance of these deeds. These conveyances were manifestly only resorted to as a means of transferring the title from Rhodes to his wife. On the nth of August, 1910, Rhodes executed a contract of bargain and sale of the farm in controversy to A. D. Hanna for the sum of $25,725. The contract was in writing, and provided for the payment of $5725 in cash March 1, 1911, and the execution of notes and a mortgage for the remainder. Rhodes- covenanted to convey the premises by a good merchantable title and surrender possession to the purchaser on that date. The contract of sale included that portion of the farm .to which his wife claimed title under the unrecorded deed, as well as the remainder, the title to which was in the name of Rhodes. Hanna was in the possession of the farm under a lease at the time the contract of sale was executed, and the date fixed for the consummation of the sale contract was the date on which the lease, by its terms, would expire. After the death of Rhodes, his widow, as administratrix, filed a bill in equity to the May term, 1911, of the circuit court of Kane county, in which she recited the making of the contract with Hanna by her husband, and alleged that she, as administratrix and individually, was ready and willing to comply with, its terms by executing a deed to Hanna conveying to him the entire premises upon compliance with the contract by him. The bill alleged that Martha Sheldon Rhodes was the legally adopted daughter of Joshua Rhodes and entitled to inherit from him the same as a natural child. Hanna and the adopted daughter, then a minor twelve years of age, were made defendants to the bill. The prayer of the bill was that a decree for specific performance of said contract be granted, and that the court determine the amount that should be paid to.the widow in her individual capacity and what portion she should charge herself with as administratrix. A decree was entered upop said bill finding that the value of that portion of the farm to which the widow held title was $14,950 and that the residue was worth $10,775. A decree was entered for the specific performance of .the contract. The widow was ordered and directed to make a deed to said Hanna to the whole of said premises upon his complying with the terms of the contract. Hanna complied with the contract and a deed purporting to convey to him the fee simple title of the entire farm was executed, under which he claims to be the sole and exclusive owner of all the premises described in the deed. The decree granting specific performance of the contract, in pursuance of which the widow executed a deed to Hanna, has never been reversed or modified and remains in full force and effect. On May 31, 1912, the appellant, John F. Rhodes, a brother of Joshua Rhodes, filed his bill in the case at bar for partition. Addie M. Rhodes, (individually and as administratrix of Joshua Rhodes, together with his surviving sisters and the children of such as were dead,) Martha S. Rhodes, and certain other persons who were in possession of some portion of the premises, were made parties defendant to the appellant’s bill. Briefly, the theory of the bill is that the deed from Joshua Rhodes and wife to Maria Severance, and the deed from Maria Severance to Addie M. Rhodes, never became operative for want of delivery in the lifetime of Joshua Rhodes; that Martha Sheldon Rhodes was never legally adopted as the daughter of said Joshua and Addie M. Rhodes and has no interest whatever in his estate; that the contract for the sale of the premises involved, to Hanna, not having been performed and a conveyance made prior to the death of Joshua Rhodes, said Rhodes was at the time of his death the legal owner of the farm in controversy, and having died intestate, leaving no child or children or descendants of such child or children, the land descended as real estate to appellant and the other collateral heirs of said Joshua Rhodes.

There is nothing in the record to support the contention that the deed from Joshua Rhodes and wife to Mrs. Severance, and the deed from her to Mrs. Rhodes, were void for want of delivery. Mrs. Severance testifies that she paid nothing for her deed and received nothing when she re-conveyed to Mrs. Rhodes; that she held the deed- from the time it was made until she re-conveyed to Mrs. Rhodes. It is a fair and reasonable inference from the evidence that Joshua Rhodes intended to make a settlement upon his wife by giving her the north eighty acres of his farm and that the conveyance to Mrs. Severance was merely a convenient means adopted to accomplish his purpose. That he had a legal right to make a suitable provision for his wife where there are no creditors to complain cannot be questioned. Heirs and devisees who claim merely as volunteers have no right to attack such conveyance on the ground that it was voluntary and had the effect of decreasing the estate to which they would be entitled upon the death of the grantor, but so far as the rights of Hanna and .the collateral heirs are concerned, they cannot be affected by the determination of the question raised in respect to- the delivery of the Severance deeds. If the deeds were not delivered, then the title to the whole premises was in Joshua Rhodes at the time he made the contract of sale with Hanna, and that contract entitled Hanna tO’ a deed for the whole of the premises upon compliance with its terms. If the deeds were; delivered and jMrs. Rhodes became the owner of the north eighty acres prior to the execution of the contract with Hanna, while she did not sign the contract she knew that the sale had been made, was present at the time, and set up no claim under her unrecorded deed and made no objection to the inclusion of the north eighty in the sale. Beside thus estopping herself as against Hanna, who had no. notice that she claimed any interest in fee in the premises, she has ratified and confirmed the sale by filing the bill for specific performance, in which she offered to convey, and by procuring a decree under which she has actually conveyed the whole of said premises pursuant to the contract made by her husband. Hanna was entitled, under his contract, to the fee .simple title to the entire farm, and this he obtained either by the deed made by Mrs. Rhodes as administratrix, or partly through that deed and partly through her deed in her individual capacity. In either event the title vested in him and his contract was satisfied.

Whatever of controversy may remain to be settled among the heirs of Joshua Rhodes, it must be held that Hanna is entitled to hold the land under his deed, un-' molested by any of the conflicting claims to the purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 1063, 260 Ill. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhodes-v-meredith-ill-1913.