Rolofson v. Malone

146 N.E. 169, 315 Ill. 275
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
DocketNo. 16332
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 146 N.E. 169 (Rolofson v. Malone) 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
Rolofson v. Malone, 146 N.E. 169, 315 Ill. 275 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court :

Appellant filed a bill in the circuit court of Macon county to declare a resulting trust and for an accounting as to certain land in that county the legal title to which is in her father, Robert L. Malone, appellee. This tract of land contains 160 acres. Appellee answered denying that appellant is entitled to have a trust declared in said land and alleging that he is owner of a two-thirds interest in the land in fee simple and appellant is owner of a one-third interest, subject to his (appellee’s) dower interest in such one-third. Appellee also filed a cross-bill asking for partition. The cause was referred to the master in chancery, who heard the evidence, took an accounting and reported recommending partition in accordance with the prayer of the cross-bill and stating an account between the parties. The chancellor approved the master’s report and decreed accordingly. Appellant brings the cause here for review, and appellee has assigned cross-errors as to an item of accounting in which he claimed credit for certain funeral, medical and hospital bills paid by him.

The undisputed facts of the case are as follows: In October, 1884, Briscoe Davis, his wife, Harriet C., and daughter, Mary S., were residing on a farm of 197 acres in Scott county, Illinois. At that time Malone went to work as a farmhand for Davis and six months thereafter married the daughter. . Of this union there was born one daughter, Nellie, the appellant, who afterwards married Earl Rolofson. When Malone went to work on the farm for Davis the latter was in poor health and Malone assumed the management of the farm. In 1888 Davis died. Thereafter Mrs. Davis left everything to Malone. He paid all bills for the household and for the operation of the farm, including taxes. There is no evidence that he received pay as a farmhand, but all income from his labor and the produce of the farm went into a common fund, which was applied to the personal expenses of Mrs. Davis and Malone and. his wife, the mother of appellant. Malone, after he assumed charge of the farm, built a wagon-shed and machine-shed and cleared some timber pasture, which according to the testimony of witnesses was between 60 and 90 acres. He re-built fences and put clover upon the farm in the poorer soil, and brought up the value of the farm, according to witnesses, to the amount of about $20 per acre. In 1892 the Scott county land was sold for the sum of $9000 to Fred Boester. One thousand dollars was paid in cash, as Malone told Boester that his mother-in-law and wife were buying a farm in Macon county and they needed $1000 to pay down on it. The land in question here was purchased in the latter part of August, 1892, a deed thereto being made on March 1, 1893. This deed was taken in the name of Malone: On the same date Malone and his wife signed a deed for an undivided one-third interest to Mrs. Davis. Malone attended to all transactions concerning the purchase of the land in Macon county. Mrs. Davis died in 1905, intestate, leaving Malone’s wife as her only child and heir-at-law. She died seized of a one-third interest in the land in question. In January, 1914, Mrs. Malone died intestate, leaving her husband and appellant, her only child and heir-at-law.

The bill alleges that Mrs. Malone was the equitable owner of the entire tr^ct of land purchased in Macon county by reason of the fact that as heir of her father she was owner of the Scott county land upon his death, subject to her mother’s dower interest, and the further fact that the money arising from the sale of the Scott county land went into the purchase of the land in Macon county. The record shows that the $9000 arising from the sale of the Scott county land was all put into the purchase of the Macon county land. This land was purchased for $13,600, and $4600 of the purchase price was represented by a mortgage given back to the grantor, signed by Malone and his wife. This was later paid off by Malone out of the receipts from the Macon county land. In 1896 Malone and his wife joined in a mortgage of this land to Henry Capen for $2200, which was later paid off.

Malone, on the death of Harriet C. Davis, paid the doctor and hospital bills, amounting to $770.60, and on account of the last illness and death of his wife, Mary, the sum of $1400. The rents during the last year of Mrs. Malone’s life amounted to $630, and in stating the account the master, and later the chancellor, allowed that sum to be applied to Malone’s claim for the funeral expenses of Mrs. Malone. The balance of such funeral expenses, amounting to $1540.60, was disallowed upon the ground that it was a voluntary payment and not intended as a claim against the estate of Mrs. Davis or Mrs. Malone. This forms the basis of appellee’s cross-error.

At the time of the filing of the bill, and for some years prior thereto, appellant and her husband were, and had been, renting this farm from appellee. The accounting taken by the master covers the period from 1914 until 1922, when the bill in this case was filed. It finds, and the decree holds, that considering all receipts from the land and expenses of the management thereof during that period, appellee, as owner of two-thirds of the land and a dower interest in the other one-third, owes and should pay to appellant, as owner of the last mentioned one-third, subject to appellee’s dower interest, the sum of $4070.79. The master also recommended partition in accordance with the prayer of the cross-bill. This recommendation was adopted by the chancellor, who decreed accordingly.

The principal question in the case is whether Mary S. Malone, mother of appellant, intended, at the time the land in Macon county was purchased, that appellee, her husband, should have the beneficial interest therein, or whether a resulting trust arose from the fact that the money arising from the Scott county farm was used to purchase this land. A resulting trust arises where the legal title or estate to property is transferred to one person with the intention that the beneficial interest shall be in another, as where the purchase price of the property is furnished by one other than the person in whose name the deed is taken and no intention that the beneficial interest shall pass to the holder of the legal title is shown. Such a trust arises the instant the legal title is taken, if it arises at all. Whether or not such trust arises depends on the intention of the one who furnishes the purchase price with reference to the manner of the taking of the title. It arises not out of an agreement but out of a presumed intention that while the title to the property be taken in another yet the beneficial interest is to be in the payor. The payment of the consideration raises a prima facie presumption in favor of a resulting trust. This presumption, however, may be rebutted by parol proof of an intention on the part of the payor that the grantee shall take the beneficial interest and not merely the legal title. The intention of the payor is to be gathered from the facts and circumstances shown in evidence. These rules are well settled in this State, as is shown by the following cases: Rush v. Rush, 304 Ill. 558; Dodge v. Thomas, 266 id. 76; Lord v. Reed, 254 id. 350; Pickler v. Pickler, 180 id. 168; Goelz v. Goelz, 157 id. 33; Cook v. Patrick, 135 id. 499; 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. (3d ed.) sec. 1031.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.E. 169, 315 Ill. 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolofson-v-malone-ill-1924.