Rountree v. Smith

38 N.E. 680, 152 Ill. 493
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 680 (Rountree v. Smith) 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
Rountree v. Smith, 38 N.E. 680, 152 Ill. 493 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

In 1885 appellee resided upon a twenty-acre tract of land which she owned, near the city of Waukegan. Appellants, husband and wife, were teachers of elocution in Chicago. They took rooms in appellee’s residence, in which they spent the month of August of that year. The summers of 1886 and 1887 they also spent at her home, she and they living as one family. About the first of September, 1887, Mrs. Smith made a trip to her native town in the east, being absent several weeks. She spent the winter with appellants at their rooms in Chicago, and thereafter, to and including the summer of 1891, she lived with them in the city during the winter months and they at her home in summer, the family relation at both places being continued. Appellee is a widow about sixty-eight years of age, without children or other near relations. She owned, in addition to the twenty-acre homestead, two tracts of land in Lake county,—one of thirty acres and the other of forty-one and a fraction,—and certain lots, and a small tract of land in Cook county, near Englewood, all of which she valued at $100,000. 'The parties apparently became warm friends during the summer of 1885, and that relation continued until the latter part of the year 1891. Before making her visit east in the fall of 1887, appellee formed the purpose of giving Mrs. Rountree the homestead and the thirty-acre tract, the deeds to take effect at her death, and to that end she executed and acknowledged0two deeds, one for each of the tracts, which she placed in an envelope, sealing it up and writing on it the words, “To be opened at my death,” and placing it in her private secretary. Subsequently she concluded to enlarge the gift, and include in it the whole of her real estate, and of date February 14, 1891, she executed four deeds, one conveying to Mrs. Rountree the Englewood property, and each of the others one of the Lake county tracts. These deeds she gave to Mrs. Rountree soon after they were made, but, as she says, not with the intention of then passing the title. She, afterwards, about October 22,1891, consented to the recording of the one to the homestead, but not intending thereby to make it absolute. The other deeds remained in the hands of Mrs. Rountree, unrecorded, until about the 13th of November, 1891, during which time the parties were negotiating as to security to be given Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Rountree then, in the presence of appellee, gave them, with the one conveying the homestead, and, as she says, the two executed in 1887, to Erastus O. Moderwell, an attorney. Shortly thereafter appellee became displeased with appellants, and her former friendship, especially for Mrs. Rountree, wholly ceased. She then demanded the return and cancellation of her deeds. This request Mrs. Rountree refused to comply with, but withdrew them from the hands of Moderwell, and in April, 1892, caused them to be placed on record. Thereupon appellee filed this bill in the circuit court of Lake county, and afterwards an amended bill, asking that each of said deeds, with the records thereof, be set aside and canceled. The circuit court granted the prayer of her bill, and appellants appeal.

The theory of appellee’s case is, that the deeds of 1891 were- voluntary conveyances made by her, with the agreement between herself and Mrs. Rountree, the grantee, that she and her husband would execute and deliver back to her, notes equal in amount to the value of the lands conveyed, secured by mortgages or deeds of trust upon the premises, it being understood between the parties that appellee would so manage the securities that at her death the grantee would become the absolute owner of the property, free from all incumbrance; that some time after their execution she gave them to Mrs. Rountree, but with the agreement, on her part, that they were not to be recorded, but remain subject to her control, she to continue to have control of the property and the right to sell and convey any part of it and receive the purchase money, in which event the securities would, to that extent, be destroyed ; that she subsequently gave to Mrs. Rountree permission to have the deed to the homestead recorded, but not for the purpose of giving effect to it, except as previously agreed upon. In short, her contention is that the deeds were intended to become absolute only upon her death, and that they were executed and delivered, and the one recorded, upon that agreement, and with the understanding that the conveyances were not to take effect or be treated as absolute until security should be given her as above stated, which Mrs. Rountree and her husband afterwards refused to give, at least until after she had determined not to perfect the conveyances, and so informed them, demanding the return and cancellation of her deeds. As to the deeds of 1887, she alleges, in her amended bill, that they were not intended to be delivered until her death, and never were in fact delivered by her in any manner.

The theory of the appellants is, that the deeds of 1891 were voluntarily executed, acknowledged and delivered on the day of their date, without any understanding between the parties, then or previously, that they were not to become at once absolute; that they were made without their knowledge or procurement, and were wholly voluntary on the part of appellee; that any understanding between the parties as to giving security, for any purpose, was an afterthought on the part of Mrs. Smith, and arose after the complete execution and unconditional delivery of the deeds. Therefore they say, without proof, not only of an agreement on their part to do something in consideration of the conveyances, but also a breach of that contract, appellee has no right to have them set aside and declared void. They claim that the deeds of 1887 were, long after the execution and delivery of those of 1891, given to Mrs. Rountree by Mrs. Smith, as additional proof of her voluntary purpose to give her all the real property she owned.

That the deeds were voluntary on the part of appellee, intended as mere gifts.to Mrs. Rountree, is not denied. While the latter claims to have performed many acts of kindness towards Mrs. Smith, and rendered her valuable services from time to time, both before and after the deeds were executed, and did, no doubt, in that way win the friendship and affection which prompted the gift, it is not claimed that any such services entered into the consideration for the deeds, in the sense of a contract. Mrs. Rountree’s own testimony is to the effect that the conveyances were intended as gifts to her, and that no contractual relation existed between herself and Mrs. Smith, at any time, under which she could have compelled them. The testimony of appellee is positive and full, to the effect that both before and after the deeds of 1891 were transferred to Mrs. Rountree, it was at all times agreed and understood that they were to take effect only upon the execution, and delivery back to her, of notes secured by mortgages, etc. In other words, her testimony fully supports the theory of her bill as stated above, and in that testimony she is corroborated by John S. Coliman, who took her acknowledgment to the deeds, Mrs. Broadway and Mrs. Lucy A. Prosser, who testified to a conversation between the parties, at the house of Mrs. Broadway, February 26, 1891, the deeds being taken there by them, but whether they had then been given to Mrs. Rountree is in dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 680, 152 Ill. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rountree-v-smith-ill-1894.