Russell v. Robbins

93 N.E. 324, 247 Ill. 510
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 93 N.E. 324 (Russell v. Robbins) 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
Russell v. Robbins, 93 N.E. 324, 247 Ill. 510 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

On December 31, 1909, the appellee, Catherine Williams Russell, filed her amended bill of complaint in the superior court of Cook county asking the court to set aside a deed executed by her on January 18, 1901, of four acres of land in said county, and two subsequent deeds of' the same land, to Mary A. Thompson, who is now Mary A.' Robbins, one of the appellants. A tenant of Mrs. Robbins was made defendant with her, but. he had no substantial interest, and in this opinion Mrs. Robbins will be called the defendant. The ground for asking a cancellation of the deeds was that they were made in consideration of future support of the complainant, which was not furnished. The bill was answered, and. the fact that the original deed was made in consideration that the defendant would support the complainant during her natural life was admitted, but the charge that the condition was not complied with was denied. The first deed conveyed the property and the two subsequent deeds conveyed nothing but were of a confirmatory nature. The chancellor.heard the evidence of the parties and entered a decree finding that the defendant had failed, refused and neglected to furnish the complainant with reasonable care and support with the exception of about two and a half years after the making of the first deed, and had failed and refused to compensate other parties with whom the complainant had lived the remainder of the time, for such care and support, and setting aside the deeds in accordance with the prayer of the bill.

On the first Sunday in January, 1901, the defendant went with a friend to an old house on the four acres of land in question, where the complainant lived. The complainant was about seventy-three years old and feeble, and her husband had recently died. It was a very cold day, and they found the complainant lying on a broken-down bed, with no fire in the house and covered with a lot of rags. The house was a cheap, old concern, that cost perhaps three or four hundred dollars when built, and was without a foundation, with no glass in the windows and the kitchen doors broken down. The complainant was there alone in a house that was not habitable for a human being, and the defendant, who had worked for her four summers when the defendant was a child, and took some interest in her, proposed to take her home and take care of her. The defendant took something to the house for the complainant to ea.t and left it there, and the complainant said that if she would take her home she would give her her property, if there was any left. The defendant came back a few days afterward and took the complainant home with her, and on January 18, 1901, the complainant executed a deed of the four acres of land to the defendant. The deed recited the consideration of $100 and future support during the natural life of the complainant. The land was of comparatively little value, being covered with stumps, the greater part of it dry and the. remainder a wet slough. The defendant was a working woman of the poorer class, who did washing for others. There was no complaint by the complainant of her treatment, but in June, 1902, she went on a visit to the home of the defendant’s sister, where she remained about three months, during which time the •defendant called on her several times and asked her if she wanted to come home, but was told that she was well enough off where she was. ■ The defendant and her sister had some difficulty, and the complainant filed a bill to set aside her deed blit afterward dismissed the suit, and on September 2, 1902, executed a warranty deed reciting a consideration of $800 and without any condition as to support. The defendant had put in windows, shingled the house, put water conductors on it, had a well put in, painted the house and put in new floors, and rented it for $5 a month. The $800 was figured up from these improvements and costs paid by the defendant and for some settlement in the probate court, and' no other consideration was paid. The complainant then lived with the defendant for some time, but on some date, not made certain by the evidence, she went to the defendant’s mother-in-law on an agreement that the mother-in-law would keep her for two weeks, until she could get a hired-man. The complainant found the place pleasant for her and remained there about two years, during which time defendant took clothes and shoes to her and told her she could always come back when she wanted to. The defendant was married to George R. Robbins in October, 1903. He was a well-digger and later janitor óf a public school. At the end of the two years the complainant, saying she was going to take a walk, left the mother-in-law and upon search was found at the home of the defendant’s sister, where she remained two years. The defendant visited her at various times during the absence of the sister, with whom she was not on good terms, and tried to get her to come back. While the complainant was away from the defendant’s home complainant had caused an attorney to place on record a notice that the second deed, had been obtained Toy undue influence and was void for want of consideration. After two years with the sister the complainant went back to live with the defendant, and the two went to the office of an attorney, where the complainant executed a quit-claim deed on May 14, 1907, to remove the cloud created by the notice, and $800 was named as the consideration in that deed. Complainant then continued to live with the defendant until August 1, 1908, when she walked out of the gate and' disappeared. The defendant made search for her and left a notice at the police station, and she was found at the house of another woman who had once been a neighbor of the defendant and who was at enmity with her. A police captain went there to get her to return, but she declined to do so, saying that she had been all right .at the defendant’s house but did not like to stay there and was going to stay with the other woman. While at this other woman’s house the complainant filed this bill, and while there she suffered a stroke of paralysis. About the middle of May, 1910, she came back to the defendant’s and was living there at the time of the hearing. The complainant was called to the stand and said-that she was eighty-two or eighty-three years old; 'that she was living with the defendant and had made a deed of the property to her; that she liked it at the defendant’s very well, and she repudiated her solicitor in the case. The chancellor being of the opinion that she was incapable of testifying, had her removed from the witness stand and appointed a guardian ad litem for her.

The deeds recited money considerations, from which it is argued that they could not be set aside because the complainant could not dispute the payment of such considerations. It is true that a consideration duly acknowledged in a deed cannot be contradicted by parol for the purpose of destroying the legal effect of the deed as a conveyance. (Kimball v. Walker, 30 Ill. 482; Illinois Central Ins. Co. v. Wolf, 37 id. 354; Redmond v. Cass, 226 id. 120.) The legal effect of the deeds is not questioned in this case but it is admitted that they were sufficient to transfer the legal title, and it was legitimate and proper to show the actual consideration for the purpose of determining whether there was fraud for which the deeds should be set aside in equity. Even on the face of the first deed which conveyed the property, the future support was the material part of the consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.E. 324, 247 Ill. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-robbins-ill-1910.