Schoonmaker v. Plummer

29 N.E. 1114, 139 Ill. 612
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 1114 (Schoonmaker v. Plummer) 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
Schoonmaker v. Plummer, 29 N.E. 1114, 139 Ill. 612 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, brought by Alice Schoonmaker and Edward Schoonmaker against Eugene Plummer and Nancy Plummer, to restrain certain proceedings at law, and to compel the conveyance by the defendants to said Alice Schoonmaker of a certain dwelling-house and lot in the city of Galesburg, described as lot 1, in block 1, in Peck & Wood’s addition to Galesburg. The complainants are husband and wife, and said Alice Schoonmaker is a daughter of the defendants.

The claim of the complainants, as made by their hill, and •as they have attempted to establish it by the evidence, is, in substance, that in March, 1885, and for two years prior thereto, they were residing in Monmouth, Warren county, said Edward Schoonmaker having steady employment at good wages with the Weir Plow Company of Monmouth. The defendants, at the same time, were residents of Knoxville, Knox county, about twenty-one miles from Monmouth and about five miles from Galesburg, and were well off. It being the desire of the defendants that their daughter should live nearer them where they could more easily visit her, they proposed to the complainants that they leave Monmouth and move to Galesburg, and as an inducement to their doing so, said Eugene Plummer ■ offered to buy a house and lot in Galesburg and give it to his said daughter, in case the complainants would move to Gales-burg and live in the house to be so purchased. Plummer and his daughter thereupon made several trips to Galesburg to examine different houses which Plummer was proposing to buy, to see if the3r would suit her, and if she would be willing to have her husband give up his regular employment at Monmouth and move to Galesburg in consideration of the proposed gift.

On the 20th day of March, 1885, Alice Schoonmaker, in response to a message from her father by telephone, came to Knoxville where she met her father, and was by him driven to ■ Galesburg, to examine the house and lot in controversy in this suit, and for which her father had then made some negotiations. After she had examined the house, her father asked her if it suited her, and upon her replying that it did, he said: “That is all-sufficient, it is for you I am buying it.” The same day Plummer bought said house and lot, paying $1800 for it, but taking a conveyance of it to himself. After the purchase, Plummer urged the complainants to move into said house at once, but in consequence of sickness, their removal from Monmouth was delayed until April 29, 1885, when they moved to Galesburg and took possession of said house.

The house at that time was new and not entirely finished, and the rear part of the lot was low and needed filling. After they took possession, Plummer urged them to fix the house up, saying that it was theirs and that they should fix it to suit, themselves. The complainants thereupon, as they claim, finished the stairway which was incomplete, painted and papered the house on the inside, and afterward bored a well fifty feet deep, floored and battened the wood-shed, graded up the rear-of the lot by putting on about two hundred loads of earth, built some fence, planted some shrubbery, and made some other improvements, treating the premises as though they were their own. The total value of said improvements, according to their evidence, was from $400 to $500. '

The complainants remained in possession until July 14,. 1890, when Plummer served on them a written notice to surrender said possession to him, and soon afterward he commenced against them an action of forcible detainer, before a. justice of the peace, and upon trial of said suit, judgment, therein was rendered in favor of the complainants. Plummer thereupon removed said suit by appeal to the Circuit Court, where it is still pending. Plummer also brought his suit in ejectment against the complainants to recover possession of said premises, and thereupon this suit was brought to restrain the prosecution of both of said suits at law, and to compel ai. conveyance of said premises to said Alice Sehoonmaker.

The defendants, by their answer, deny that Plummer offered' to buy a house and lot and give it to his daughter. They also-allege that the complainants, while living at Monmouth, had not been able to accumulate anything, and that they had fully-determined to leave Monmouth and move to Galesburg; that Plummer thereupon had his daughter look at the house in question, and upon her expressing satisfaction with it, he said he would buy it and let her and her husband move into it; thatPlummer did afterwards buy said house, taking the conveyance thereof to himself, and permitted his said daughter and her husband to occupy it, and that it was his intention, until they got a little ahead in the world, to let them occupy said, premises free of rent; that the improvements put upon said premises by the complainants have in no year been equal to a reasonable rent thereof, and that neither of the complainants pretended, until shortly before the filing of said bill, that they owned said premises, but on the contrary, they attempted to-buy said house and lot of Plummer at half its value.

The defendants also, by their answer, in the following language, “assert that there never was any gift of said premises to either of the complainants, and assert that, if either or both should testify to such gift, they will, by their statement, as they have in their bill, show only such parol gift as is governed by the Statute of Frauds and Perjuries, and of no avail against-these defendants or either of them.”

The cause being heard on pleadings and proofs, a decree was rendered dismissing the bill at the complainants’ costs for want of equity, and the complainants now bring the record to-this court by appeal.

The point is made that, by the language of the answer above quoted, the Statute of Frauds is not sufficiently pleaded or set up to enable the defendants to avail themselves of its provisions. It is true the allegation is not very formal, and does-not conform to the recognized precedents, but' we think it-sufficient in substance, especially in view of the fact that the-bill, on its face, alleges the gift as a parol gift. The allegation of the answer seems to show with sufficient certainty, that the gift alleged in the bill is a parol gift; that it is obnoxious to the provisions of the Statute of Frauds and Perjuries, and that said gift is of no avail, that is, is void, as against the-defendants. This, we think, is a sufficient pleading of the-statute.

The main contention arises upon the evidence, the contention on the part of the defendants being that there is no such ■clear and satisfactory proof of even a parol gift as can entitle the complainants to a decree of specific performance. The ■evidence is quite voluminous, and it would serve no useful purpose for us to attempt an analysis of it in its details. We shall therefore content ourselves with a brief statement of our reasons for concurring with the conclusion reached by the trial court.

The testimony of the parties to the alleged gift is directly in conflict, the one affirming and the other denying it. As their testimony, as well as that of the other witnesses, was ■delivered orally in open court, the court below had an opportunity to see them and hear them testify, and was accordingly in a much better position to judge of their relative credibility than we can be.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carnivale v. Carnivale
25 Misc. 3d 878 (New York Supreme Court, 2009)
Christensen v. Christensen
255 N.W. 109 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)
Smith v. Danforth
223 N.W. 59 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)
Cook v. Cook
123 N.W. 693 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1909)
Price v. Lloyd
86 P. 767 (Utah Supreme Court, 1906)
Koenig v. Dohm
70 N.E. 1061 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)
Gannon v. Moles
111 Ill. App. 19 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1903)
Towle v. Wadsworth
147 Ill. 80 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 1114, 139 Ill. 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoonmaker-v-plummer-ill-1892.