Siffermann v. Hill

131 Ill. App. 174, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 23
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 21, 1907
DocketGen. No. 12,979
StatusPublished

This text of 131 Ill. App. 174 (Siffermann v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siffermann v. Hill, 131 Ill. App. 174, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 23 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

This case comes to us on an appeal from the decree of a chancellor in the Superior Court of Cook county, which dismissed for want of equity the appellant’s bill, brought by him as complainant against the appellees as defendants in that court. This dismissal followed the sustaining of certain exceptions to the report of a master in chancery to whom the cause had been previously referred. The master had recommended a decree in favor of complainant, not unqualifiedly, hut substantially, in accordance with the prayer of the bill.

The bill was filed in aid of an execution on a judgment obtained by complainant Siffermann against the defendant Charles J. Hill for $434, and costs.

The bill alleged the recovery of said judgment on January 10, 1899, in the Circuit Court of Cook county, and that it was unsatisfied, and that an execution on the same was in the hands of the sheriff; that prior to the date of said judgment against Charles J. Hill he was the owner of lot 20 in block 2 in the Superior Court partition of certain described blocks in Cook county (residence property on Hermitage avenue,, in Chicago), but that after the indebtedness on which the judgment was rendered had accrued-—but before the judgment—the said Hill and his co-defendant to the bill, his wife, Minna Hill, had conveyed said real estate to one Babbage, and- the said Babbage had conveyed the same to Minna Hill, the transaction being for the express and only purpose of placing the title to the said real estate in Minna Hill and preventing •the creditors of said Charles J. Hill from haying recourse to it to satisfy their claims; and that said conveyances were a fraud upon the rights of the complainant; that Charles J. Hill had no other property but that thus fraudulently conveyed by him, and that by reason of such conveyance to Minna Hill, the sheriff was unable to levy upon said real estate and sell the same as the property of Charles J. Hill. Therefore the bill prayed that the conveyances from the Hills to Babbage and from Babbage to Mrs. Hill be vacated and declared void as to the complainant, and the sheriff directed to levy on the premises in question for the satisfaction of the complainant’s judgment.

A demurrer and afterward a plea of the defendants having been overruled, the defendants answered, saying that the real estate in question was bought with Mrs. Hill’s money and title taken by. the husband under an agreement between him and his wife that he would at any time convey said real estate to her, or at her .order, when requested; that afterwards she did request him to convey the premises to her and he complied; that Mrs. Hill had ever since the said purchase of the property with her money been in actual possession of the same, collecting’ the rents arising from all but that part of them used as a family residence for her own use and benefit.

To this answer a replication was filed, and the cause was then referred to a master. *The master found the facts. The findings of fact are not questioned in the objections which were afterwards ordered to stand as exceptions to the report. It was in the application of the law to those facts, evidently, that the chancellor below found himself at variance, with the master and overruled him.

We may properly take, therefore, the facts on the' application of the law to which the decision of this appeal must rest, from the report of the master in the record. Our own examination shows his statements to be correct. They are as follows: .

“In the year 1882, the defendants were married; prior to said time, the defendant, Minna Hill, had been the wife of one Jacob Koenig, who had died in 1880; the defendant, Minna . Hill, had received from the estate of Jacob Koenig certain money and property upon which she had realized in all the sum of three thousand dollars; after her marriage to Charles J. Hill she gave him five hundred dollars, which he used in the business of a meat market, which was carried on in certain premises at the corner of O’Brien and Jefferson streets, in the city of Chicago; after-wards in the year 1886, the premises at O’Brien and Jefferson streets were purchased by Hill for the sum of six thousand two hundred fifty dollars; the latter sum was paid in the following manner: Thirty-five hundred dollars by the proceeds of a mortgage secured through Foreman Brothers Banking Company, two hundred fifty dollars by the personal' note of Charles J. Hill, and twenty-five hundred dollars in cash delivered to Hill by Minna Hill, and paid by him to the seller of the property; the above sum of,twenty-five hundred dollars was the balance of the money received by Mrs: Hill from the estate of her former husband. The evidence further shows that the title to the property at O’Brien and Jefferson streets remained in Charles J. Hill until the year 1893; that during such time Hill continued to engage in the meat business upon those premises and reduced the mortgage upon the property by the sum of five hundred dollars; that during such time various sums were collected in rents from the property, which were expended in part upon repairs and improvements, and the remainder of the money was used by Mr. Hill; that the property was finally sold for the sum of twelve thousand dollars, three thousand dollars of which was credited upon the mortgage, and nine thousand dollars in cash deposited in the Foreman Bank to the credit of Charles J. Hill; that in the same month the property on Hermitage avenue, described in the bill of complaint, was purchased for the purpose of providing a home for the family, and that the title was placed in the name of Charles J. Hill; that Hill ceased doing business for two months after the sale of the O’Brien street property, and then resumed the meat business on Twelfth,street, which he carried on until the year 1898.
“The evidence further shows that by deed dated May 25,1898, Charles J. Hill and Minna Hill, his wife, conveyed to Felix Babbage, as trustee, the Hermitage avenue property upon trust, to convey the same by good and sufficient deed unto the said Minna Hill, and that by deed dated and recorded upon the same date, the said Felix Babbage under said trust conveyed by quit-claim deed said property to the said Minna Hill.
“The evidence further shows that on the 10th day of January, 1899, a judgment was rendered in the Circuit Court of Cook county in favor of the complainant, Aloise Siffermann, and against the defendant, Charles J. Hill, for the sum of four hundred thirty-four and 30-100 dollars and costs of suit, and that said judgment is still in full force and effect, except for the payment of the following sums thereon: September 17, 1899, twenty-four dollars; November 27, 1899, twenty-five dollars; August 18, 1900, twenty-four dollars. ********* The purchase price of the original O’Brien street property was six thousand two hundred fifty dollars. The entire transaction was carried on by Charles J. Hill personally in. his own name. Title was taken in his name, and the principal note and interest notes secured by the purchase money mortgage, were signed by Charles J. Hill alone. The note for $250 was likewise signed by Hill alone, and the cash payment of $2,500 was made by Hill. The payments which were afterwards made in satisfaction of the $250 note and in reduction of the mortgage debt to $3,000 were likewise made by Hill, although there is evidence tending to prove that most of the payments made on account of the mortgage came from rents of the property.

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Bluebook (online)
131 Ill. App. 174, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siffermann-v-hill-illappct-1907.