Sparrow v. Wilcox

272 Ill. 632
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 272 Ill. 632 (Sparrow v. Wilcox) 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
Sparrow v. Wilcox, 272 Ill. 632 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees, Edna Sparrow, Dorothy Riemenschneider and Viola Burke prior to December 23, 1913, were the owners of a lot on North Paulina street, in the city of Chicago. They were desirous of selling this lot, and Chester H. Burke, husband of Viola Burke, entered into negotiations with John H. Garrett, who, it appears, occupied the same offices- with him, for a sale of the property. Through these negotiations a sale of the property was made by appellees to Garrett for the consideration of $7500. Garrett executed three notes for $2500 each, payable in one year, in payment for the property. He also transferred as collateral security for the three notes above mentioned, two notes for $3200 each, payable to himself and signed by Gustave Gunderson, and a mortgage executed by Gunderson on 320 acres of land in Meagher county, Montana. Garrett also delivered to Burke an abstract of title to the Montana land covered by the Gunderson mortgage, showing Gunderson to be the owner thereof subject to the mortgage from Gunderson to Garrett, and a written statement sworn to by him as to his financial worth, in which statement he listed his assets at $226,850 and his .liabilities at $15,000 for money borrowed. Burke thereupon delivered to Garrett a deed to the Paulina street property from the said owners, which deed was dated December 23, 1913, was acknowledged December 29, 1913, and recorded the day following.

On May 22, 1913, appellants, Jennie E. Counselman, Charles L. Hutchinson, Seymour Morris, Edith Counselman and Charles Counselman, had recovered a judgment against Garrett for $7030.80 in the superior court of Cook county, upon which judgment an execution had been issued and returned unsatisfied. On September 16, 1913, appellants obtained another judgment against Garrett- in the municipal court of Chicago for $7428.54. An involuntary petition in bankruptcy had been filed in October, 1913, in the United States district court, against Garrett and one Bowers, as co-partners, owners of Rice Bros. Colossal Railroad Shows, and an order was entered on November 3, 1913, adjudicating such co-partners bankrupts. On September 23, 1914, an alias execution was issued on the judgment of May 22, 1913, obtained by appellants, which execution was levied upon the premises in question and a sale was made and a certificate of purchase issued to appellants October 20, 1914. Garrett had by his deed of April 3, 1914, conveyed the property in question to Charles H. Wilcox.

On July 20, 1914, appellees filed their bill of complaint against Charles H. Wilcox and others, including appellants, to set aside the deed made by appellees to Garrett and the deed from Garrett to Wilcox of the property in question on the ground of fraud and deceit and falsehoods and misrepresentations by Garrett as to his financial worth, setting up in said bill, among other things, .that the notes and mortgages purporting to be signed by Gunderson were not his genuine notes and mortgages and that the abstract of title to the land covered by the mortgage was not genuine; that the appellees had relied on the representations made by Garrett as to his financial worth, which representations were wholly false and untrue and that the consideration for the deed of conveyance made by appellees had wholly failed. The bill further alleged that appellants and others claimed some interest in the premises as judgment creditors; that such interest, if any, was subordinate to the interest of the appellees, and prayed for a cancellation of the deed from appellees to Garrett and of the deed from Garrett to Wilcox. The latter and the Central Trust Company, as trustee in bankruptcy, which was also made a party defendant, filed answers to the bill calling for strict proof. Appellants also filed their answer calling for strict proof as to the alleged misrepresentations and fraud of Garrett, and set up that the lien of their judgment against Garrett and the property in question was superior to the rights of the complainants.

Appellants, after a sale had been made on the levy under their alias execution issued on the judgment of May 22, 1913, as above set out, filed a cross-bill setting up the issuance of the sheriff’s certificate of sale and asking that the same be declared valid and a bar to further proceedings by complainants under the original bill. Issues were joined upon the bill and cross-bill and the cause was referred to James V. O’Donnell, a master in chancery, who took the testimony of the respective parties and made his report, finding that the conveyance from appellees to Garrett was induced by fraud and that their deed to Garrett should be set aside, and also finding that Wilcox was not a bona fide purchaser for value; that the only consideration for the conveyance made by Garrett to Wilcox was a pre-existing debt; that the judgment liens of appellants should be set aside as far as said property was concerned, and that appellees should have the title to the property restored to them free from the liens of the judgments of appellants. Objections and exceptions were duly taken to the master’s report and were respectively overruled, and a decree was entered by the chancellor setting aside and canceling the deed of appellees to Garrett and the deed from Garrett to Wilcox and restoring the fee title in the premises in controversy to appellees free from the lien of the judgments belonging to appellants. Appellants have appealed to this court from the decree and have assigned numerous causes for error. Wilcox and the Central Trust Company, defendants to the bill, the latter a trustee in bankruptcy, have not joined in the appeal. Garrett did not answer and was defaulted in the court below.

The principal grounds urged by appellants for reversal are: (1) Appellees, upon their own showing as disclosed by the evidence in the record, are not entitled to set aside their deed to Garrett on the ground of misrepresentation and fraud; (2) appellants were judgment creditors of Garrett without notice; actual or constructive, of any claims of appellees, and their liens and the rights arising therefrom are superior to any alleged equities of appellees.

As to the first point, the master found that the transaction between Garrett and Burke was tainted with fraud on the part of Garrett; that the mortgage purporting to be executed by Gustave Gunderson and conveying the premises in Meagher county, Montana, securing the notes hereinbefore referred to, was never recorded in the office of the recorder' of deeds of Meagher county; that from the circumstances surrounding the entire transaction it was a reasonable inference that no such person actually existed, and that said notes purporting to be signed by Gunderson were forgeries and worthless, and that the abstract tendered with the notes and mortgage to Burke by Garrett was also a forgery and worthless. The master further found that at the time of the negotiations between Burke and Garrett a sworn statement was made by Garrett and given to Burke, in and by which it was made to appear that Garrett was a man of great means and considerable financial responsibility, but it developed on the hearing that before this financial statement was rendered the firm with which Garrett was associated was adjudged a bankrupt in the bankruptcy court. The master found that said statement was wholly false and fraudulent, and that in the entire transaction the grossest, and almost criminal, fraud was perpetrated upon the complainants. There can be no doubt from the evidence that Garrett was insolvent at the time he gave the notes.

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272 Ill. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparrow-v-wilcox-ill-1916.