Spina v. Spina

22 N.E.2d 687, 372 Ill. 50
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1939
DocketNo. 24957. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 22 N.E.2d 687 (Spina v. Spina) 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
Spina v. Spina, 22 N.E.2d 687, 372 Ill. 50 (Ill. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff, Antonia Spina, (appellant here,) filed an amended complaint for divorce in the superior court of Cook county against the defendant, Leonardo Spina. She also asked a finding of ownership of a one-half interest in an improved parcel of real estate conveyed to defendant and herself as joint tenants, an accounting of rents and other joint funds, and the appointment of a receiver. Defendant answered that plaintiff was not entitled to the relief sought. Thereafter, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint seeking partition of the real estate and an accounting of rents and other joint personal property. Defendant again interposed an answer and filed a counterclaim against her for divorce, charging desertion. Plaintiff denied its material allegations. The counter-claim was heard without a contest, and a decree for divorce was entered in favor of defendant, the court retaining jurisdiction of the cause for the sole purpose of determining the rights of the parties under plaintiff’s second amended complaint. Subsequently, the cause was referred to a master in chancery who heard evidence and made a report recommending that a decree be entered finding the issues for the defendant and against the plaintiff. Her objections to the report were overruled and ordered to stand as exceptions. The chancellor overruled the exceptions and rendered a decree confirming the master’s report. The decree found that at the time of the execution of the deed defendant did not fully understand the nature and effect of the conveyance; that plaintiff did not contribute anything from her own income toward the purchase and maintenance of the property; that, on the other hand, defendant furnished all the funds for its purchase and that when the sale was consummated he neither requested nor intended the title to be conveyed in joint tenancy. Accordingly, the decree adjudged that partition of the premises and the accounting of moneys and other property sought by plaintiff be denied and that title to the premises was vested solely in defendant. A freehold being involved, plaintiff prosecutes this direct appeal, assailing the portion of the decree denying partition and an accounting. The decree for divorce is not challenged, and plaintiff has likewise elected to abide by the part of the decree denying to her an accounting of other funds and of personal property claimed to have been owned jointly with defendant.

The following facts appear from the pleadings and the evidence: Plaintiff and defendant were married in Italy in 1909. The next year, defendant came to this country and obtained employment. In 1912, he returned to Italy, and in the early part of 1913 brought his wife to Chicago where they lived together until November 9, 1935, when they separated. Six children were born to the couple, four of whom are living. The record discloses .that plaintiff and defendant lived together in harmony and tranquility for more than twenty years. Defendant was industrious and from his arrival in Chicago until the beginning of the depression was steadily employed. From 1914 to 1930 he was employed by a sewer-construction company in the capacity of “bottom man” and sometimes, as foreman, had charge of construction gangs. His earnings averaged between $50 and $60 dollars weekly prior to 1920, and during the next ten years he earned a minimum of $300 per month. In addition, he frequently worked overtime, on Sundays and holidays, for which he received the prevailing union scale of wages. The requirements of boarders who lived at the home of defendant and plaintiff from time to time added to the latter’s household duties. She named six men including, among others, her uncle and a brother of defendant, who resided at her home prior to July, 1923. They remained from six months to fourteen years and, according to her, paid amounts varying from three to fifteen dollars per month. She testified that she cooked for them, laundered their clothes and mended their wearing apparel. From the testimony it appears the boarders sometimes paid her and, less frequently, the defendant. The latter testified that these boarders were his co-employees and that he told them to pay “whatever they can because they were to work with me and I was to furnish them the job;” that neither his brother nor plaintiff’s uncle paid board, and that one of the remaining four named by plaintiff paid three dollars and another two dollars and fifty cents or three dollars per month. He stated he did not know what one of the other two paid, and did not testify with respect to the sixth.

Prior to July 12, 1923, plaintiff and defendant signed a contract with Moses Weinberg and his wife, by which they agreed to purchase a four-story brick building located at 1445 West Taylor street, Chicago, for $15,500, subject to a mortgage of $6500, and deposited $500 in cash as earnest money. The building contained one store, three six-room and four four-room apartments. Defendant retained attorney Guiseppe Zaffina to represent him in the transaction. The deal was closed on the day named at the downtown office of attorney Morris A. Weinberg who represented the vendors. Six persons were present, the sellers, the purchasers and the two attorneys. Attorney Zaffina recounted that on this occasion he explained to defendant and his wife the difference between deeds in joint tenancy and tenancy in common; that attorney Weinberg asked whether the warranty deed should be a joint tenancy deed; that defendant replied they wanted it to be in the name of himself and his wife, “so if the one dies the property remains to the other,” and that thereupon attorney Weinberg prepared a warranty deed conveying the property to plaintiff and defendant not as tenants in common but as joint tenants, subject to the encumbrance of $6500, and explained the precise nature of the deed to them. The defendant paid $8500 to the sellers in order to close the deal. Of this sum defendant had accumulated $6500 and borrowed $2000 from the brother who lived at his home. The mortgage indebtedness was later liquidated and the trust deed securing it released of record July 31, 1929. Attorney Zaffina testified further that when the deal was closed defendant directed attorney Weinberg to procure a fire insurance policy on the property which the latter ordéred. Zaffina caused the deed to be recorded and delivered it and other papers to defendant.

Plaintiff’s version of the circumstances attending the execution of the deed is substantially the same as narrated by attorney Zaffina. She added that in a conversation with defendant prior to repairing to attorney Weinberg’s office he stated he would not permit her to go downtown on account of their children, declaring that irrespective of whether she accompanied him the property would be placed in both their names. Plaintiff testified that despite this assurance she protested, wanting “to see everything,” and, apparently, not in vain. She stated that upon their return home defendant said: “You wanted to come up, you stubborn, if you didn’t come it would be just the same.” Subsequent to the purchase, plaintiff said that defendant told her she had a half-interest in the property and frequently complained she did not do enough work around the premises for her interest in the property. Defendant’s account of the transaction is directly contrary to plaintiff’s narration.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E.2d 687, 372 Ill. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spina-v-spina-ill-1939.