Thatcher v. Kramer

180 N.E. 434, 347 Ill. 601
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1932
DocketNo. 21011. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 180 N.E. 434 (Thatcher v. Kramer) 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
Thatcher v. Kramer, 180 N.E. 434, 347 Ill. 601 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

In February, 1929, a bill in chancery was filed in the circuit court of Madison county by the administrator of the estate of Murray B. Trabue, deceased, to cancel certain notes, mortgages and trust deeds and to release certain judgments growing out of a real estate transaction between the deceased and William F. Kramer, negotiated on September 14, 1928. A large amount of testimony was taken before the master in chancery, who submitted his findings with a recommendation that a decree be entered finding the issues in favor of the defendant. Exceptions to the master’s report were taken and argued before the chancellor, and in February, 1931, the exceptions were sustained and a decree entered in favor of the complainant, directing the cancellation of the deeds and other instruments by which the real estate exchange had been effected. To reverse that decree the present writ of error was sued out.

Trabue died intestate on February 7, 1929. Three weeks before his death he had been adjudged of unsound mind and incompetent to manage and care for his property by the county court of Jersey county. At the time of his death he was about seventy-five years old, and the bill alleged that for more than two years prior to his death he had been in failing health and was incompetent to transact his business affairs or protect his own interests. On September 14, 1928, he entered into the deal with Kramer by which he parted with title to a 600-acre farm in Greene county, subject to mortgage indebtedness, taxes and interest totaling $46,750.57, in exchange for 140 acres of farm land in Madison county and eight tracts of improved city property in Alton and Wood River subject to a total mortgage indebtedness of $36,100. He also paid Kramer $3500 in cash, gave him a judgment note for $3500, and received from Kramer a bill of sale conveying to Trabue about $1500 worth of personal property located on the Madison county farm. After this trade Kramer continued in possession of the improved city properties, collecting the rents as Trabue’s agent. The bill charges that Kramer employed William F. Wade as a salesman to assist in the trade; that Wade formerly lived in Jerseyville and was acquainted with Trabue; that Kramer fraudulently induced Trabue to make the trade although Trabue was incompetent to understand its true significance; that Trabue paid Kramer and Wade $400 for acting as his agent in the transaction; that Kramer took a judgment against Trabue on the judgment note for $3500 on October 1, 1928, and ten days later procured from Trabue quit-claim deeds to all of the nine tracts of land which Kramer had previously transferred to Trabue; that in the deeds from Kramer to Trabue the latter had assumed the payment of the building and loan association mortgages against the property and there was no equity left in the property above the total amount of these mortgages. The bill further alleges that all these transactions between Kramer and Trabue were fraudulent and invalid because of the fiduciary relation then existing between the parties.

To properly understand the relations of the different parties at the time of the transaction between Kramer and Trabue it is necessary for us to review some of Trabue’s previous transactions.

The evidence taken before the master shows that up to about eight or nine years prior to his death Trabue was engaged in farming; that about 1920 he sold a farm near Jerseyville for over $60,000 and afterwards sold or exchanged another 160-acre farm for property in St. Louis; that soon after he sold the first mentioned farm he employed T. A. Gardner, a real estate dealer in St Louis, as his agent, and through Gardner he bargained for some real estate at Broadway and Wright street, in St. Louis. At the time Trabue was supposed to have acquired title to this St. Louis property there was a second deed of trust on it for $8000, on which Trabue then paid $3000 and at a later time delivered to Gardner $5000 in bonds with which to pay off the remainder. Trabue supposed that the proceeds of these bonds had been applied as he had directed some two years prior to the transactions in this suit. In the latter part of August, 1928, William F. Wade and J. W. Whitlock, claiming to represent Norman Staats, of Greene county, entered into negotiations with Trabue for the exchange of 600 acres of land in Greene county then owned by Staats, which was then subject to mortgage indebtedness, back taxes, etc., in an amount exceeding $46,-000. At that time foreclosure proceedings were pending in the Greene county circuit court on the mortgages covering this land. As a result of these negotiations, on August 31, 1928, a contract was drawn up by Wade and signed by Trabue and Staats for the sale of this 600-acre tract to Trabue, and as part of this deal Trabue then executed a warranty deed conveying the St. Louis property located at Broadway and Wright street to Staats. At the time this deal was consummated no abstracts of title were furnished by either Trabue or Staats to show the condition of the title to the property involved in the exchange. For about one )rear prior to the date of this transaction Wade had had a desk in the real estate office of Kramer in Alton and for several months prior to that time had resided in one of the houses owned by Kramer which he afterwards conveyed to Trabue in the transaction consummated on September 14, 1928. Whitlock had a real estate office just across the street from the office of Wade and Kramer in Alton. Wade and Whitlock had previously been in partnership in the real estate business in Whitehall, and also in Jerseyville, before either of them moved to Alton. Staats testified that Wade and Whitlock represented him in the transaction involving the exchange of properties with Trabue ; that as their compensation for their services he agreed to give them a one-third interest in the St. Louis real estate presumably owned by Trabue. After the deed had been made from Trabue to Staats for the St. Louis property Wade had a deed made out conveying an undivided one-sixth interest in the St. Louis property from Staats and wife to Kramer. On October 12, 1928, Wade discovered that said Trabue had never owned the property located at Broadway and Wright street, in St. Louis, which he had attempted to convey to Staats, and that about the time the deed was made from Trabue to Staats this property had been sold at a foreclosure sale under the second deed of trust which Trabue supposed Gardner had paid off with the proceeds of $5000 in bonds which he had delivered to Gardner for that purpose. After the deal between Trabue and Staats was closed Wade was with Trabue frequently. He went with him to Greene county to file his deed to the 600-acre farm in Greene county for record and to undertake some adjustment of the delinquent taxes and interest on the mortgage indebtedness on this land, it . being necessary for Trabue to pay about $7500 to stop foreclosure proceedings. It also appears that Wade, Whitlock and Staats went with Trabue to St. Louis a day or two after the contract was made with Staats to get the legal description of the St. Louis property to be inserted in the deed which Trabue had signed without such description at the time the contract was made. A new deed was made by Gardner in St. Louis which Trabue signed in lieu of the deed made in Jerseyville. On the 13th of September Wade and Whitlock came to Jerseyville to see Trabue about trading the Greene county land, and on that day they took him to Wood River to see a Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
180 N.E. 434, 347 Ill. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thatcher-v-kramer-ill-1932.