Tindall v. Yeats

64 N.E.2d 903, 392 Ill. 502, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 268
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1946
DocketNo. 29021. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 64 N.E.2d 903 (Tindall v. Yeats) 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
Tindall v. Yeats, 64 N.E.2d 903, 392 Ill. 502, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 268 (Ill. 1946).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case comes to this court on the direct appeal of Jane Thompson Tindall, as executrix, from the order of the circuit court of Marshall county, dismissing a complaint in equity filed by' the plaintiffs below. The complaint sought a construction of certain deeds and an agreement of Grace Adams, appellant’s testatrix, together with a construction of the will of Grace Adams. The complaint also sought partition of the real estate involved. A freehold is involved.

By her will, which was admitted to probate by the county court of Marshall county on June 5, 1944, Grace Adams, after making provision for the payment of certain legacies, devised and bequeathed to Jane Thompson Tindall, as executrix, the residue of her estate and directed that the executrix liquidate the same and divide the proceeds among certain named beneficiaries. All of the specific legacies and bequests have been paid.

The complaint, which was filed on July 13, 1944, by the executrix and certain of the testatrix’s brothers, alleged that on May 31, 1939, Grace Adams was the owner of the east 1/2 of the west y2 of section 3, township 13 north, range 10 east of the fourth principal meridian, situated in Marshall county, Illinois; that on that day she and her husband, by warranty deed, conveyed the real estate to Walter C. Overbeck; and that on the same day Overbeck reconveyed the real estate to Grace M. Adams and Margaret Isabelle Yeats, (who is the same person as Isabelle Yeats,) as tenants in common; that as an integral and inseparable part of the above transaction Grace Adams and Isabelle Yeats entered into the following contract:

“This Agreement,- Made this 31st day of May A.D. 1939, between Grace M. Adams, hereinafter referred to as the First Party, and Margaret Isabelle Yeats, hereinafter referred to as the Second Party,
WITNESSETH :
Whereas the First Party has this day and date vested title in the parties hereto as joint tenants in the Marshall County, Illinois, farm owned by the First Party, all evidenced by certain deeds executed by the First Party and Martin A. Adams, her husband, and Walter C. Overbeck, all of the within date;
Now Therefore, in consideration of having vested title of said real estate as aforesaid, The Second Party herein, in consideration thereof, agrees with the First Party that said First Party shall have all the rentals from said real estate, and the possession thereof during the term of her natural life, with power and authority to insure the buildings thereon, make repairs and do such other things thereon as she could or would do were she the sole and exclusive owner thereof. This Agreement shall not, however, in any manner affect the joint tenancy of said real estate nor the legal incidents accompanying same.
Dated this 31st day of May, A.D. 1939.
Grace M. Adams, (Seal)
Margaret Isabelle Yeats, (Seal)”

The complaint further alleged that on June 4, 1941, Grace Adams discovered that the deed from Overbeck, dated May 31, 1939, by which the real estate was conveyed to her and Isabelle Yeats, conveyed the land to them as tenants in common, and not as joint tenants; that on June 4, 1941, Grace Adams, a widow, Isabelle Yeats and her husband executed a deed conveying the real estate to one Kathryn Krenz; that on June 12, 1941, Kathryn Krenz conveyed the real estate to Grace Adams and Isabelle Yeats as joint tenants. It is further alleged that the deed of Kathryn Krenz to Grace Adams and Isabelle Yeats was but a correction deed given at the direction of Grace Adams and subject to the terms of the agreement set out above. The complaint further alleges that under the above deeds and agreement the real estate was held by Grace A.dams and Isabelle Yeats as tenants in common. It was further alleged that Isabelle Yeats claimed to own all of the real estate as surviving joint tenant and concluded with a prayer that the deeds, agreement and will be construed and that the court decree the executor and Isabelle Yeats each seized of an undivided one-half of the real estate as tenants in common and that the premises be partitioned.

The answer of Isabelle Yeats admits all the allegations in the complaint except the legal conclusion that a tenancy in common was created and maintains that the deeds conveyed title to the grantees, as joint tenants, and that she owns the entire fee' in the property by virtue of the right of survivorship upon the death of Grace Adams. Plaintiffs filed a replication to this answer in which they denied that a joint tenancy between Grace Adams and Isabelle Yeats was created.

By an amendment to their complaint, plaintiffs subsequently alleged that continuously from and after May 31, 1:939> t° the date of her death Grace Adams exercised full, complete and undivided control and supervision over the said real estate, that she alone entered into and terminated leases, waived forfeiture or forfeitures of existing leases, provided for repairs, taxes and insurance from her own funds, and that all of such acts were done by Grace Adams in pursuance of the terms and provisions of the agreement set out above and that Isabelle Yeats at all times agreed to and acquiesced in the manner, method and extent of the control and supervision exercised by Grace Adams in connection with the real estate and concludes with the allega-

I tion that such acts on the part of Grace Adams, acquiesced in by Isabelle Yeats, worked a severance of the joint tenancy, if such did exist, and created a tenancy in common.

The answer to the amendment to the complaint set forth that the exercising of control and supervision on the part of Grace Adams was with the. knowledge and consent of Isabelle Yeats and that said Grace Adams was doing so as her agent and joint cotenant and denied that the acts set forth in the amendment to the complaint affected the joint tenancy or worked a severance thereof. To this answer plaintiffs filed their reply.

The cause was referred to a master and, upon the pleadings as outlined above and testimony taken before him, he found that Grace Adams, desiring to effect a joint tenancy of the real estate involved, conveyed the title thereto to Walter C. Overbeck who in turn reconveyed the property to Grace Adams and Isabelle' Yeats, but that through inadvertence and mutual mistake the property was conveyed to the latter as tenants in common rather than as joint tenants; that subsequently thereto, and upon the discovery of the omission and mutual mistake, and for the purpose of correcting the former conveyance, the deed of June 4, 1941, to Kathryn Krenz and the deed back from her on June 12, 1941, resulted in an effective conveyance of the property in question in joint tenancy. The master further found that the agreement between Grace Adams and Isabelle Yeats, set out in full above, was executed contemporaneously and as an inseparable part of the original transaction by which it was attempted to place the title to the propertly jointly in Grace Adams and Isabelle Yeats.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.E.2d 903, 392 Ill. 502, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tindall-v-yeats-ill-1946.