Towle v. Wadsworth

147 Ill. 80
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 147 Ill. 80 (Towle v. Wadsworth) 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
Towle v. Wadsworth, 147 Ill. 80 (Ill. 1893).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, brought by James Wadsworth against John R. Towle, in which the complainant claims to be the equitable owner of an undivided one-half of certain lots of land in the city of Chicago, the legal title to which is in the defendant, and praying for a conveyance of the legal title, for an accounting and partition, and for an injunction restraining the defendant from prosecuting certain actions of ejectment and of forcible detainer brought to obtain possession of the premises, and certain actions for rents claimed to be due from the complainant. The defendant answered denying that the complainant had any equitable interest in the lots in question, and pleading the Statute of Frauds. He also filed a cross-bill, alleging that he had purchased the premises and was the legal and equitable owner thereof, and praying that a certain paper reciting and declaring that the defendant held the legal title to an undivided one-half of the lots in trust for the complainant, which the complainant had placed on record in the office of the recorder, be set aside and cancelled as a cloud upon the defendant’s title. The cross-bill was duly answered, and the cause being heard on pleadings and proofs, the evidence of the witnesses being taken in open court before the chancellor, the cross-bill was dismissed for want of equity, and a decree was entered in favor of the complainant in accordance with the prayer of the original bill.

In 1859, Wadsworth, who was then the owner of the lots in question in fee, erected a dwelling house thereon, and has occupied the premises as the residence for himself and family from that time to the present, and is still in possession. In 1873, he borrowed $12,000 of the Chicago Theological Seminary, and to secure such loan, he, together with his wife, executed a deed of trust conveying the lots to Oswell A. Bogue, as trustee. In 1877, the deed of trust was foreclosed by sale under the power therein contained, and a trustee’s deed was executed conveying the lots to the seminary. The seminary continued to own the property from the date of the foreclosure down to January, 1886, the date of the transactions out of which the present controversy arose. During that time Wadsworth occupied the premises under successive annual leases from the seminary, sometimes paying the rent, and sometimes giving his promissory note for it, the rent reserved being $360 per year for a part of the time, and $300 for the residue.

On the 28th day of January, 1886, as the result of certain negotiations, in which it is admitted Wadsworth took„some part, an agreement was entered into between the seminary, through its committee, and Towle, the defendant, by which the seminary agreed to sell the lots in question to Towle for $12,000, of which $2000 was to be paid in cash on delivery of the deed, and $2000 in one year, $2000 in two years, and $6000 in five years, from March 1, 1886, the deferred payments to be secured by Towle’s notes and a deed of trust on the premises, the sale to be subject to certain assessments then due, and to the lease to Wadsworth expiring May 1, 1886, and it was provided that certain portions of the property should be released at certain rates per front foot, upon proper payments being made on the notes. It was provided that abstracts of title should be furnished by March 1, 1886, and $250 on account of the purchase money was receipted on the contract as paid.

Before March 1, 1886, Towle sold a portion of the property to Evers for $2500 cash. The terms of the contract between the seminary and Towle were thereupon somewhat modified, and it was finally carried out in the following way: the seminary conveyed to Evers the part sold to him, and conveyed the residue to' Towle, and Towle paid to the seminary, in addition to the $250 already paid, the sum of $3900 in cash, and gave his two notes, one for $1850, payable two years after date, and one for $6000, payable five years after date, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, both being secured by a deed of trust on the part of the property conveyed to Towde.

It is not claimed that there is any written .evidence of the equitable title which Wadsworth is seeking to enforce, the theory of the bill being, that there was a resulting trust in Wadsworth’s favor as to one-half of the property purchased by Towle of the seminary. The allegations of the bill on this point are, in substance, that after the foreclosure of the deed of trust, Wadsworth conversed from time to time with the representatives of the seminary in reference to a redemption or repurchase of the property; that on the 18th day of January, 1886, he conferred with the trustees of the seminary, presenting to them a letter from Lucius G-. Fisher, one of their number, and that at that conference, the trustees proposed to sell the property to him, Wadsworth, or to any person he might prodiice, for $12,000, one-fourth cash or convertible securities, and the balance in one, two and three years, with semi-annual interest, but power was given to the committee of the trustees to vary these terms if necessary and .advisable, the proposition to hold good until January 25,1886; that he called upon the board in consequence of an arrangement made between him and Towle; that prior to that date Towle called upon him and requested him to agree that he, Towle, should participate in the purchase of the premises, .each to own an undivided one-half thereof, Towle to furnish all the money to make the first payment, one-half of which was to be loaned to Wadsworth, and applied in payment of Wadsworth’s share of the first installment of the purchase money, and to be repaid on or before two years thereafter, Towle to hold the title of Wadsworth’s half as security for the payment of the money so loaned; that after receiving the above mentioned proposal from the seminary board, Wads-worth completed his arrangement with Towle and accepted liisproposition, and thereupon they purchased the lots from the seminary for $12,000; that soon after the purchase, Towle sold to Evers a portion of tile property for $2500 and paid to the seminary that sum and enough more to make $4150, and, thereupon, acting on behalf of himself and Wadsworth, he secured the residue of the consideration by his two notes and a deed of trust on the property; that since the purchase, Towle has made various sales to different parties, and has received therefrom various sums of money which should be credited to Wadsworth; that in making the purchase, Towle acted for himself and Wadsworth, and took the title in his own name in pursuance of the agreement to hold Wadsworth’s half as security for the money loaned to him, and used in completing the purchase of the premises.

The case thus made by the bill is denied by the answer, and the issues thus formed are issues of fact, to be determined-by the testimony of the witnesses. The principal witnesses-were the parties themselves, and to a very considerable extent their testimony is in conflict, and the decision of the case must depend largely if not wholly upon the conclusion to be drawn from their respective versions of the circumstances out of which the controversy has arisen.

Wadsworth’s testimony is substantially as follows: After the foreclosure, I frequently talked with the officers of the seminary in relation to re-purchasing the property. My principal. talk was with Mr. Fisher, one of their directors, who lived in Hyde Park near the property, and who seemed, by the way he acted, to have the care and custody of the property delegated to him.

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Bluebook (online)
147 Ill. 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towle-v-wadsworth-ill-1893.