Tyler v. Tyler

25 Ill. App. 333, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 132
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 1, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Ill. App. 333 (Tyler v. Tyler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler v. Tyler, 25 Ill. App. 333, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 132 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Moran, P. J.

The appellant, William A. Tyler, in May, 1885, and when lie'was about sixty-four years of age, married for his second wife a lady who was less than half his age. The marriage took place in the State of New York and the parties thereto resided there until the final separation between them. Appellant was the owner of a large amount of property, consisting of notes and mortgages and some real estate, which latter was situated in the State of New York. Shortly after the marriage differences arose between appellant and his wife and it became apparent that they would not be able to continue to live together, and appellant was afraid that his wife would commence legal proceedings against him for support. Under the influence of this fear, that his property would be subjected to the demands of his wife, he sought the aid and confidence of his son, the appellee, and on the 27th of August, 1885, there was executed an agreement in writing between appellant and appellee, whereby there was transferred to appellee certain mortgages, securities and notes which in said agreement are particularly described and enumerated, and which amounted in the aggregate to about $80,-000. There was in said agreement a recited consideration for said transfer of $10,000 paid by said appellee, and an agreement that he would pay to appellant during the term of his natural life, the sum of $10,000 per annum in semi-annual payments, to be made only upon the consideration that said sum should be necessary for the support of appellant, and upon the personal demand of appellant, but when demanded said appellee was not to refuse payment on the ground that the 'sum was not necessary for support. Said instrument was signed by appellant and appellee and was left in the custody of the lawyer who drew it. A portion of the securities mentioned in it were then and there delivered to appellee and others of them subsequently.

Afterward and in the month of September, appellant procured to be conveyed to appellee certain real estate situate in the State of New York. In April, 1886, appellant filed his bill in the court below, seeking the aid of the court to compel appellee to surrender back to him the said securities transferred and to reconvey the said real estate. The bill set forth, as groundsTor equitable relief in substance, that at the time the transfers and conveyances were made the appellant was in a weak state of mind, and that said conveyances and transfers were made upon the suggestion and advice and through the influence of appellee, who took advantage of appellant to procure the said transfers and conveyances, and also that by certain writings executed by appellee and delivered to appellant, appellee constituted himself the trustee of appellant, and held for appellant the legal title to said real estate and said securities, and in and by said writings vested the beneficial and equitable title to said land and said securities in appellant.

Appellee placed his defense on a denial of the allegation that he had procured the conveyances or transfers to be made to him, or that he had taken advantage of appellant, and set up that the purpose of the said conveyances and transfers on the part of appellant, were to hinder, delay and defraud his wife, with whom he had had serious trouble, and who was at the time about to, and afterward did commence against appellant a suit for separate maintenance, and in which a decree against appellant was entered, and that the agreements to re-convey the land and to surrender back the securities were executory contracts and were secret, and part of the plan to defraud said wife of appellant, and that they did not create a trust.

The court on the hearing found that certain of the securities mentioned in the agreement between appellant and appellee had never been in fact delivered to appellee, and such were declared to be still the property of appellant, and ordered that as to such of the securities as were delivered to appellee, the court would not aid appellant by decreeing their surrender and that the court would not compel appellee to reconvey the real estate.

An examination of the evidence contained in the record, satisfiesus that the learned chancellor who tried this case in the court below, was clearly right in the conclusion reached by him, that the design of the conveyances and transfers from appellant to appellee was to delay, hinder and defraud the wife of appellant in obtaining alimony and maintenance in the suit which it was apprehended she was about to commence against him; that the design to so hinder and defraud originated with appellant, and while appellee became his willing instrument in aiding the design, he did not overmaster appellant or take advantage of him, and that therefore appellant and appellee were in the matter of the conveyance of said real estate, and the transfer of said securities in pari delicto—equals in guilt. We will assume (for the purposes of this ease, in the view we feel compelled to take of it), but without intending to decide the point, that the court below was right in treating a transfer of property, real or personal, made to defeat or hinder a wife from obtaining support or alimony, as subject to the same rule as though the conveyance was made to hinder and defraud an ordinary creditor.

It is too well settled to need the citation of authority to support the statement, that a court of equity will not aid a grantor to recover from the grantee property conveyed for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding creditors, by raising a trust, or constructing out of the transaction a trust upon the ground that the conveyance was without consideration. Neither will equity specifically perform a contract to reconvey made by the fraudulent grantee. What the parties have executed for a fraudulent purpose the court will not aid either party to disturb. What the parties have fraudulently contracted to execute, the court will refuse to compel the contractor to perform.

But while equity will not raise or create a trust, when the consideration is founded on fraud, yet where a party constitutes himself a trustee by a sufficient declaration of trust, t-o that the trust is complete and express, it will not permit the trustee to defeat the trust or refuse to perform it, by the suggestion that the property of which the trust is declared was delivered to him in the execution of a fraudulent purpose, In Fast v. McPherson, 93 Ill. 496, this principle was applied by the Supreme Court. There Fast, the appellant, who was trustee by an express trust, set up to defeat his declaration of trust, that the property had been originally conveyed to defraud creditors, but the court said: “The same principle which would have precluded appellee from alleging that a deed absolute on its face and unaccompanied or followed by an express declaration of trust, was, in fact, held in secret trust so as to defeat or delay creditors, etc., precludes Fast from alleging, as an excuse for his breach of trust, that he executed the declaration of trust in order that creditors might ho defeated or delayed. Neither party is allowed to base a right upon an allegation of her or his own participation in the doing of an unlawful or fraudulent act.” In Owens v. Owens, 23 N. J. Eq.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rollestone v. National Bank of Commerce
252 S.W. 394 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ill. App. 333, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-tyler-illappct-1888.