VanZanten v. VanZanten

269 Ill. 491
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 269 Ill. 491 (VanZanten v. VanZanten) 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
VanZanten v. VanZanten, 269 Ill. 491 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of -the court:

Nicholas VanZanten filed his bill in the circuit court of Cook county to remove a cloud upon his title to twenty-four acres of land in that county and to quiet his title. He died before the hearing and the suit was revived in the name of his widow and children. Upon a hearing, in open court the bill was dismissed for want of equity, and this writ of error has been sued out to reverse the decree.

John VanZanten, Sr., was a truck farmer and owned eighty-six acres of land near the village of South Holland, in Cook county. He had a wife, three sons, (Jacob, Nicholas and John, Jr.,) and two daughters, Nellie and Dora. Jacob, the oldest son, was a minister and resided in Wisconsin.' In 1892 Nicholas, the second son, married and moved on the twenty-four acres of land in controversy, into a house erected by his father. John, Jr., the youngest son, was married in 1896 and remained in the old homestead, his father and mother removing to a new house erected by them close by. Dora was married in 1897 and with her husband resided upon a part of the eighty-six acres. Nellie never married but continued to live with her parents. In 1898 John VanZanten, Sr., was about sixty-three years old. On March 4, 1898, he and his wife signed two deeds, — one to Nicholas and the other to the unmarried daughter, Nellie. On June 3, 1898, they signed two more deeds, — one to John, Jr., and the other to Dora. The four deeds were acknowledged on June 8, 1898. On November 14, 1898, they signed two other deeds, — one to Jacob and another to John, Jr., — which were acknowledged November 23, 1898. On May 9, 1899, they signed four more deeds, which were acknowledged May 16, 1899, — one each to Nicholas, John, Jr., Nellie and Dora. These deeds included eighty-six acres, — all the land John VanZanten, Sr., owned, — and were in the form of statutory warranty deeds purporting to be absolute conveyances in fee simple. On May 23, 1899, John VanZanten, Sr., executed his will, whereby, after providing for the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, he devised all of his estate, both real and personal, to his widow for life, with full power and authority to sell and dispose of the same, or any part thereof, in any manner she might deem proper, the remainder undisposed of at her death to be divided equally among his five children. On June 24, 1905, John VanZanten, Sr., died, and four days later his widow and children met at his house, the deeds were taken from a tin box in which he had kept them since they were made, and delivered to the grantees named therein and were subsequently recorded. The will, which was also in the tin box, was taken out and read, and a contract written in the Dutch language was signed by the five children, as follows:

“South Holland, Illinois, June 28, 1905.
“Present, Mother VanZanten, Jacob, Klaas, John, Nellie and Dora VanZanten (Paarlberg.)
“Purpose of coming together is the opening of father’s testament, made May 23, 1899. Everything found in the best order and carried out according to the reading and speaking of the testament. Furthermore it was found good for this year to pay mother one dollar for every acre for her support. Naturally each pays the taxes on his own land.
“Jacob and Dora offered to pay the tax and up-keep of the woodland and the eight acres by the Illinois Central railroad, and all what is left of the rent from these two pieces to give to mother.”

On February 26, 1909, the will was admitted to probate and John VanZanten, Jr., was appointed executor. He filed an inventory, including the land in question. The personal property inventoried consisted of two notes for about $500 each. On November 30, 1909, the widow,^purporting to act under authority conferred by the will, conveyed to John, Jr., the twenty-four acres included in the two deeds to Nicholas. This deed, the inventory and the will of John VanZanten, Sr., constitute the cloud which the bill was filed to remove. The answer, among other things, denied the delivery of the deeds.

The plaintiffs in error insist that the deeds were delivered to their father so as to vest the title to the twenty-four acres in controversy in him. The circumstances immediately attending the signing and acknowledgment of the deeds and the execution of the will do not appear in evidence. No witness testified who had ever seen either one of the deeds prior to the-meeting after the death of John VanZanten, Sr., when they were taken from his tin box. There is evidence tending to show that statements were made by him that he had made deeds; that he said that all the family saw the deeds and everybody was satisfied and if he died there would be no trouble; that he got Jacob from Michigan and he read the deeds to the children and they were all well satisfied, and that Mrs. VanZanten said all the children were together and the old man gave each one a deed, which they read and were satisfied; that neither she nor her husband had changed their minds, and she did not intend to change the deeds because then she would not have a clear conscience. No witness testified the deeds were delivered by the grantor to his children, or to any facts or circumstances which would authorize the inference that they, or any of them, were delivered. The evidence makes it clear the grantor intended to give his children the land described in their respective deeds, but so far as the proof shows he kept the deeds in his possession and control. ■ It is essential in order to pass title by deed that the deed be in some manner delivered. The intention of the grantor cannot be effective unless made so by delivery. Abrams v. Beale, 224 Ill. 496; Wilenou v. Handlon, 207 id. 104; Walls v. Ritter, 180 id. 616; Weber v. Christen, 121 id. 91.

The plaintiffs in error contend that if the deeds were never delivered by the grantor and no title passed during his life to the grantees by virtue of the deeds, by the voluntary action and agreement of the parties after the death of John VanZanten, Sr., they partitioned the land among themselves, in pursuance of which each continued in the possession and control of his "or her respective parcel, without question or objection, until after the will was probated, about four years later. We think the legitimate inference from the evidence is that at the meeting of the children and widow of John VanZanten, Sr., a few days after his death, it was agreed among all of them to accept the division of the land among them according to his plan and wish as indicated by the deeds; that an understanding was reached as to the disposition of the personal estate and as to the provision for the widow, and the will was not to be probated. This was not all embraced in the instrument signed by the five children, but that agreement, and other facts proved, to our minds warrant no other reasónable conclusion. The personal estate is variously stated to have amounted to from $1000 to -$1500. By the consent of all of the children and the widow the deeds were delivered to the respective grantees, and the written agreement signed by all the children shows conclusively that it was the understanding that °each of them was owner in severalty of the land described “in his or her deed. Their father had long before put each of them in possession of the land intended for them, respectively, and given them complete management and control, they each paying to their father a small sum annually.

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Bluebook (online)
269 Ill. 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanzanten-v-vanzanten-ill-1915.