Wenegar v. Bollenbach

54 N.E. 192, 180 Ill. 222
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 192 (Wenegar v. Bollenbach) 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
Wenegar v. Bollenbach, 54 N.E. 192, 180 Ill. 222 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant and the appellee are first cousins, the deceased father of the appellant having been a brother of the appellee’s mother. Appellant, at the time of the transaction herein narrated, was only twenty-two years old, and was a carpenter by trade, living* at Palatine in the county of Cook. His aunt, Mrs. Weiskopf, lived, at the time of her death, in Henry county near a place called Hoop Pole. Her nephew, the appellee, bad lived in Henry county, and had worked on his aunt’s farm there, and knew its value. Charles Bollenbach lived at Long* Grove in Cook county, Illinois.

On September 6,1897, appellee approached appellant upon the road near Palatine, and offered to purchase his interest in the estate of their aunt, Mrs. Weiskopf, who had died in Henry county a week before that time. Appellant swears, that he knew nothing about the farm left by his aunt, and knew nothing about the extent of his interest therein. He swears, that appellee represented appellant’s interest or share in the farm to be one-twelfth. The substance of his testimony is, that such interest was represented to him to have been acquired through the will of the deceased husband of Mrs. Weiskopf. According to the testimony of appellant, appellee represented that Jacob Weiskopf, in his will, had left the land to his wife, Magdalene Weiskopf, for her life, and at her death that it was to go to her nephews and nieces, or to her brother and sister and their children. Mathew Wenegar had five children, Mrs. Bollenbach had four children, and appellant was the child of a deceased brother, thus making ten nephews and nieces. There is some uncertainty in the testimony of appellant, owing* to his want of knowledge on the subject of legal heirship and the laws of descent, as to whether the land was represented as belonging* to twelve nephews and nieces of Mrs. Weiskopf, or to her brother and sister and her ten,nephews and nieces. Whether the one statement or the other is correct, it clearly appears from the evidence of appellant that his own interest was represented to be one-twelfth. He also swears, that appellee stated to him, that the other heirs would make an effort to deprive him of his interest. His testimony also is, that appellee represented the farm to be worth about $35.00 an acre, or $5600.00 for the whole of the one hundred and sixty acres; that his interest was stated to be one-twelfth of $5600.00, that is to say, about $466.00.

It is quite clear from the proof that appellee, a young man about twenty-four years of age, was sent to the appellant to obtain the latter’s interest in the land by Charles Bollenbach, the father of appellee. The appellant further states that, relying upon the representations of his own cousin, that his interest in the land was only one-twelfth and was worth only $466.00, he agreed to sell such interest to appellee for $466.00.. When appellee approached appellant, he had in his possession a quitclaim deed partially made out, that is to say, with the description of the land inserted in it. Appellee agreed to give the appellant a note for $466.00, signed by himself and a brother of his, named Louis Bollenbach, payable one year after date. After making the agreement aforesaid, appellant and appellee went to the office of a justice of the peace and notary, named George C. Whipple, in Palatine, and requested him to finish the draft of the quit-claim deed, and take appellant’s acknowledgment thereto. Appellee went the next morning to Louis Bollenbach, who lived six miles distant in Lake county, and obtained his signature to the note. Whipple had an office in Chicago, as well as in Palatine, and stated that he would have to go to Chicago to put his seal upon the acknowledgment. Appellee went with him on the cars to Chicago, and the acknowledgment was completed by putting the notarial seal thereto.

If the testimony of the appellant is true, appellee made a false statement in regard to.the extent of appellant’s interest in the property, as he was entitled to one-third thereof as heir of Mrs. Weiskopf. Appellee denies, that he made any such representations, as are sworn to by the appellant. Appellee states, that he told the appellant, that the latter was the owner of an undivided one-third of the property, but that there were certain claims against the estate, the largest of which was held by his father, Charles Bollenbach, and that, if these claims were proved up against the estate, the whole value of the property, after their payment, would be only about $1400.00, and that one-third of this, to-wit, $466.00 or thereabouts, was the total value of appellant’s interest. It is nowhere explained how such a figure as $1400.00 could be obtained under the evidence, or under any theory advanced by either side in the case.

Appellant is sustained in what he says by the testimony of Whipple. Whipple swears that, when appellant and appellee were with him in his office in Palatine, appellee made the representations, which are sworn to by the appellant, and that he made the same representations to him (Whipple) while they were going together on the train from Palatine to Chicago.' Whipple states, that he was surprised at the character of the will, as it was represented to be by the appellee, and asked him why Jacob Weiskopf should have given the property by his will to his wife’s relations, instead of his own relations. He also states, that he communicated his impressions in regard to the matter to the appellant. After appellee had delivered the note to appellant, and had obtained the deed, and gone away, appellant’s suspicions were aroused in regard to the matter, and, at his request, Whipple wrote to the clerk of the probate court in Henry county, and obtained a copy of Jacob Weiskopf’s will; and it was ascertained that, therein, Jacob Weiskopf had left all his property to his wife, so that she was, at his' death, the owner thereof in fee. Thereupon, Whipple prepared for appellant a deed of revocation, which is in the record, and bears date October 2, 1897, less than a month after the making of the deed sought to be set aside. This deed of revocation recites the execution of the quit-claim deed by appellant to appellee on September 6, 1897, and states that the same was executed by and through the fraud and false statements and representations, made by Edward Bollenbach, and that, because thereof, the said quit-claim deed was thereby recalled, revoked, remanded, annulled and made void. This deed of revocation was signed by Benjamin Wenegar, and acknowledged by him before Whipple on October 2, 1897, and was recorded in the recorder’s office in Henry county on October 5, 1897. The evidence shows that, after the recording of the latter deed, Charles Bollenbach and his son made advances to the appellant with a view of settling the matter, but no settlement was made; and the original bill herein was filed, as before stated, on February 2, 1898.

The testimony of the appellant is not only confirmed by the positive evidence of Whipple, but by some very significant circumstances. The fact that, within a few days after the execution of the quit-claim deed by appellant to appellee, a copy of the will of Jacob Weiskopf was obtained by Whipple and the appellant from Henry county, shows that there must have been some representation in regard to the contents of the will. As matter of fact, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 192, 180 Ill. 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wenegar-v-bollenbach-ill-1899.