Williams v. Brown

14 Ill. 200
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 Ill. 200 (Williams v. Brown) 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
Williams v. Brown, 14 Ill. 200 (Ill. 1852).

Opinion

Caton, J.

The bill avers that the complainant advanced to the defendant Brown fifty dollars, with which to purchase the premises in question for him, and that Brown undertook the trust. That, on the same day, Brown bargained with Swaringen for the land, paid him therefor the fifty dollars advanced by the complainant, and took a bond for a deed to himself, and that he promised to convey to the complainant so soon as he should get a deed from Swaringen. This he subsequently refused to do, but procured a conveyance to be made from Swaringen to Mrs. Hay, who was his mother-in-law, and a member of his family ; and that at the time the conveyance was made to her, she had notice of the complainant’s equitable title. The bill prays for a conveyance of the premises to the complainant, and for general relief.

The answers are not sworn to.

Brown admits that he agreed to purchase the land for the complainant, and that for that purpose, he received from him fifty dollars ; that he subsequently made a written agreement with Swaringen for the land, at eight dollars and seventy-five cents per acre, but did not pay for it at the time ; that, had he got a conveyance of the land from Swaringen, he intended to have conveyed it to the complainant, but that Swaringen, when he learned the land was intended for the complainant, refused to complete the bargain and make a deed; and that Brown, rather than involve himself in litigation, surrendered to Swaringen the bond; that he subsequently purchased the land for Mrs. Hay, and paid her money therefor, and took a conveyance to her, and that she holds it now in her own right.

Mrs. Hay in her answer, denies any personal knowledge that the complainant had employed Brown to purchase the premises for him; says she purchased the land from Swaringen, paid her own money therefor, and took a deed to herself and for her own use. A replication was filed to both answers.

Mr. Mudd testifies to the sale of the premises from Swaringen to Brown; that they estimated the quantity at about six acres, and the price agreed upon was $8.75 per acre, and that Brown paid to Swaringen fifty dollars at the time. This purchase was made in the fall or winter of 1839.

Latham swears that he heard a conversation between the complainant and the defendant Brown, in which the latter admitted that he had purchased the land for the former, and paid his money therefor.

George Hoarer testified that Brown told him that Williams had given him money to buy the land with, and that Swaringen refused to convey the premises to Williams.

Mrs. Williams, the mother of the complainant, testifies that, about the close of the year 1849, she heard Brown say that he purchased the land for the complainant, and with his money, and that he would make him a deed for it so soon as he could get one from Swaringen.

Augustus L. Brown, on the part of the defendants, testifies that, about the month of June, 1850, his father, the defendant, gave him fifty dollars, as the money which the complainant had advanced him for the purchase of the land; that he tendered the money to the complainant, who refused to accept it, but insisted on a conveyance of the premises.

Several witnesses testified that the character of Latham for truth and veracity was bad.

Two questions arise in this case: First, was the land purchased by Brown with the money of the complainant? And, second, was Mrs. Hay a subsequent bond fide purchaser without notice ? If this bill is to be maintained, it must be upon the ground that here was a resulting trust. /No contract between the parties can create such a trust, but it is an implication of law arising from the fact that the land was purchased with the money of one party, and the conveyance made to another. When such is the case, he with .whose money the land was purchased, may follow the money into the land. Such a trust may be raised without any contract or understanding between the trustee and cestui que trust, and even in the total ignorance of one of the parties, — as where the owner of the money purchases land and takes .the conveyance to another without his knowledge, or where one buys land with the money of another and takes a deed to himself. In either case, the law will raise a trust in favor of him, with whose money the purchase was made. While a parol agreement between the parties does not help the trust, neither does it prevent that implication of law from which the trust arises. The question of the ownership of the money may, frequently, and indeed, most generally is proved, either in whole or in part, by establishing some contract between the parties, either in reference to the money or the purchase. Such were the cases of Boyd v. McLean, 1 Johns. C. R. 582; and Coats v. Wood-worth, 13 Illinois, 654. In this case, while the agreement which is clearly proved, by which Brown was to purchase the land for Williams, cannot be. enforced either at law or in equity, it may still be considered in determining the question, whose money paid for the land. It may constitute important auxiliary proof on this point. The evidence, however, is very satisfactory on this point, independent of the agreement. The answer admits, and the proof shows, that the complainant advanced to the defendant Brown fifty dollars, for the purpose of making the purchase, and Mudd swears that at the time the purchase was made, Brown paid to the vendee fifty dollars, and two other witnesses testify to several conversations between the parties, in which Brown distinctly admitted that he had purchased the land for the complainant, and with his money. These statements were made while Brown held Swaringen’s bond for a deed of the premises, and long before the defendant Hay had acquired any interest in them. Declarations thus made are competent evidence in favor of the complainant, to establish the fact thus admitted, although, at least,' as to the other defendant, not conclusive evidence of such fact. When we add to this the moral obligation which the agreement between the parties imposed upon Brown, thus to invest the money, it leaves no reasonable room to doubt as to that fact. And there is no proof in the case tending to rebut this conclusion. So far from proving that Mrs. Hay paid any thing for the land, there is nothing to show that any money whatever was paid at the time the deed was made to her. Had such been the case, the proof to establish it was peculiarly within the knowledge and control of the defendants, and it was their duty to produce it, and thus, if possible, rebut the strong case made out by the complainant.

It may be inquired, why an immediate conveyance was not made, if the purchase-money was paid by Brown at the time of the purchase ? Beside the positive testimony to the fact of the payment of the fifty dollars, a satisfactory answer to this is otherwise found in the record. The purchase was at so much per acre, and according to the estimated quantity of land; the purchase-money would amount to a trifle more than the fifty dollars, which excess was to be subsequently determined by a survey, and in the mean time, the purchase was to be evidenced by the bond. This explains satisfactorily why a conveyance was not made at the time of the purchase. But it was urged that the complainant was not entitled to a conveyance, because there is no evidence, that he has ever paid such balance, or rather that such balance was not paid with his money.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ill. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-brown-ill-1852.