Wilson v. Augur

52 N.E. 289, 176 Ill. 561
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 52 N.E. 289 (Wilson v. Augur) 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
Wilson v. Augur, 52 N.E. 289, 176 Ill. 561 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

It appears from the evidence introduced on the hearing that Daniel Wilson, in his lifetime, owned 57-¡- acres of land, described as the north-west quarter of the southwest quarter of section 12, and 17£ acres off the east side of the south-west quarter of the south-east quarter of section 11, township 15, north, range 1, west, in Christian county. Daniel Wilson died on the 13th day of February, 1863. He had purchased the lands of John Grigg, and held a bond for a deed, the full amount of purchase money having been paid. It seems that a year or two before Wilson’s death he was confined to his bed the most of the time, and was weak in both body and mind and unable to attend to business. His wife was dead, and his two daughters, Ruth Wilson and Mary C. Jacobs, kept house for him and looked after his business. He resided on the 40-acre tract above mentioned, and Washington Wilson, a reputed son by a former wife, lived on the 17£-acre tract. He occupied under his father, and had what he could raise on the land. In addition to the children named, Daniel Wilson left surviving him two sons, John B. and Levi D. Wilson, the latter, at the death of his father, being fourteen years of age. After the death of Wilson, Washington Wilson claimed the entire 57-J- acres of land, and it appears from the evidence that about three months before the death of Wilson, Washington Wilson obtained possession of the bond for a deed, and, with an assignment of the bond to himself, he and Burns, who was a pettifogger residing in the neighborhood, went to Springfield to J. C. Conkling, the agent of Grigg, to procure a deed for the land. They found a deed in the hands of the agent from Grigg to Daniel Wilson. This deed they induced the agent to return to Grigg, and they also induced the agent to procure another deed from Grigg to Washington Wilson. This deed was placed on record, and on or about the 1st day of September, 1863, Washington Wilson conveyed the lands to Burns. It also appears that in the spring of 1863, after the death of Wilson, the two daughters who resided with him on the 40 acre tract leased the land to Thomas Doolen for one year. He went into possession of the land and raised a crop, but in August of that year he sold his crop to Burns and turned over the possession of the land to him, and he occupied the land from that time until his death, in August, 1896. It also appears from the evidence that complainant, Levi D. Wilson, left Christian county and went west before he "was of age, and returned in 1874 or 1875. After his return the other heirs of Daniel Wilson conveyed their interest in the premises to him. In 1882 he brought an action of ejectment against Bairns to recover the possession of the premises, but he failed to recover. Nothing further was done by complainant to recover the lands until this bill was filed, in 1897.

The answer of the defendant neither admitted nor denied the charge of forgery of the assignment of the bond and the collusion and fraud in procuring the deed from Grigg, as alleged in the amended bill of complaint, and it is contended that the failure to do so is equivalent to an admission of the truth of these allegations. We do not concur in that view. Where a material averment in a bill is neither admitted nor denied by the answer it must be supported by proof. DeWolf v. Long, 2 Gilm. 679; Stacey v. Randall, 17 Ill. 467; Wilson v. Kenney, 14 id. 27; Morgan v. Herrick, 21 id. 481; Trenchard v. Warner, 18 id. 142.

It is next contended that if it should be held that appellee has not admitted the forgery, fraud and collusion charged in the bill, the court erred in dismissing the bill, because the evidence ,on the hearing was sufficient to sustain the allegations of the bill. .There is evidence in the record tending to prove the allegations of the bill. Isaac F. McQuality testified' on behalf of complainant, as follows: “During the summer of 1874 or ’75 I was helping Burns, with a number of other men, to put up hay on the forty where Daniel Wilson lived. John Morgan and Uncle Johnnie Fletcher were great friends of Burns, and were there at the time. I was cleaning up around the stack between loads and went back into the shade to get a drink of water,—also some whisky which it was the custom to furnish to the men who were helping put up hay. Burns, Morgan and Fletcher had gone around in the shade, too, and were talking together and having a little of the whisky Burns had there. They were speaking of the talk there had been in the neighborhood as to how Burns got this land through Wash. Wilson from Daniel Wilson. Fletcher told Burns he always had an idea that Mary Wilson, wife of Wash. Wilson, had sneaked the papers from Daniel Wilson and wrote the assignment from Daniel Wilson to Wash. Wilson. Burns says, ‘By God! that’s so; Mary Wash, did sneak the papers away from old man Wilson and made the assignment.’” The witness further testified that Burns was a farmer and pettifogger, and that his general reputation for honesty-in the neighborhood was bad. Witness stated, under objection, that Burns was considered a dangerous man; that “when any one got into trouble in the neighborhood he always tried to get on one side or the other, and would get them into trouble and let them get out the best they could; he was feared by his neighbors.”

Thomas Doolen testified that he knew Burns from 1859 until his death, and knew Daniel Wilson the last two or three years of his life. Witness stated he rented the 40 acre tract in controversy from Mary.C. Jacobs and Buth Wilson after their father’s death,—rented it in spring of 1863; that Wash. Wilson told him he wanted him to pay rent to him, and proposed to sell the land to witness; does not remember terms; best recollection he offered to deed the land for $200. Witness and Burns talked about the land afterward, and Burns asked witness if he was on a deal with Wash’. Wilson for the land. Witness replied that Wash. Wilson had offered to sell the land to witness. Burns then said to witness: “You had better not buy that land; they can’t make you any title to it; you had better let it alone.” Witness states he asked Burns why he thought so, and Burns said in reply that the assignment of the bond, or something that seemed to be the title they had, was of their own work; that old Daniel Wilson did not know anything about it.

These declarations of Burns, uncontradicted, as they appear in the record, it must be admitted tend to prove that the bond for a deed was obtained from the possession of Daniel Wilson by foul means, and that the assignment of the bond from Daniel to Washington Wilson was a forgery. These facts were known to Burns when he obtained a deed from Washington Wilson for the land. Indeed, he seems to have been the principal actor in procuring a deed from Grigg to Washington Wilson on a fictitious assignment of the bond held by Daniel Wilson.

There is also evidence showing bad conduct on the part of Burns in regard to this property. As has been seen, at the death of Daniel Wilson his two daughters, who had been in charge of his business, were left in possession of the 40-acre tract. Under the advice of Burns an action of forcible entry and detainer was brought by Washington Wilson before a justice of the peace against the two daughters, for the pretended purpose of recovering possession of the land, but on the day of trial, when the two daughters were absent from home attending to the suit, under the advice of Burns Washington Wilson went to the house, removed all goods and furniture into the highway and tore down the house.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 289, 176 Ill. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-augur-ill-1898.