Wood v. Sheffer

94 N.E. 24, 248 Ill. 617
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 24 (Wood v. Sheffer) 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
Wood v. Sheffer, 94 N.E. 24, 248 Ill. 617 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the-opinion of the court:

On May 22, 1909, appellees filed their petition in the circuit court of Jasper county against Margaret A. Sheffer, M. W. Hanna, and A. S. Foullcs as administrator of the estate of John Stephens, deceased, for the partition of 320 acres of land in Jasper county, alleging that John Stephens, then a resident of Ness county, Kansas, died intestate December 17, 1908, leaving him surviving Rebecca E. Wood, Alice E. Barker, Frank J. Stephens, James H. Stephens, Alfred E. Stephens and Margaret A. Sheffer, his children; Byrd Schaefer, Clara Young and June Young, children of Kate Young, a deceased daughter; Charles W. Miller, son of Lou Miller, á deceased daughter, and Robert W. Shelby, son of Minnie Shelby, a deceased daughter, as his only heirs-at-law; that at the time of his death John Stephens was the owner in fee of said real estate, which, upon his death, descended to his said heirs-at-law; that after the death of John Stephens the said James H. Stephens conveyed all his estate in said premises to Alfred E. Stephens, Frank J. Stephens, Rebecca E. Wood, Charles W. Miller and Charles D. Barker, and that the said Alfred E. Stephens conveyed all his estate in said premises to Rebecca E. Wood, and that the interests of the parties in said real estate are as above shown; that Robert W. Shelby is an infant, and that the defendant M. W. Hanna is tenant of the premises from year to year. The petition was docketed by the clerk on the chancery side of the court and summons was issued and served upon the defendants as in chancery. The defendant Margaret A. Sheffer appeared and filed what was denominated a plea and answer, setting up as a defense to the action that after the death of her father she contracted for and purchased from the petitioners the premises sought to be partitioned at an agreed valuation of $7500, and that in pursuance of such contract the petitioners thereafter executed a warranty deed to her for the premises and delivered the same to their agent, John F. Wood, for delivery to her; that she was at the time of making such contract, has ever since been and now is, ready, able and willing to pay the purchase price agreed upon for said premises, but that said petitioners at the instigation of said John F. Wood, and said John F. Wood, have failed and neglected, and now refuse, to deliver said deed to her; that in equity she has the title to said premises and is entitled to specific performance of said agreement, for which she prays, and denies that petitioners are entitled to partition. This pleading concludes with a verification and a prayer for judgment. The petitioners filed a replication to the plea and answer, specifically denying the various allegations of new matter in avoidance therein contained and tendering issue as at law. Margaret A. Sheffer joined issue by.filing a similiter to the replication. She also filed what was denominated a bill of interpleader and cross-petition, addressed to the judge of said circuit court in chancery sitting, in.which she set up the same facts alleged in her plea and answer, and made such facts the basis for a prayer for the specific performance of the contract claimed to have been made between her and the petitioners for the conveyance of said real estate to her. The petitioners interposed a demurrer to this bill of interpleader and cross-petition, which was sustained by the court. A hearing was had before the court upon the issues formed upon the petition, and resulted in a decree finding the issues in favor of the petitioners, finding the interests of the parties as alleged in the petition, ordering partition among the parties according to their interests as found by the court, and appointing commissioners to malee such partition. Defendant Margaret A. Sheffer has appealed from that decree to this court.

One of the questions argued by the parties is whether the proceedings were at law or in chancery, and on account of the complex condition of the record it is difficult to determine whether the cause, as a whole, should be deemed one at law or in chancery. The suit was commenced by the filing of a petition under the Partition act, and was therefore instituted as a proceeding at law. The plea and answer filed by the defendant, the replication of the petitioners thereto and the similiter of the defendant were all pleadings at law. Appellant was the first to attempt to treat the cause as one • in chancery by the filing of a pleading (which was, in effect, a cross-bill,) addressed to the chancellor of the court, and seeking affirmative relief which could only be granted in a court of chancery. The demurrer interposed by the petitioners was at that stage of the proceedings properly sustained on the ground that such pleading is not recognized in a suit a,t law, is not authorized by the Partition act, and the relief sougfft thereby was not such as could be granted in a proceeding at law. Notwithstanding the ruling upon the demurrer and the fact that the proceedings thus far, as shown by the pleadings, were a.t law, the court thereafter seems to have treated the cause as one in chancery. When appellant had closed her case appellees interposed a demurrer to the evidence offered by her, but the court refused to entertain the same, remarking: “This is a chancery case; it is a law case too, I reckon, but you have proceeded very much like a chancery case.” The evidence has been preserved by a certificate of evidence instead of by a bill of exceptions, thus indicating that the circuit court finally regarded the cause as one in chancery. This attitude of the court has furnished ground for appellant to assign as error the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the cross-bill and in refusing to decree specific performance of the alleged contract between appellant and the other heirs of John Stephens for the conveyance to her of the land in question. The case has not been presented to us, however, as one arising upon the demurrer to the cross-bill, but as one in which the decision depends entirely upon the evidence taken upon the hearing in the circuit court, and it is only in case we should hold that appellant has by the evidence established her right, ip equity, to a decree for specific performance, that we are asked to hold the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the cross-bill erroneous,—and this in order that she may be in a position to have granted to her the affirmative relief which she seeks. The case is therefore one presented to us primarily upon its merits.

After issue had been joined, the court and the parties proceeded as though the cause stood for hearing upon the cross-bill as well as upon the petition- and answer. The parties made full proof upon all questions relating to the alleged contract and the right of appellant, in equity, to demand specific performance thereof, and the appellant, as disclosed by the certificate of evidence, testified fully “on behalf of the cross-complainant in the cross-bill.” In view of this attitude of the court and of the parties upon the hearing in the circuit court and the attitude of appellant in this court, it would serve no good purpose and would not promote the ends of justice to reverse the decree of the circuit court, in case we should find that the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the cross-bill was error, unless we also find that the appellant has by the evidence established her right, in equity, to a decree for specific performance. We shall therefore first consider the evidence and the question whether appellant thereby established her right, in equity, to demand specific performance of a contract for the conveyance of the premises to her.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 24, 248 Ill. 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-sheffer-ill-1911.