Christensen v. Christensen

265 Ill. 170 | Ill. | 1914

Mr. Chibe Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

John Christensen, plaintiff in error, filed his bill in this case in the circuit court of DeKalb county against Clara Christensen, his wife, and Clara Kraus Sloan, defendants in error, alleging that he was the owner of a homestead estate, an estate for life and an undivided half of the fee of lot 8. in block 36, in the city of DeKalb, and praying the court to declare his title accordingly, to take an account of the rents and profits of his interest in the lot obtained by Clara Christensen since she excluded him from the premises, to require her to convey an undivided one-half of the premises to him, to decree to him a homestead estate therein and to require her to pay over to him the rents and profits so received by her. The defendant Clara Kraus Sloan was the owner of a mortgage executed by both Clara Christensen and John Christensen, and its validity was not disputed. The court heard the cause on exceptions to the report of a special master, who recommended that the bill be dismissed for want of equity. The exceptions were overruled and the amended bill dismissed.

The evidence in the case was to the following effect: On May 9, 1884, Maria Spicer, owner of the lot, and Robert Spicer, her husband, entered into a contract with William Thackham by which they agreed to convey the lot in fee simple, by warranty deed, for a consideration of $200, payable by William Thackham as therein specified. Possession was taken by virtue of the contract, and Amelia Thackham, mother of William Thackham, resided on the lot with her children in a small one-story house containing three rooms. On October 3, 1885, the complainant, John Christensen, married Amelia Thackham and went to live with her in the house on the premises. On September 4, 1886, Maria Spicer (then Maria Brady) and James Brady (who was then her husband) conveyed the lot to William Thackham in pursuance of the articles of agreement. There was a controversy as to whether there was a subsecpient contract between William Thackham and the complainant. According to the testimony of the complainant he entered into an arrangement with William Thackham a. )rear or two after the marriage and while he was living on the premises with his wife, by which it was agreed that if the complainant would put a house upon the premises he should have the lifé use of them. It was agreed that William Thackham, if present at the hearing, would testify that no such agreement was made. If the agreement was made it was several years afterward, before any building was placed on the premises by the complainant or anything was done under the contract. In 1892 or 1893 the complainant sold the old one-story house for a trifling sum and purchased an unfinished story-and-a-half building and moved it onto the lot. He finished the house sufficiently to make it habitable and claimed that he had expended $1200 or $1300 in improving the premises. William Thackham mortgaged the premises to Joseph Glidden for $50 and the complainant paid that mortgage. Including that payment li£ proved expenditures by him amounting to $720.50, but these improvements were made as much as six years after the alleged agreement with William Thackham, during which time the complainant was living on the premises with his wife.' He continued to occupy the premises with his wife until July 2, 1898, when she died, and he • continued to live there until February, 1903. After the death of his wife he had possession, and he married the defendant Clara Christensen on October 30, 1899, and they lived on the premises from that time until she drove him away. The complainant had assumed to be the owner of the premises and never paid any rent, and William Thackham, who held the legal title, never made any demands upon him. In 1902 the defendant Clara Christensen learned that the legal title was in William Thackham, and there were negotiations for a purchase from him. He proposed to make a deed for $800, and the complainant testified that the deed was to be made to him and his wife, Clara Christensen, and each was to be the owner of an undivided one-half. Neither of them had any means to pay for the property, and the money was borrowed from Clara Kraus Sloan, a daughter of Clara Christensen born during one of her former 'marriages. William Thackham, with his wife, conveyed the premises to Clara Christensen on October 23, 1902, and John Christensen and Clara Christensen executed their mortgage to Clara Kraus Sloan "to secure a note signed by Clara Christensen alone, "for $800 and interest. On February 3, 1903, Clara Christensen filed her bill against John Christensen for a divorce and obtained an injunction restraining him from interfering in any way with the property. The bill was afterward dismissed, on motion of Clara Christensen, without prejudice. She testified that there was no agreement for a conveyance to the parties jointly; that she had supposed he owned the property, and when she found he did not she bought it herself; that he said he was unable to pay anything, and, in fact, paid nothing, and that the whole purchase money was borrowed from her daughter on the mortgage. Clara Christensen improved the property and rented it for saloon purposes for $55 a month for one year, and after that for from $35 to $50 a month.

The contracts which complainant claimed were made between him and William Thackham and the defendant Clara Christensen were both oral, and if they were, in fact, made as claimed, they were subject to the defense of the Statute of Frauds‘unless facts were proved which would take them out of the operation of the statute. Such a contract may be taken out of the Statute of Frauds by such part performance as would make it a fraud to permit the defense to be interposed against the obligation assumed, but there are certain conditions which the courts have always insisted must exist and be proved.' One is, that the contract and its terms must be established by clear and unequivocal evidence. In Langston v. Bates, 84 Ill. 524, the court quoted from Story, (vol. 2, sec. 764,) as follows: “A court of equity ought not to act upon conjectures, and one of the most important objects of the statute was to prevent the introduction of loose and indeterminate proofs of what ought to be established by solemn, written contracts.” That rule has been repeated in numerous cases, among which are Morrison v. Herrick, 130 Ill. 631, Standard v. Standard, 223 id. 255, and Casstevens v. Casstevens, 227 id. 547. Another rule is, that the acts relied on as part performance must have been done under the contract itself and for the sole purpose of performing it, and it is a well established rule that possession must be taken under the contract and lasting and valuable improvements be made by the vendee. The acts of part performance must refer exclusively to the contract, and be such as cannot be explained consistently with any other contract than the one alleged and be such as would not have been performed but for the contract. (Wood v. Thornly, 58 Ill. 464; Shovers v. Warrick, 152 id. 355.) As possession must be taken under the contract it is not sufficient that the party was previously in possession, but it must affirmatively appear that he got possession under the agreement relied on and in part performance of the same. There was evidence that the property was worth much more than the $800 which William Thackham asked for a deed, and the complainant had expended a considerable sum on the lot in comparison with its former value. William Thackham had permitted the complainant to occupy the premises without any payment of rent for a considerable period after the death of the first wife, and the evidence justifies the conclusion that he intended to do so as long as he owned the premises, during the lifetime of the complainant. If we assume that the agreement with William Thackham was made as claimed, there was no proof that, possession was taken under or in pursuance of the contract, so that the contract was not taken out of the statute and cannot be enforced. The possession of the complainant was referable, not to such a contract but to' the possession of the wife, Amelia, who had been in possession under the contract of purchase from Maria Spicer, and there was no change in possession until her death, many years after the contract was alleged to have been made. We must be governed by our conclusion as to w'hether there was any legal obligation to permit the complainant to occupy the premises during his lifetime, and under the rules of law the proof was not sufficient to show such an obligation.

The alleged contract with the defendant Clara Christensen was denied by her, and the entire purchase money was borrowed from her daughter, the defendant Clara Kraus Sloan, upon the individual note of Clara Christensen, secured by the mortgage. There was no evidence that complainant disclosed to his wife, when she bought the property, that he had or claimed to have any interest in the premises, and we do not regard the alleged contract as proved. As he neither paid anything nor became liable to pay anything on the purchase price there was no resulting trust, and we are satisfied with the conclusion of the circuit court.

The decree is affirmed.

Decree affirmed.