Grove v. Jeager

60 Ill. 249 | Ill. | 1871

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This case, in substance, is as follows : Conrad Jeager, and Margaretta, his wife, being 'the owners of certain premises, each an undivided half thereof, an agreement was made between them that the former should give to his wife $600; he paid to her $200, and in order to secure to her the payment of the remaining $400, the following mode was devised : Jeager and his wife conveyed the whole premises to defendant Merkle ; he conveyed them back to the husband, Conrad Jeager. The latter executed to Merkle his note for $400, payable one year after date, with ten per cent interest, and, together with his wife, Margaretta, a mortgage on the same premises to secure the payment of the note, and the note and mortgage were delivered to Mrs. Jeager, Merkle acting merely as a trustee for her in the transaction. Subsequently, at the instance of Henry Grove, the appellant, the attorney of Mrs. Jeager, Merkle indorsed the note to Grove for the benefit of Mrs. Jeager.

Grove brought this bill in chancery against Conrad and Margaretta Jeager, and Merkle, defendants, to foreclose the mortgage for the -benefit of Mrs. Jeager.

The court below dismissed the bill, and Grove brings the case here by appeal.

So far as this contemplated provision for the wife was executed, it was made effectual, and it was so to the extent of the $200 which were paid; but,' so far as it remains executory, it would be contrary to the practice of courts of equity to aid in enforcing it, the doctrine being that a court of equity will not enforce a voluntary contract. 1 Story Éq.Ju. sec. 433; 2 ib. sec. 793 a. •

We must regard this proceeding as one to carry into execution a voluntary executory contract by enforcing the payment of money under a voluntary promise to pay it, and that the execution of the mortgage does not give to it the character of an executed promise, the mortgage being but an incident to the note, which is .the principal; if payment of the note can not be directly enforced, neither can it be indirectly by foreclosure of the mortgage for the purpose of its payment..

This is true as respects Conrad Jeager’s own interest in the mortgaged premises which he conveyed to Merkle; but we think it should be held otherwise as to the interest in the premises which Margaretta Jeager owned in her own right, and which she conveyed to Merkle for the only purpose of having this mortgage made of it to secure the payment to her of this stipulated provision. It would seem to be highly inequitable that this scheme, designed purely for her benefit, should result in depriving her of her own property and lodging it in her husband. To allow the husband to make a successful resistance in full to the foreclosure of this mortgage, would be enabling him to get his wife’s land into his own hands by a fraudulent device.

To avoid the force of such seeming injustice, Conrad Jeager'’ sets up that all the land was once his; that he gave to his wife her undivided half of it, she having prevailed upon him, by unwarrantable means, to convey it to her.

Ilis own sworn version of the affair is, substantially, that she wanted something for her children (she having three by a former husband) ; that she forced him to make the deed; that slie said if he did not give her some claim on his property, she would not live with him; that he made a deed to one Fíense, and the latter made one to her; that the deed was for just one-half of the property; that she seemed to be satisfied at the time with this deed, but afterwards wanted the other half, too. In compliance with which want, and to avoid a threatened prosecution by her against him, before a justice of the peace, for an assault and battery, he settled with her by agreeing to give her this $600, and securing its part payment as above mentioned.

Some other circumstances of conduct on the part of his wife, are detailed by Jeager, as going, as he says, to prevail upon him to make this deed, which certainly fall much beneath the standard of propriety of conjugal deportment, and merit censure; but they all, in our view, do not amount to means of that extreme character which would call for the interference of a court of equity to set aside, or to justify it in holding for naught, a deliberately executed deed, the making of which was procured through the use of such objectionable means.

This conveyance to his wife, in the mode of conveying to Fiense, and the latter conveying back to her, was on the 17th day of September, 1868, with which Jeager appears to have rested entirely content; and, on the 5th day of April, 1869, he undertook to make the further provision in question for his wife. The voluntary conveyance of this land to the wife, as between the parties, made it as much hers as if she had paid, a full valuable consideration for it; and it is not to be permitted to- Jeager, after this land of his wife has come back into his hands, in trust for a purpose of benefit to her, to hold on to it for himself under the claim that he, in the first instance, gave it to his wife, and that she never paid him anything for it.

We think the mortgage should be held and made effective, so far as it embraces that interest in the land which belonged to Mrs. Jeager, and which she conveyed to Merkle ; and that, to the extent of that interest, she is entitled to have the mortgage foreclosed for her benefit, and the proceeds of that portion of the mortgaged premises applied towards the satisfaction of this note.

The decree of the court below must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion. Decree reversed.

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