261 Ill. 606 | Ill. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Livingston county granting the prayer of a bill filed by appellees, Girden F. Linn and Fidelia E. Crandall, for .the partition of certain lands described and to set aside certain deeds as clouds upon their title. The land sought to be partitioned belonged to James H. Linn in his lifetime, and consisted of 320 acres situate in Livingston county. He had six children, and the bill alleges that on May 3, 1909, he executed warranty deeds purporting to convey the said 320 acres of land to’ his children, the deeds purporting to convey to each child a separate parcel. He died about November 15, 1911. The bill alleges the deeds executed by him to his children were never delivered but were deposited by him with a custodian for safe keeping, he reserving the right to take them, or any one of them, up at any time he desired; that the grantees in the deeds had secured them from the custodian and some of them had placed their respective deeds on record.' The bill was filed by Girden F. Linn and Fidelia E. Crandall, two of the children of James H. Linn, and these, with four other children, James E. Linn, Laura Clark, Orin P. Linn and Ida L. Reynolds, were the only children and heirs-at-law surviving James H. Linn. Said last named four children, a tenant occupying the land, and Laura Linn, widow of James H. Linn, whom he married after executing the deeds sought to be set aside, were made defendants to the bill. None of the defendants answered the bill except James E. Linn and Laura Clark. They answered separately, denying that the deeds to them were never delivered and averring that they were delivered to John C. Culbertson in escrow, to be delivered to the grantees after the death of the grantor, and that they legally and lawfully obtained possession of said deeds according to the directions of James H. Linn and lawfullly placed them on record. The answers denied the widow was entitled to dower. The master in chancery to whom the cause was referred to take the testimony and report his conclusions of law and fact, reported recommending a decree setting aside the deeds on the ground that they were never delivered by the grantor and for the partition of the premises subject to the widow’s dower, as prayed in the bill. The chancellor overruled exceptions of James E. Linn and Laura Clark to the report and entered a decree setting • aside the deeds and appointing commissioners to make partition and assign dower to the widow. James E. Linn and Laura Clark have prosecuted this_appeal from that decree.
The proof shows that on May 3, 1909, James H. Linn executed six deeds purporting to convey to his children, in separate parcels, all his real estate in Livingston county. The deeds-to James E. Linn and Laura Clark were for eighty acres each, to Orin P. Linn fifty acres, to Girden E. Linn thirty acres, and to Fidelia E. Crandall and Ida L-Reynolds each forty acres. At the same time he executed a deed to Girden F. Linn for a lot in Chicago but did not describe in that deed the lot he owned there, and deeds to Fidelia E. Crandall and Ida L. Reynolds for eighty acres, each, in the State of Nebraska. The deeds were prepared by R. W. Ames, a minister of the gospel. Ames testified that a day or two before the deeds were prepared James H. Linn came to him and said he wanted to prepare his property for distribution among his children and desired to know the best way to do it. He had planned making a will, but Ames advised him a will would not be very safe, and suggested making the distribution by deeds and delivering them in escrow as a better plan. A few days after this conversation Linn again called upon the witness and said he had decided to adopt the plan the witness recommended, whereupon the deeds were prepared. Ames testified Linn inquired if he placed the deeds in the hands of someone for saie keeping whether he could withdraw them in case he decided to sell the land or a part of it. The witness told him he could do that and dispose of the property and do as he pleased with what he disposed of. Linn wanted the witness to keep the deeds, to be delivered after his death, but the witness advised that as he was unsettled and moved frequently he deliver them to someone else, and he suggested John C. Culbertson, a banker, as a proper man to leave them with. The deed to each grantee was placed in a separate envelope, numbered from I to 6, and on each envelope was indorsed, “James H. Linn. — This envelope not to be opened during my life.” At the same time the deeds .were prepared the witness prepared a list or paper containing the names of the respective grantees and a description of the land contained in the deed to each grantee, and these descriptions were numbered from I to 6, to correspond with the numbers on the envelopes containing the deeds. This' list the witness called “the escrow of the deeds,” and it showed who the grantees were and the description of the land conveyed in the deed in each of the envelopes. Lor instance, No. I in the list was Girden L. Linn and the description of the land in the deed to him, and the envelope marked No. i contained the deed to Girden L. Linn. This list was kept by James H. Linn. John C. Culbertson, the person with whom the deeds were left by James H-. Linn, testified that when Linn handed him the bunch of envelopes containing the deeds he asked the witness “to put them away for him and keep them for him,” and that was all he said. The deeds were all the statutory form of warranty deeds, containing no reservations of a life estate in the grantor or any other conditions. James H. Linn had secured the Nebraska land some years before from his son Orin P. Linn, but the deed from Orin P. Linn to his father had never been recorded. After the execution of the deeds to his children, which included the Nebraska land, and after they were deposited with Culbertson, James H. Linn sold the Nebraska land, but instead of making the deed to the purchaser himself he had it made from Orin P. Linn, in whom the record title was. James H. Linn received and appropriated the consideration paid by the purchaser for the land. He retained the possession and control of the Illinois land and paid the taxes thereon and received the rents and profits therefrom until his death.
The following propositions have been settled by repeated decisions of this court: A deed delivered by a grantor to a third' person for delivery to the grantee upon the grantor’s death may be a valid conveyance, but it is indispensable, in such cases, to the validity of the conveyance, that the deed, when delivered to the third party, shall pass absolutely beyond the dominion and control of the grantor. If there is any reservation of control of the deed by the grantor, — if he merely places it in the hands of a third person as a convenient place of deposit, still intending to retain control over it himself, — it is not a valid delivery and conveys no title. So long as the deed in the hands of the depositary is subject to recall by the grantor the grantee acquires no right under it, and if the grantor dies without parting with control over the deed no one has authority afterwards to deliver it to the grantee. The circumstances of the delivery to the depositary must clearly show the grantor intended the deed to presently become operative. It must take effect upon execution and delivery, if at all. The intention of the grantor may be evidenced by words or by acts, or by both words and acts, but, however shown, it must appear that no control of the deed was reserved or intended to be reserved by the grantor after delivering it to the depositary. Stinson v. Anderson, 96 Ill. 373; Byars v. Spencer, 101 id. 429; Cline v. Jones, 111 id. 563; Hayes v. Boylan, 141 id. 400; Provart v. Harris, 150 id. 40; Shults v. Shults, 159 id. 654; Spacy v. Ritter, 214 id. 266; Russell v. Mitchell, 223 id. 438; Weigand v. Rutschke, 253 id. 260; Hoyt v. Northup, 256 id. 604; Thurston v. Tubbs, 257 id. 465; Kavanaugh v. Kavanaugh, 260 id. 179.
There can be no doubt from the testimony that James H. Linn intended that if he died without withdrawing the deeds from Culbertson’s possession and disposing of the land it should go to the grantees in the deeds, but this intention could not prevail if he retained any dominion or control over the deeds and intended to reserve the right to make any other disposition of the land he saw fit to make during his lifetime. Snch an intended disposition of property is ambulatory until the death of the grantor, and can only be effected by an instrument in writing in conformity with the statute for the disposition of real estate by will. (Spacy v. Ritter, supra; Cline v. Jones, supra; Hayes v. Boylan, supra.) It seems entirely clear from the words and acts of James H. Linn that he did not intend, when he executed and delivered the deeds to Culbertson, to lose control over them or the right to make any other disposition of the property he saw fit to make during his lifetime. When the witness Ames advised him to make the deeds and deposit them with some person for safe keeping until his death, he inquired of the witness whether he would have the right to withdraw the deeds in case he should desire to dispose of the land or any part of it, and was advised that he could; that he could dispose of the property and do what he chose with it.. Culbertson testified that when Linn left the deeds with him for safe keeping, all he said was for Culbertson to put them away and keep them for him, (Linn.) This testimony not only fails to show any intention of Linn that the deeds should become presently operative and pass beyond his dominion and control, but it does show a contrary intention. That he intended to retain control of the deeds and the disposition of the land during his lifetime is further evidenced by the fact that he did sell and dispose of the land described in two of the deeds and appropriate to himself the consideration received for it. While it is true, as contended by the appellants, that the law makes stronger presumptions in favor of the delivery of deeds in cases of voluntary settlements than in ordinary cases of bargain and sale, no such presumption can prevail where the proof shows the grantor did not intend to malee a delivery. (Hoyt v. Northup, supra.,) The testimony of the witnesses Jackson and Corbett, that James H. Linn told them he had made deeds conveying his land to his children because he feared if he made a will it would get into the courts, and while he had deeded to some of his children more than he had to others this was because he had helped some of his children considerably and others he had not helped at all, does not prove that he had made a delivery of the deeds so that they.became operative and divested him of the right to recall them and make some other disposition of the land.
Appellants were introduced as witnesses in their own behalf, before the master, and appellees, who were complainants in the bill, objected to their competency. The master heard their testimony subject to the objection, but before the taking of all the testimony was concluded he announced that in his opinion the witnesses were incompetent, under section 2 of the Evidence act, to testify to any transactions occurring prior to the death of James H. Linn. The substance of the material parts of the testimony of James E. Einn was, that his father died on November 15, 1911, in Clearwater, Florida; that he and his sister, Eaura Clark, were with him at the time and had been for two months; that about six weeks before his father’s death, his father, while lying in bed, directed the witness to a drawer in a bureau in the room, where he would find some keys, and told the witness to take the keys, go up-stairs to a drawer named and get a paper which the father said was a list of the deeds he had made; that the names were on the paper and were numbered; that the deeds were in Culbertson’s bank, and they were numbered. The witness testified his father said, “When I am dead take them back to Culbertson and present them and get your deeds and take them to Pontiac and have them recorded, and that will settle it.” The witness testified he went up-stairs but could not find the paper, so he brought the drawer and its contents down-stairs to his father; that his father took the list out and handed it to him; that after the death of his father the witness presented the paper to Culbertson, who at first refused to deliver him the deeds; that after some talk between the parties Culbertson called up someone at the county seat by telephone, and later'gave witness the deed corresponding in number with his name on the list but refused to give him the deed to Eaura Clark; that she called later arid got it herself. Eaura Clark substantially corroborated the testimony of her brother James as to the delivery of the paper to him by their father. After the master had ruled that appellants were incompetent witnesses their counsel offered the testimony of James E. Einn in behalf of the other defendants, not including himself, and the testimony of Eaura Clark in behalf of the other defendants, not including herself. The master in his report stated that in arriving at his conclusions he had considered the testimony of appellants as incompetent for all purposes. The bill was filed by complainants as heirs of James H. Linn, claiming an interest in and the right to partition of the land which appellants claimed in their answer to own as purchasers. It is clear that under section 2 of the act on evidence appellants were not competent, upon their own motion, to testify in their own behalf as to anything occurring prior to the death of James H. Linn. They were both called to testify to the same transactions and statements of James H. Linn, which their counsel claim amounted to a “symbolical delivery” of the deeds at that time. If the occurrence they testified to was of any importance, neither could testify for the other without also testifying for him-, self or herself. It would be a violation of both the letter and the spirit of the statute to hold that notwithstanding their incompetency as witnesses in their own behalf each was competent to testify for the other. The master and the chancellor were clearly right in holding they were not competent to testify to anything that occurred, before the death of James H. Linn. Sullivan v. Corn Products Refining Co. 245 Ill. 9; Lowman v. Aubery, 72 id. 619; Bardell v. Brady, 172 id. 420.
It is further contended by appellants that, leaving out of consideration their testimony as to what occurred before the death of their father, the fact that James É. Linn produced the list of deeds to Culbertson after the death of his father creates the presumption that the list was delivered to him by his father in his lifetime and should be treated as a symbolical delivery of the deeds. In Walls v. Ritter, 180 Ill. 616, George M. Simms executed his will and four deeds. He placed them in a sealed envelope, and after his death William Walls, the grantee in one of the deeds, and another party, went to the bank and received from the banker a private box which had been left in his custody by Simms. The box was taken to a back > room, where Walls produced a key and unlocked the box, the envelope was taken from it, was opened by the banker and found to contain the deeds and will. Walls was a grandson of deceased, and testified, over objections to his competency, that the key was delivered to him by his grandfather more than two months before his death and had remained in his possession until the box was opened at the bank. In its opinion the court said it was contended that the delivery of the key was a symbolical delivery of the deed. The court held the witness was incompetent, but said if the testimony was treated as competent it wholly failed to' prove a delivery of the deed. In Hawes v. Hawes, 177 Ill. 409, the grantor delivered the key to his safety deposit box to the grantee, with directions to her to get the grantor’s .will in case of his death. After the death of the grantor the grantee opened the box and found in it an enevelope addressed to her, which contained a deed to her, and a paper, signed by the grantor, directing the grantee to record the deed upon opening the envelope. The court held this was not sufficient to show the grantor intended the title to pass presently to the grantee during the grantor’s lifetime, and said: “There was neither act nor declaration of delivery nor intention to deliver, but the only intention apparent was that the grantee should obtain possession when she should open the box after his death.” What was there said would apply to this case, even if the testimony of appellants had been competent. The testimony of appellants that James H. Linn gave James E. Linn the list of the deeds in Culbertson’s possession and told him to take the list to Culbertson when he was dead, present it and get the deeds, no more indicates that James H. Linn intended by that act that the title should presently pass to the grantees before his death than did the facts before the court in Hawes v. Hawes, supra. Certainly the fact that James E. Linn was in possession of the list after the death of his father would not be sufficient to authorize holding the title had passed by the deeds.
In October, after the deeds were executed in May, James H. Linn executed a will but made no disposition therein of the land in controversy. This is not sufficient to show that he intended the title to pass presently, and during his lifetime, to the grantees in the deeds. Hawes v. Hawes, supra; Lange v. Cullinan, 205 Ill. 365.
We are of opinion the decree is sustained by both the law and the evidence, and it is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.