Novak v. Jogminas

246 Ill. App. 518 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1927

Mr. Presiding Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

This controversy is between Frank H. Novak, appointed administrator upon the petition of creditors of the deceased, and Amelia Jogminas, the widow. There is no controversy as to the facts, which are stipulated.

The administrator filed his petition in the probate court setting up that the deceased in his lifetime purchased several tracts of real estate, taking the title to the same in the name of himself and his wife Amelia as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, and that at the time of his decease, September 18,1924, deceased and his wife owned these several pieces of real estate as joint tenants; that the money used for the purchase of this real estate belonged to the deceased, but that these several tracts were sold by deceased and his wife under contracts for deeds. The several tracts of land and the joint agreement of the deceased and his wife to convey the same were severally set up, as well as facts tending to show that as to all these tracts the purchase price was paid only in part, the agreements providing that other payments should be made monthly; that these contracts were in the possession of the widow Amelia Jogminas at the time of her husband’s death, and that she has refused to turn the same over to the administrator or to account for collections made thereon, claiming that all the moneys due belong to her and that the estate has no interest therein. The petition averred that one-half of the moneys due or to become due was the property of the estate of the deceased and the petition prayed an order might be entered so finding.

The widow answered, admitting that she acquired the several pieces of real estate jointly, denying that the purchase price was supplied solely by her deceased husband, and averring that after his death the real estate became her sole property and that the administrator had no interest either in the real estate or in the money due under the contracts.

The probate court found and entered an order as the petition prayed and respondent appealed to the circuit court where, by agreement of the parties, a jury was waived and the cause submitted to the court upon a stipulation of facts, from which it appears that these real estate contracts were executed and delivered by the deceased and his wife before the death of the husband; that the purchasers of the several pieces of real estate, upon execution of the contract, went into possession of the same and made all the payments provided for in the contract to the deceased up to the time of his demise and thereafter to Warren W. Smith, a real estate agent acting for the widow Amelia Jogminas; further that “prior to the date of the execution of said real estate contract, the title to said real estate-was held by Frank M. Jogminas and Amelia Jogminas, his wife, as joint tenants and not as tenants in common.”

The court found that the purchase money evidenced by said real estate contracts due and payable after the death of said Frank M. Jogminas passed to and belong to said Amelia Jogminas, and decreed that Smith, who had been made a party defendant, should pay to the widow the money collected by him on account of said contracts of purchase since the death of Frank M. Jogminas. This appeal followed.

The administrator contends that under the undisputed facts he is entitled to one-half of the unpaid purchase price of these lands upon the theory of equitable conversion, that is, equity will regard as done that which should be done, and applying that fiction convert the real estate into personalty free from the incident of survivorship. A number of cases stating that unquestioned equitable doctrine are cited in the briefs: Rhodes v. Meredith, 260 Ill. 138; Ward v. Williams, 282 Ill. 632, and other cases. The theory is untenable. The doctrine of equitable conversion does not apply to joint tenancies. At any rate the probate court of Cook county is not a court of equity but a court of law and therefore legal rather than equitable rules must be applied. The court of law disregards the fiction which the court of equity applies and, in conformity with legal rules, holds that the contract to convey has no effect on the estate or the title. It follows that as the surviving tenant, the widow, took the legal title to the contracts and land in question, she is entitled to receive the unpaid consideration. Covey v. Dinsmoor, 228 Ill. 438; Chappell v. McKnight, 108 Ill. 570; Gall v. Stoll, 259 Ill. 174; Budelman v. American Ins. Co., 297 Ill. 222.

For the reasons indicated the judgment of the circuit court of Cook county is affirmed.

Affirmed.

O’Connor and McSurely, JJ., concur.