160 Ill. 56 | Ill. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court:
The original bill in this case was filed by Annie C. White, since deceased, against her mother, Ann White, also since deceased, and her brothers, Alexander and James B. White, and her sisters, Elsie a.nd Mary S. White, and others, to set aside certain conveyances of real and personal property derived from her father’s estate, and to ascertain and declare her interests therein, and for an accounting. The case has been twice tried in the circuit court of Cook county, but by different chancellors, and upon each trial a decree was rendered for the complainant, setting aside said conveyances, excepting, however, by the terms of the last decree, as to certain paintings of considerable value which were held to have been a reasonable gift from the daughter to her mpther. The first decree was reversed by this court for the refusal of the trial court to permit Alexander White, one of the defendants, to testify on behalf of his co-defendants. The opinion of this court rendered on that appeal is reported in.147 Ill. 427. The substance of the pleadings and the principal facts are stated in that opinion, and need not now be repeated. On the second hearing Alexander White was permitted to testify, but substantially the same conclusion was reached by the trial court as on the first hearing.
Very soon after filing her bill, Annie C. White, who had for several years been domiciled in New York City, married Alexander Ross, who, on her death in that city, in January, 1891, by virtue of her last will succeeded to all her property rights as her sole devisee and legatee, and as such devisee and legatee, and as executor of her will, he afterward became the sole party complainant in this cause. Ann White, the mother, died in April, 1890, leaving by her last will all her property, embracing that conveyed to her by her children, which included the share of her daughter Annie now in controversy, to three of her children, James, Elsie and Mary.
The allegations of the bill respecting the execution, acknowledgment and delivery of the several deeds transferring the property to the mother, Ann White, and the reasons and consideration therefor, are sufficiently stated in the former opinion. The evidence is somewhat voluminous, and will not be here stated in detail. We have carefully examined and considered it, and are of the opinion that it fully justifies the conclusion reached by the learned chancellor of the circuit court as to the main facts, and which, for the purposes of this decision, so far as not already stated, may be briefly summarized as follows:
Both before and after the death of Alexander White, Sr., his family, though having their home in or near Chicago, spent a considerable portion of their time in the city of New York, where the children were educated. Annie C. was the youngest daughter, and became eighteen years of age June 12, 1878, and was therefore past twenty-eight years of age when she executed the first deed ’ to her mother, July 14, 1883, and upwards of thirty-two when she made the second deed, in January, 1888, alleged to have been made to take the place of the deed of 1883, which was lost or destroyed. The daughter Annie, although an invalid and somewhat of a pet in the family, took up her abode in New York in the fall of 1884 and never thereafter returned to Chicago. A visit which she proposed to make in 1887 was advised against .by her family. She had returned to Chicago, after a temporary absence, shortly before executing the deed to her mother of date July 14,1883. The deed of January 18, 1888, was prepared in Chicago and sent to her in New York to be executed. The management of her interest in her father’s estate had been wholly committed to other members of the family, and she had very little knowledge of what was being done with it or of its extent or value. For convenience in management, leasing, subdivision and sale, she had conveyed certain parcels of real estate to her brother James, and certain other parcels to her sister Elsie, who afterward included the same property, or what remained undisposed of, in their conveyances to their mother. No account was rendered to her, but she received regular remittances from some.member of the family in Chicago up to the time of her marriage, sufficient, at least until a year or two before her marriage, to provide for her comfortable maintenance suited to her condition in life. Generally the letters to Annie were written by her sister Elsie, who wrote with apparent authority from her mother and the rest of the family. The family had broken up housekeeping before she took up her home in New York, and lived at one of the hotels in Chicago when not sojourning in Europe or elsewhere. After her establishment in New York a new and expensive residence was purchased and fitted up in Chicago, and was occupied by the family for several years without her knowledge, she being kept in ignorance of the new home established by her mother, brothers and sisters, and in the belief that they were still living at the hotel. The explanation given for thus apparently excluding her from the family circle, and from all knowledge that they were living in the quiet of their own home instead of at a public hotel, was, in part,'that it was found unpleasant to keep house with her because of her interference and inability to get along with the servants employed in the family. She had expressed a wish to one Reynolds, a friend of the family, to accompany him from New York to Chicago on a visit. He, not feeling at liberty to bring her without first having obtained the consent of her family, wrote and mentioned her request. Elsie White, in her testimony, speaking of fhe letter from Reynolds and her answer, says: “It was simply saying that my sister had expressed a desire to accompany him to Chicago the next time that he came here, and that he did not care to accept that responsibility without writing to us, asking whether it would be agreeable—something of the kind. I replied to the letter, and remember the substance of the reply. I said I was obliged to him for the interest he took in the matter, but that we saw no reason to change the opinion expressed the last time we saw him here in Chicago at our home, and we thought at present it would be desirable for my sister to remain in New York; that my brother Alexander was there, and would see that she had every attention. That is all I remember saying. It was a short letter. At the conversation referred to in the letter with Mr. Reynolds my mother was present. We referred to our once having requested Mr. Reynolds not to say that we were keeping house again. Either mother or I—I don’t know which—said it, and we would have to request him again to please not say anything about it for these reasons. We simply said that my sister, owing to her delicate health and being the youngest daughter, had been spoiled and petted to such an extent that as she - grew older she became very exacting, so that we were obliged to give up housekeeping two or three times, and my mother was so unhappy that we felt it our duty at present to keep our sister away; that we would see that she would not need for anything, and we thought her health was better, and under those circumstances we felt it would be wise and right, and our duty to our mother, . to not have her a member of the family at present. We remarked that our sister had a marked preference for New York, and did not care to live in Chicago. When •my sister was young, while her father was alive, he and the family, and all of ns, were living in New York a great deal of the time. We made our home there. I think we lived there about ten years, and my sister and we all were at school there.” There was evidence, however, tending to show that the members of the family had lived happily together, and the letters, mostly from Elsie to Annie in New York, show great affection for her and interest in her welfare. She was addressed by pet names and in coaxing terms, as might well be expected from an older sister writing with affection and authority for her mother as well as herself, to the youngest, who was in poor health, away from her home and wholly dependent upon her family. Many of these letters were in reply to letters written by Annie G. White, but no letters from her were produced. The evidence shows that after the deed of 1888 was made, in reply to the inquiries of Annie G. as to when the estate would be divided, she was informed by her sister Elsie, to whom, with James, the management of the estate had been committed after it had been taken out of the hands of Alexander, that the estate would be settled and divided and she would get her share as soon as the Cotzhausen case should be disposed of. The deed of 1888 was not recorded until after the bill was filed. The deed of 1883 was never recorded, but leases, sales and conveyances were made by the heirs, from time to time, in the same manner as before its execution. No rights were ever asserted under it until the bill in this case was filed, and Annie G. White did not seem to know that she had ever executed such a deed, as no mention was made of it in her original bill, and it was only after it was set up in the answer that it was embraced by amendment in the bill of complaint. This deed of 1883 was not produced at the trial, but witnesses were produced who testified to its execution and its contents. Appellee Ross disputes the fact that any such deed was ever in fact executed, and the notary before whom it was said the acknowledgment was taken, testified that he had no recollection or knowledge of having seen such a deed or taken the acknowledgment of the grantor thereto. But we are of the opinion that the preponderance of the evidence shows that such a deed was in fact made.
The case has been fully and ably argued by counsel on both sides, and many reasons, of more or less force, have been urged as sufficient on the one side' to reverse the decree and on the other to sustain it. Appellants strenuously insist that the evidence shows that appellee Alexander Ross was not entitled to the decree in his favor even if his wife would have been entitled to it had she lived, for the reason that he does not come into court with clean hands. It is insisted that the evidence shows that there was a fraudulent conspiracy between him and the witnesses Reynolds and Stoddard to get possession of Annie C. White and her property by bringing about a marriage between her and Ross, and in procuring the deed and will from her to Ross, and that a court of equity ought not to lend its aid in the acquisition of property to one whose title is tainted with fraud or wrongdoing.
While the principle contended for by appellants is one not to be overlooked, and is one unhesitatingly applied by this court .when justified by the evidence, we cannot find sufficient evidence in this record to deny appellee relief on that ground. The evidence does show that the marriage took place the next day after Annie C. White filed the original bill in this case, and that the day following her marriage she made her will in favor of her husband, Ross, as her sole devisee and legatee, and also conveyed to him all the property in question by deed, and that he also made his will in her favor, but there is no evidence whatever that the deed or will was obtained by fraud or undue influence. Appellants contested the will in the courts of New York, but unsuccessfully. The testatrix was held competent, and it was also adjudged that the will was not obtained by fraud or undue influence. While the coincidence between the filing of the bill, the marriage, the making of the deed and will in Ross’ favor, the consultations with Reynolds and Stoddard and the preparation of-papers by the latter, demands attention, still the evidence fails to show the fraud and conspiracy alleged. It shows that Ross and Reynolds had been friends of the White family for a number of years, and Ross a most intimate personal friend of Alexander White; that Ross had long been devoted in his attentions to Annie 0. White, and that they were probably betrothed as early as 1883,—five years before their marriage. No objection to Ross, or to his marriage with Annie, seems to have been made by any member of the family, though apprehensions seem to have been indulged, generally, that some one might, by marriage, acquire some right or control over some part of the family estate. It surely was no wrong for Annie C. White to assert her right to her interest in her father’s estate, if she had any, and it was not fraudulent or wrongful for Ross, as her betrothed, and afterward as her husband, to assist her in recovering title to her property. They had the right to employ counsel and to procure the assistance of friends, and such action would be no evidence of fraud or conspiracy. The deed to Carter, and from him to Ross, was shown to have been in trust for Mrs. Ross. This deed and the mutual wills, following close upon the marriage, would not be sufficient, of themselves, nor in connection with the other evidence, to so taint the title in the hands of Ross with fraud or wrongdoing as to deprive him of his standing in a court of equity.
Nor can we find in the record any sufficient evidence to establish the contention of appellee Ross that the mother, Ann White, was guilty of any fraud in fact, by means of which she procured the deeds in controversy in her favor. It is not shown that she ever requested or advised that the property should be conveyed to her. The scheme seems to have originated with Alexander, James and Elsie, and to have been talked over in the family, mostly by them, sometimes in the presence of the mother and sometimes in the presence of the daughter Annie, but nothing was proved that the latter ever advised or suggested with reference to the matter in any of these family consultations, and the only inference that can be drawn from the evidence is, that she simply acquiesced in whatever was planned by the other members of the family for her to do, and executed whatever papers were prepared and presented to her for execution.
Neither time nor space will permit us to review all the contentions of counsel in the case, but the decree must be sustained, if sustained at all, on one of three grounds or propositions which, in varied forms, have been urged upon the one side and contested on the other, and which may be separately stated and considered, as follows:
First, that there was an express trust in favor of Annie C. White reserved from the conveyances to her mother; that by agreement and understanding of the parties the legal title to all the property was placed in the mother’s name as the safest and best course to pursue to preserve it for the benefit of those entitled to it, according to their respective interests, and thus prevent it from passing into the hands of strangers, who, by imposition upon the children, or some of them, might acquire title thereto, and also to meet the expense and requirements of the Cotzhausen litigation. But as to this ground of relief relied on by complainant, the Statute of Frauds having been pleaded by defendants below, it will be seen that an express trust could not be established unless manifested and proved by some writing signed by Ann White. No writing of any kind signed by her was produced having any tendency to establish such a trust, except her answer to the original bill of complaint. It is well settled that an express trust may be declared by an answer in chancery, signed by the party who by law is enabled to declare such trust. (Robbins v. Butler, 24 Ill. 387; Jones v. Lloyd, 117 id. 597; Phillips v. South Park Comrs. 119 id. 626; Perry on Trusts, sec. 81.) But the terms of the trust must be gathered from the whole answer as it stands, and where the answer, taken as a whole, does not prove a trust, no trust can be established by it, although certain parts of the answer, standing alone, tend in some degree to show that a trust was in fact created. Perry on Trusts, sec. 85.
Appellee Ross relies on certain expressions in the answer of Ann White, stating, in substance, that it was thought the best and safest course to pursue to have the property conveyed to her absolutely, to use and dispose of as she, in her judgment, might deem just and right, and that she was induced to take conveyance to herself, and thus become the absolute owner, through fear that the little knowledge of the ways of men of business and the practical affairs of life possessed by her children would enable some fortune hunter, by false devices or feigned love and marriage, to rob them of their inheritance. This is a mere statement of the motives or some of the reasons for making and accepting the conveyances, and is not sufficient to establish a trust. (Bryan v. Howland, 98 Ill. 625.) Besides, other parts of the answer allege that the conveyances were intended to, and did, vest in her the absolute title to the property, and state, among other things, that the conveyance by each of his or her interest was in consideration of the conveyances made by the rest, and in consideration of the fact that the mother had helped their father acquire the estate, and that the children thought their father should have given it all, by will, to their mother, and that it was their purpose to do what they thought their father should have done, and vest the whole estate absolutely in their mother. The answer, so far from declaring any trust when taken as a whole, sets up absolute legal and equitable ownership in Ann White. It follows that no express trust was proved.
The second ground or proposition is, that the conveyances were made for convenience, only, and without consideration; that they were voluntary, and that it'was not the intention of the parties that the grantee should take beneficially, but that she should hold the legal title, only, and that a resulting trust at once arose in favor of the grantors, which may be established by parol evidence, and which a court of equity will protect and enforce by now compelling the restoration of the legal title. (10 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 4, 56.) As we are satisfied that the decision of this cause must be based on other grounds,,we do not deem it important to follow counsel in their argument on this branch of the case. Much difficulty will be found in deducing such a trust from the facts contained in this record.
The third ground or proposition upon which the decree is sought to be sustained, and the one which we find is sustained by the evidence and supported by abundant authority, may be stated thus: That at, and before and after, the time or times when the deeds in question were made and delivered,' the relation of parent and child existed in its full vigor between the mother, Ann White, and the daughter, Annie C. White; that the position of the mother was one of dominance and authority over the daughter, and of the daughter of dependence upon the mother; that the daughter confided in and trusted her mother implicitly; that the mother was-already possessed of an abundance of means for her own support,—even of wealth,—and that the property conveyed to the mother by the daughter was of large value, exceeding $200,000, and embraced her entire estate and substantially all her means of support; that the daughter was an invalid, without any business, occupation or profession, wholly unacquainted with business affairs and the forms and instrumentalities by which conveyances of property are made from one person to another, and wholly unable, by reason not only of bad health, but of lack of business education, training and experience, to earn her own living; that nothing was paid or agreed to be paid to the daughter, Annie C. White, for all the vast property so conveyed; that she had no independent advice, and did not understand that she was divesting herself absolutely of all her property rights; that the gift was improvident, and unreasonable on the part of the daughter to make and unconscionable on the part of the mother to accept, and that unjLer such circumstances the presumption of undue influence arises, and that the conveyances in question were obtained by undue influence of the mother over the daughter, and that the burden of proof is on the mother, and those claiming under her, to show that the daughter acted independently, advisedly and of her own free, intelligent will and accord, uninfluenced by the recipient of so munificent a gift, and no such proof having been made, that, independently of any question of actual fraud, the transaction must be held to be constructively fraudulent, and that a court of equity will raise a constructive trust and fasten it upon the conscience of the holder of the legal title, and convert such holder into a trustee for the party who, in equity, is regarded as the beneficial owner.
The ultimate facts stated in the last proposition are established by the evidence in this case, and are in substantial accordance with the findings of the two chancellors who, on different trials, heard the case below on both oral and written testimony. That such conveyances of property, made under such circumstances, are presumptively voidable there can be no reasonable doubt. This rule in equity is established by the great weight of authority both in England and this country, and is founded on principles of justice and morality. (Hoghton v. Hoghton, 15 Beav. 278; Cooke v. LaMotte, id. 234; Coutts v. Ackworth, 8 L. R. Eq. Cas. 558; Harvey v. Mount, 8 Beav. 439; Turner v. Collins, L. R. 7 Ch. App. 329; Burry v. Oppenheim, 26 Beav. 594; Ashton v. Thompson, 32 Minn. 25; Carter v. Tice, 120 Ill. 277; Highberger v. Stiffler, 21 Md. 338; 83 Am. Dec. 593; Noble v. Moses, 81 Ala. 530; 60 Am. Rep. 175; 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. sec. 962, note; Schouler on Dom. Relat. sec. 271.) In such cases courts of equity will interfere upon grounds of public policy, or, as often stated, for the preservation of mankind, and unless the donee can show affirmatively that the transaction is “a righteous one” it will be set aside.
It is contended by appellants that such is not the rule in this country, but that the. parental authority over the child is only a circumstance to be proved with others tending to establish undue influence; that notwithstanding a conveyance or gift be shown to have been made by the child to the parent at a time, though of full age, when the child was under the dominion of the parent, still the transaction cannot be impeached without some affirmative proof of the exercise of undue influence on the part of the parent, or that the parent was guilty of some fraud, imposition or wrongdoing in obtaining the advantage bestowed; and it is claimed that their contention is supported by the authority of the Supreme Court of the United States in Jenkins v. Pye, 12 Pet. 24. Counsel quote from the principal opinion in that case, where, in referring to the rule claimed to have been laid down by the English cases, it was said, among other things: “We * * * cannot discover anything to warrant the broad and unqualified doctrine contended for on the part of the appellees. All the cases are accompanied with some ingredient showing undue influence exercised by the parent operating on the fears or hopes of the child, and sufficient to show reasonable ground to presume that the act was not perfectly free and voluntary on the part of the child; and in some cases, although there may be circumstances tending, in some small degree, to show undue influence, yet if the agreement appears reasonable it has been considered enough to outweigh light circumstances, so as not to affect the validity of the deed.” “We should not be disposed to adopt or sanction the broad principle contended for, that a deed of a child to a parent is to be deemed prima facie void. It is undoubtedly the duty of courts carefully to watch and examine the circumstances attending transactions of this kind, when brought under review before them, to discover if any undue influence has been exercised in obtaining the conveyance. But to consider a parent disqualified to take a voluntary deed from his child without consideration, on account of their relationship, is assuming a principle at war with all filial as well as all parental duty and affection, and acting on the presumption that a parent, instead of wishing to promote the interest and welfare, would be seeking to overreach and defraud his child.” Hill on Trustees, 157, Nfewland on Contracts, 445, 446, Perry on Trusts, sec. 201, 1 Story’s Eq. Jur. sec. 306, and other authorities, are also cited by counsel as denying that conveyances made under such circumstances are prima facie invalid.
That the text books and reported decisions are not fully harmonious in their statement of the rule is certainly true. In, Jenkins v. Pye, the father paid a valuable, though perhaps an inadequate, consideration for the property conveyed, and the doctrine of laches was also applied as a ground for denying relief. In a separate opinion Mr. Justice Catron, while concurring in the decision of the case on the ground of laches, took issue with the opinion of the court delivered by Mr. Justice Thompson on the other branch of the case. In the subsequent cases of Taylor v. Taylor, 8 How. 184, and Allore v. Jewell, 94 U. S. 506, the doctrine as announced by the same court does not materially differ from the general current of authority on the subject, and the question of unreasonableness and unfairness in the transaction is made to cut an important figure. Judge Story, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, (vol. 1, sec. 309,) says: “The natural, and just influence which a parent has over a child fenders it peculiarly important for courts of justice to watch over and protect the interests of the latter, and therefore all contracts and conveyances whereby benefits are secured by children to their parents are objects of jealousy, and if they are not entered into with scrupulous good faith, and are not reasonable under the circumstances, they will be set aside, unless third persons have acquired an interest under them.” So in Perry on Trusts it is said, that while courts of equity will scrutinize conveyances of property by children to their parents, they are not prima facie void, but that there must be some affirmative proof of undue influence or other improper conduct to render the transaction void. But it is also said that “the position and influence of parent over a child are so controlling that the transaction should be carefully examined, and sales by a child to a parent must appear to be fair and reasonable.” So, also, in Hill on Trustees, 157, it is said that “every contract or conveyance whereby benefits are secured to parents by their children must be perfectly fair and reasonable in all its terms and circumstances, or otherwise it will be set aside.” It is true the author says that before this will be done it will be necessary to prove the exercise of undue influence, or to establish some other case of actual or constructive fraud against the parent. So,' too, in the citation from Newland on Contracts, the author makes the reasonableness of the transaction an important element. It is there said that equity has refused to interfere because of the mere relation of parent and child, especially where the agreement was reasonable, or entered into to effect a laudable purpose. In Oliphant v. Liversidge, 142 Ill. 160, this court, in sustaining a deed of gift from father to child, said (p. 170): “Nor does any presumption of fraud arise from the fact that the grantor is the father of the grantees. In the case of a gift from a child to a parent undue influence may be inferred from the relation itself, but never where the gift is from the parent to the child.” In Finucan v. Kendig, 109 Ill. 198, and Patterson v. Johnson, 113 id. 559, this court distinctly recognized the question of unreasonableness and improvidence in the transaction as an element to be considered in determining its binding force upon the parties. In the latter case such facts and circumstances were proved as showed the transaction a reasonable and proper one, and this court said (p. 572): “The record shows that there was no influence whatever used by the father to procure the deed, and that it was made by the daughters of their own volition. The making of the deed was a graceful tribute of filial affection.”
If a child ^possessing wealth should, while under parental control, though past minority, make a deed of gift of property of substantial value to his indigent parent, sufficient to maintain such parent in comfort, and even elegance, the remainder of his life, but reserving sufficient for his own needs, thus eliminating from the transaction all improvidence, all unreasonableness and all apparent unconscientiousness on the part of the parent, it might be justly contended that the rule would be a harsh one that would cast the burden of proof on the parent, or on those claiming under him, to prove that no undue influence was resorted to to obtain the gift. But where, as in this case, the transaction appears to have been an improvident and unreasonable one for the child to enter into, and one apparently involving the taking of an unconscionable advantage by the parent in accepting and retaining the property, there can be no doubt, from the standpoint of any well-considered case, that the burden of proof is cast upon the parent to prove that the transaction was, in the language often used, “a righteous one.” We agree, however, with the learned chancellor of the circuit court in holding that the gift by Annie 0. White of her interest in the paintings in controversy, to her mother, prior to the making of the deeds, was a reasonable and proper one, and there being no proof of any improper influence, the bill of sale making such gift should stand. Nor are we disposed to disturb the decree as to the leasehold interest of the appellee Pike. We have carefully considered the evidence and argument on this branch of the case and agree with the conclusion reached by the trial court.
Some alleged errors of the trial court in admitting and refusing to admit certain testimony have been insisted upon, but as they are not of controlling importance, and as the offered testimony would not have authorized a different decree, no necessity is' seen for extending this opinion in their discussion.
The decree of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.