| Ill. | Nov 14, 1885

Mr. Justice Scholeield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was forcible entry and detainer by appellee, against appellant, under the sixth clause of section 2, chapter 57, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, for the possession of certain real estate which appellee claimed to have purchased at a sale by a trustee, pursuant to the power in a deed of trust.

Appellee gave in evidence, upon the trial in the Superior Court, among other things, the deed of trust, and the deed by the trustee to himself. Appellant, in defence, offered parol evidence, to prove that the trustee in fact made no sale, that appellee had paid nothing for the property, and that it was worth $30,000, and constituted appellant’s homestead; but the court held the evidence inadmissible, and refused to hear it,—and this is the first and principal error for which it is contended the judgment below should be reversed. Very clearly the ruling was right. This is not a suit in equity to set aside the trustee’s deed, but an action at law, in which legal, as contradistinguished from equitable, principles, must control. Conceding, as contended by counsel for appellant, that it is the sale, and not the conveyance, of title which authorizes the recovery, still the deed is conclusive evidence of the sale. If the deed is not fraudulent and void, but conveys the title to the property, there must have been a sale; and hence it comes to the question whether the deed, in an action at law, can be contradicted, and proved to have been executed in violation of law, and so to be fraudulent and void.

The rule is familiar, wherever the distinction between law and equity is preserved, that in a trial at law, fraud in the execution of a deed, may be given in evidence, as that, through misreading, or the substitution of one paper for another, or by other device and trickery, he was induced to seal it, believing, at the time, that he was sealing something else; and it may also he proved that what purports to be a deed, is in truth not a deed, but a forged instrument; but it can not be proved that the transactions which preceded and induced the execution of the deed were fraudulent. Where a party knowingly and voluntarily signs a deed, although he do so in violation of his duty and of the laws, or be induced thereto by the fraudulent contrivances of others, yet if it be such, upon its face, as will convey title, it can only be impeached and set aside, and parol evidence be received for that purpose, in a court of equity. Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, (Bump’s ed.) 332; Story’s Eq. Jur. (6th ed.) sec. 437; Taylor v. King, 6 Munf. 358; 8 Am. Dec. 748, note. This rule has been repeatedly applied by this court to cases in nowise distinguishable, in principle, from the present case. Reece v. Allen, 5 Gilm. 236; Graham v. Anderson, 42 Ill. 514" date_filed="1867-01-15" court="Ill." case_name="Graham v. Anderson">42 Ill. 514; Dawson v. Hayden, 67 id. 52; Rice v. Brown, 77 id. 549; Chapin v. Billings, 91 id; 539 ; Equitable Trust Co. v. Fisher, 106 id. 189; Kepley v. Luke, id. 395.

The objection pressed in argument to the ruling, of the trial court in admitting’ in evidence certain chancery proceedings and decrees, is not material, since all the evidence offered by appellant having been properly ruled out, his defence was gone,- and appellee was entitled to judgment. It is enough to say that nothing in the chancery suit militates against the legal title of appellee'. The primary object of that suit was to enjoin the sale, and that not having been done, as affected by the supplementary bill, its ultimate object was to set aside the sale and enjoin the present suit. The final decree confirmed appellee’s title, and the fact that a cross-bill by him, praying its confirmation, was dismissed, did not impair that decree. If it be conceded these chancery proceedings do not strengthen appellee’s legal title, it must also, at the same time, be conceded they do not weaken it. At most, they are but useless lumber in the record. At law appellee has the legal title, and by virtue of it the immediate right of possession, and it properly prevailed.

The judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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