delivered the opinion of the Court:
This case, in all its essential features, is like Frazier v. Miller, 16 Ill. 49, and falls within the authority of that decision. A father, upwards of seventy years of age, induced by the promise of his son to support him and his almost equally aged wife, in comfort during the remainder of their lives, conveyed his farm to his son’s wife, and transferred to his son all his personal property. The son took possession of the farm, and, by his continued unkiudness and ill treatment, in little upwards of a year compelled his parents to leave and take refuge with another child. This bill is brought by the father to rescind the contract, and the circuit court so decreed.
• Cases of this sort are rare in our books, as, fortunately for our comriion humanity, they are rare in actual life. But, as was said by this court in Frazier v. Miller, supra, when they do occur they appeal so strongly to the conscience of the court for relief, that if the rescission of the contract can not be referred to any other head of equity jurisdiction, it would be proper to presume that it was made in the first instance with a fraudulent intent.
On the evidence in this record, such a presumption is not merely reasonable but irresistible. No accident or misfortune, or unforeseen event of any kind, has prevented the son from executing his agreement. His refusal shows not only a wanton disregard of the obligations of a contract, more binding upon the conscience than almost any other that coxild be made, but a degi-ee of filial inhxunanity rarely seen. As the record discloses no provocation of any sort, nor any attempt at justification, the inference is unavoidable, that the son procured the deed from his aged father for the very purpose of doing precisely what he has done. The transaction was a gross abuse of the' confidence reposed by the almost imbecile parent in his son, and is tainted throughout by a fraudulent intent, which ripened into a wicked consummation. The circuit court, properly pronounced a decree rescinding the deed.
There is, however, a minor error in the decree, doubtless the result of inadvertence, which needs correction. Pettijohn was made a party to the suit, as tenant in possession. He seems to have had no other interest. The decree requires the complainant to pay to the defendants the sum of $218.00, designed, we presume, as' compensation for improvements. As this payment is to be made to the defendants generally, without naming which of them, Pettijohn would be entitled to claim his share of the money, although we presume the court did not design any should be paid to him.. In order that the decree may be modified, the cause will be remanded. The court below divided the costs in that court, and they will be divided here, one half to be taxed against plaintiffs in error, and one half against the defendant in error.
Decree modified.