delivered the opinion of the court.
While the numerous errors assigned present many questions of law and fact for our consideration, still we are in accord with the learned chancellor in his conclusion that the only serious questions necessary to be considered in the determination of the rights of the parties are as to whether in the execution of the release of December 19, 1899, there was present the element of duress and whether the release was given without consideration.
The evidence in this case is somewhat voluminous— too much so to permit of its being set forth at any great length in this opinion. Neither is it the essence of reaching a correct conclusion that it be set forth in extenso. We shall refer to what, in our judgment, seems most essential to fortify the conclusions to which we have arrived.
We cannot refrain from saying, as introductory to our views, that we are impressed with the insincerity of the pretenses and conduct of appellee and his brother Charles, and the utter unreliability of their evidence as a whole. . Their relations to this litigation abound in contradictions and inconsistencies. Their actions in this litigation and in the former suit on appeal, in this and the Supremó Court, show a studied purpose to befog the issues and unduly persecute appellant by involving the pleadings and issues in a maze of unnecessary cross-bills, answers and amendments to each. The injecting of the minor children of appellant into the case as cross-complainants was not done to serve any honest purpose, is plainly apparent, for as soon as the children lawfully could, they repudiated, as they should have done, the action of the intermeddlers prompted by appellee and Charles. The testimony of the latter will not be received as worthy of belief, except- as it may be corroborated by credible testimony or by facts and circumstances manifest from the relations of the parties not in dispute, or unless sustained by the evidence of witnesses whom we regard as worthy of belief.
The marital relations of appellant and her husband seem to have been strained for many years prior to June, 1899, when she and her husband, with a young lady traveling companion, took an European trip. On this trip the young lady referred to as a traveling companion was made one of the party by the husband. The relations of Charles Bonney with this woman and his attitude and actions with her were charged to he so scandalous that the health of appellant was much affected and she became very nervous and debilitated and continued in such condition for sometime thereafter. On the return from this European trip all semblance of marital felicity was abandoned and appellant and her husband parted. Appellee sympathized with appellant in the alleged moral delinquencies of his brother, her husband, and in that way gained appellant’s confidence. He proffered his services as an intermediary between the husband and wife, and arranged for the maintenance of appellant and her children, and subsequently for the divorce and allowances for alimony which culminated in the decree of December 19, 1899. In October, 1899, appellee arranged for appellant and her children, with a lady friend, to go to Europe, in pursuance of which the party so composed went to Borne; the expenses of the journey were provided through appellee. Failing remittances and being otherwise disturbed, appellant on November 13, 1899, left her companion and children in Borne and started for Chicago, where she arrived ten days later. On the day after her arrival she went to the bank and ascertained that the thirty-one bonds had been taken away by appellee eighteen days before. On making this discovery she attended with Mr. Frank P. Leffingwell, a member of the Chicago bar and a mutual friend of the family, at the office of appellee and demanded the return of her bonds. • Appellee, while failing to return the bonds, admitted their possession, claimed that the road was about to be sold to other parties, that her husband was assiduously working up the details, that knowledge of her presence would unnerve him, upset the deal, destroy the prospect of a sale and involve all concerned in ruin, and begged her to go to her mother in Clinton, Iowa, and stay until the sale of the road was accomplished, which he expected would be within a few days. Appellee then assured appellant that her bonds would be guaranteed by the purchaser of the road, and in that condition delivered to her. To these importunities appellant gave heed, with the request and upon the assurance that the progress of the sale as made should be communicated to her daily through Mr. Leffingwell.
In the early part of December negotiations were had by the parties looking to a divorce and a settlement of terms for suitable alimony.
A.ppellee was much concerned for the reputation of the Bonney family and desired that a divorce should not be sought for the marital infidelity of his brother Charles, and that a scandal of that nature should be avoided if possible. In the negotiations seeking a divorce with incident alimony, appellee represented his brother Charles. Appellant was represented by Major Connelly as her counsel, and Mr. Leffingwell advised appellant as a mutual friend anxious to avoid unnecessary friction, legal contest and resulting public notoriety. On December 14th negotiations proceeded to the point of disagreement; they, however, were resumed and concluded on the next day, December 15,1899. The terms of the agreement then reached, both as to the grounds upon which the divorce should be asked and the terms of the allowances for alimony and support of the children of the marriage, were as provided in the decree of divorce and alimony entered December 19, 1899. Appellant yielded her assent to the lesser charge of cruelty, instead of the more serious one of adultery, on which to rest her claim for divorce, and appellee appeared and testified in support of the charge of cruelty. At the making of the final agreement December 15th there were present Leffingwell, Connelly, appellee, Plumb, an attorney representing Charles Bonney, and Ankeny, a brother of appellant. We regard the testimony of Leffingwell, corroborated as it is by Major Connelly and Mr. Ankeny, as the most reliable and controlling in our solution of the disputed facts. While Plumb does say the bonds were referred to in the negotiations of December 14th and 15th, still on every other material point his evidence corroborates every material statement of Leffingwell, Connelly and Ankeny. Significant indeed is Plumb’s testimony that the substance of the agreement, although written by him and embodied in the decree of divorce, yet. neither in his writing nor in the decree of divorce is there any mention whatever made of the bonds, appellant’s release of them to appellee'or his brother, or a ratification of their final disposition by appellee. Leffingwell testifies that the whole subject of the negotiations of December 14th and 15th related to alimony and matters incident to the divorce suit, and the final agreement arrived at on December 15th was embodied in the decree of divorce; that no mention was made on either of these days of the thirty-one bonds, and that at no time were these bonds on either of those two days the subject of discussion. They did not enter in any manner into the alimony settlement. These statements are verified and sustained by the decree of December 19th and the testimony of the witnesses Connelly and Ankeny. These evidential facts must, as they do, control our judgment, as evidencing to our minds the fact that the decree states the terms agreed upon as a settlement of the alimony, and that nothing else was intended to be settled between any of the parties at that time. Mr. Leffingwell testifies that in the afternoon of the eighteenth or the morning of the nineteenth of December he received the first intimation from any source that appellee wanted or thought of asking appellant for a release of his liability for misappropriating the bonds, or that the bonds had been disposed of by him contrary to right. Appellee said to Leffingwell, “I suppose Margaret will have no objection to giving me a release on account of those bonds.” Leffingwell replied, “I don’t know; I will have to speak to her about that.” Leffingwell further says in his testimony that Charles Bonney and appellee both told him that if there was any fight in the matter on the part of Mrs. Bonney, Charles would put up—or they would put up—the biggest fight he knew how, to get the children and keep them; not that appellee would make a fight for the children, but he said Charles would, and Charles himself said emphatically he would. Leffingwell told all this to appellant. Under this statement, and just as she and Leffingwell were about to start for the court to the divorce hearing, on December 19th, without time for thought or in which to take counsel, and under a nervous strain resulting from the past ill-treatment of her husband, accentuated and increased by the threat of attempting to deprive her of her children, she signed the release in pencil and a blank sheet of paper in ink, both of which appear in the record. For this release no consideration whatever was given to or received by appellant. That the bonds were appellant’s, there can be no doubt from the proofs; the record so states; the husband and appellee have on several occasions admitted the fact, and their denial of that fact on the trial and their pretenses to the contrary cannot be received as overcoming or in any way weakening such convincing proof. Such pretenses and denial belie all the cogent evidential facts proving appellant’s ownership of the bonds.
The proofs undeniably show that appellant at and since her marriage has been possessed of valuable real estate and some personal property obtained from her father; that at the time of her marriage neither her husband nor appellee had any appreciable financial means. Appellee was a bank clerk on a small salary, and subsequently went into business with his brother Charles, ostensibly in the real estate business, although they also did some promoting, notably of the street car line on Twenty-second street in Chicago. That firm had not been dissolved at the time of the transactions here involved, the statements of appellee to the contrary notwithstanding. The bank account was not changed, neither was the firm’s name. Bonney Bros, continued ostensibly to be associated in active business, with both members of the firm participating. As such firm they appeared to their bankers, by continuing their account in the firm name. Irrespective of which particular member drew checks, either by habit or agreement, they both used the bank funds in the firm bank account, both for their business and individual purposes. Appellant entrusted to Bonney Bros, her business affairs for eleven years, during which time they sold her real estate and received the proceeds, made reinvestments of her property, and at times took title in the name of others; they likewise used her money and property indiscriminately, as they saw fit, regardless of her right and their duty, and as her financial agents at no time made any accounting to her of their dealings with her property. But appellee pretends to have stated an account before the master in which 321 vouchers are produced, most of which are checks payable to Charles L. Bonney, as are admittedly vouchers 218 to 264, aggregating the sum of $26,982.14. These items cover a series of years, and every dollar received by Charles L. Bonney, however used by him, whether personally or in his family, was charged to appellant. The Bonney Bros, seem to have assumed that appellant’s estate and property was their own, to be used by them as they saw fit, and that she was to bear the burden of every expense. In such fashion did they use her estate, and to that extent they charged her account. By such methods and by like artifices they bring appellant into their debt $47,102.61, in which is included an item of $6,558.11, as interest on moneys claimed to have been advanced for her account. This account serves but one useful purpose, viz.: to verify the fact that the bonds were appellant’s, and in this respect it is flatly contradictory to the oath of Lawton C. Bonney that the thirty-one railroad bonds were not appellant’s, for in his eagerness to swell the amount of this pretended claim, appellant is charged $9,000 as the value of these thirty-one bonds, which Lawton C. Bonney, without right and in violation of the confidence placed in his assumed integrity by appellant, and in abuse of that trust and confidence, disposed of them, and refused .either to restore them on demand or pay their value, and now adds to his inexcusable and questionable conduct by denying that the bonds were appellant’s at all.
The fallacy of the contention of appellee, that the release was given by appellant to him for a valuable consideration, arises from the unwarranted assumption that the money and notes delivered and the real estate conveyed to Lamb as trustee for appellant and her children moved from him and not from his brother Charles, and that the consideration for this property was the settlement of not only appellant’s claim to the thirty-one bonds, but any other claim that she might have against him, and the further contention that the payment of the $2,500 in cash and the giving of the notes amounting to $10,000, which he obligated himself to pay, placing himself as to the notes in the position of. a surety, was a consideration for the release. In the first place, we have grave doubts, from the trend of the evidence in this record, that if appellee should pay the notes himself he would then have requited appellant in the amount which would be her due on a fair accounting for money received by the firm of Bonney Bros, from the proceeds of her property, for which, as a member of that firm, he would be personally liable to her to pay. The real estate conveyed to Lamb was largely obtained with money and property rightfully belonging to appellant; this the greater weight of the evidence, to our minds, abundantly proves. Then again, whatever appellee did in the financial settlement with appellant set forth in the divorce decree, and whatever obligation or responsibility he assumed, was done and assumed for and in the interest of his brother Charles. Appellee was anxious to avoid a scandal which would become public should appellant seek a divorce for Charles’ marital infidelity, and to escape such a scandal he was willing, if not anxious, for family reasons, to appease and mollify her. This is partly evident from the fact that he testified on the trial to sustain the less seriously regarded charg’e of cruelty. The financial settlement was equally beneficial to appellee. As a member of the firm of Bonney Bros, he was liable to account to appellant for all his firm’s dealings with her property. In the unsettled condition of their affairs it was to their mutual advantage to get appellant’s claims settled and out of the way. They were anxious to protect their credit with their bank, which was carrying large loans for them, and in their efforts to reorganize the street car line it was essential to success that they should not be hampered by claims for accounting, with resulting attacks upon their business methods and financial dealings. Appellee’s brother Charles had been derelict in his marriage vows; he had treated his wife badly, as was established upon the trial for divorce by the testimony of appellee. He was not only his brother, but his partner, and it was only natural that appellee should desire a settlement for his brother, and through such settlement find an escape from the disagreeable and compromising effects of the situation. For the financial part of the difficulties appellee was equally responsible with his brother Charles to appellant. All these considerations demonstrate conclusively, we think, that appellee was acting in his own interest and that of his brother Charles in the settlement that was made with appellant. That the settlement was for alimony according to the terms of the decree, and nothing else. This being the conclusion to which we have arrived, it is clear, regardless of all other questions, that the release from appellant to appellee was given without consideration and is invalid, and that a court of equity, on that ground alone, has jurisdiction to grant the relief which appellant has prayed in her bill.
We are firmly convinced that appellee took advantage of appellant’s weak and nervous condition in threatening to help her husband resist her desire for a divorce and to deprive her of the custody of her children, as a means to the end of procuring, without consideration, a release from the liability cast upon him by the law in misappropriating appellant’s thirty-one railroad bonds, and that he selected as the crucial moment in which best to accomplish his malign purpose the eve of the hearing of the divorce suit. Appellee unquestionably took an undue advantage of appellant, and used threats of resistance to her application for a divorce and of robbing her of the custody of her children to procure the release without consideration. Such conduct very nearly, if not quite, oversteps the line where free action ceases and duress results.
LefBngwell, however, admits that while appellant was much agitated and fearful lest she lose control of her children, according to the threats made, and believing that her husband and appellee would resort to unscrupulous means to make possible the carrying out of their threats, yet she knew what she was doing at the time and the consequences which would follow the execution of the release. It is apparent that appellant’s situation was fraught with much difficulty, and her freedom of action, if not suspended, much curtailed. While, if there was an adequate consideration for the release, the circumscribing of the will of the party would not be regarded as sufficient to establish duress and thereby avoid it, on the other hand, where there is, as in this case, a total lack of consideration, the threats made and the undue advantage exercised will be circumstances of a controlling character with the courts in according relief from a contract or conveyance so unfairly and inequitably obtained. The rule is thus laid down in section 948, Pomeroy’s Bq. Juris.: “ * * * Whenever one person is in the power of another, so that a free exercise of his judgment and will would be impossible, or even difficult, and whenever a person is in pecuniary necessity and distress, so that he would be likely to make any undue sacrifice, and advantage is taken of such condition to obtain from him a conveyance or contract which is unfair, made upon an inadequate consideration and the like, even though there be no actual duress or threats, equity may relieve defensively or affirmatively.” Buford v. Louisville etc. R. R., 82 Ky. 286; Dingman v. Romine, 141 Mo. 466.
We think that a presumption of invalidity of the release arises from the circumstances of the threats made and of the undue advantage taken of appellant’s necessities and her enfeebled health and nervous condition. Although we do not deem it necessary to, nor do we, place our decision upon the ground that the release was procured by duress, it is sufficient to avoid it that it was exacted without any consideration.
Willetts v. Willetts, 104 Ill. 122, was a case where the wife entered into an agreement for separate maintenance, in which she was overreached by her husband, and the settlement was not commensurate with his estate. It was executed by her while she was in a weakened condition of health and suffering from harsh treatment at the hands of her husband. She filed a bill to set aside all the papers relating to the contract for separate maintenance and for a separate maintenance and a suitable allowance. The trial court granted the relief prayed, set aside the contract of the wife, decreed her separate maintenance with a suitable allowance for that purpose. The decree was affirmed by the Appellate Court in the Second District, and in affirming the decision of the Appellate Court the Supreme Court say: “We are of opinion that no cause is found requiring that the decree of the Circuit Court should be disturbed. The deeds and contracts and other papers which are set aside by the decree of the Circuit Court were executed and accepted by Mrs. Willets under such circumstances that we think the court was fully warranted in the conclusion that her acts were so far affected by the undue influence of her husband that she has a right to have the same set aside.” Applying this to the case at bar, we find that the release sought to be avoided was not only executed by undue influence of the husband, but by the coercion and improper influence of appellee. By parity of reasoning appellant is as much entitled to avoid her release as was the complainant in the Willetts case her contract of separate maintenance.
While we do not regard it as at all essential to a correct determination of the rights of the parties to this record to decide the applicability or not of the doctrine of res adjudicaba fully presented by the pleadings and argued by counsel in their respective briefs, yet we will advert briefly to the litigation preceding this cause, as necessarily a part of the history of the case at bar and helpful in solving the rights of the parties here.
Charles L. Bonney refusing to pay any of the $2,500 notes given on account of alimony, appellant proceeded against him in the original cause by filing a petition for a rule on him to show cause why he did not pay. The court refused to grant the rule, and on appellant’s bringing the record to this court for review, we reversed the decision of the Circuit Court and directed it to grant the rule to show cause as prayed in the petition. Bonney v. Bonney, 98 Ill. App. 129.
On February 14,1902, Charles L. Bonney filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Cook county, setting up the conveyance to Lamb as trustee of the property constituting the alimony allowed by the decree of divorce between him and appellant of December 19,1899, claiming a reversion in one-half upon the death of appellant. He alleged non-residence and waste on the part of Lamb as grounds for his removal as trustee. Charles L. Bonney, without notice to Lamb, filed “an amended supplemental bill,” in which he made his wife and chil-' dren, the appellee and the People’s Trust & Savings Bank parties, and prayed, after attacking the actions preceding the decree of divorce and the settlement of alimony made in that decree, and impugning appellant’s and Lamb’s conduct, charging fraud of both in many matters specified, for an accounting; that the decree for alimony be reviewed and modified; that the four notes for $2,500 each be considered canceled; that a new trustee be appointed, and for a preliminary injunction enjoining suits commenced or which might be commenced on the notes. To the latter bill, Mr. Lamb, appellant and the bank filed a general and special demurrer. Appellee, after answering, filed a cross-bill, setting up the same matters set out in the “amended and supplemental bill” and substantially the same matters appearing in the cross-bill in the case at bar. Appellee made all persons in his brother’s bill, including his brother, defendants, and prayed inter alia for an accounting between appellant and Bonney Bros., between Charles and appellant for moneys advanced by him for family expenses; that Lamb be removed as trustee and another appointed, to whom Lamb should account; that the interest of appellant and the children, if any, in the property be determined; that the interest of appellee in the real estate be'.set off in severalty; that the $2,500 in cash be returned to him, etc.,—in substance the identical relief prayed by the present cross-bill.
To this cross-bill Lamb, the bank and appellant filed a general and special demurrer. The children, by a guardian ad litem, answered, and filed a cross-bill, claiming, that they were the absolute owners of one-half of the property. The demurrers to the “amended and supplemental bill” of Charles was sustained, and he took leave to amend within five days; but instead of doing so, he filed an amendment to his original bill. It being made to appear that he had not complied with the order last referred to, his “amended and supplemental bill” was dismissed by the court, and the amendment to the original bill, having been filed without leave, was stricken from the files. The demurrers to the cross-bill of appellee were sustained, and it was likewise' dismissed by the court. The cause was referred to a master on the issues made by the minors. The master heard evidence and filed his report, upon the coming in of which the Circuit Court entered the following order:
“This cause coming on to be heard upon the pleadings and upon the report of the master to whom the same was referred, and it appearing that the Bank, Lamb and Margaret”—appellant—“were necessary parties to this suit and that their demurrers were sustained to the bill of complaint as amended, and that complainant elected to stand by his bill as amended, therefore ordered, that said master’s report be approved and the bill of complaint as amended be dismissed for want of equity as to Lamb, Bank and Margaret, and dismissed for want of necessary parties as to the remainder of said defendants. That all cross-bills be dismissed for want of necessary parties. That all defendants to said bill as amended recover costs against complainant and have execution therefor.”
From this decree Charles L. Bonney appealed to this court, and appellee and the minors appeared and filed cross-errors. This court, on February 25,1904, in case general number 11,158, in an opinion not reported, affirmed the decree of the Circuit Court. Charles sought a further review in the Supreme Court, where all of the parties appeared by counsel, and the decree of the Circuit Court and the judgment of this court were affirmed. Bonney v. Lamb, 210 Ill. 95.
The foregoing recitation of the nature of the litigation preceding this, we think, clearly demonstrates the futility and vexatiousness of the extended issues made in the pleadings filed and inspired by appellee in the case at bar; and we can only see in such actions a studied and maliciously designed plan to harass, annoy and tire out appellant in her legitimate contest in seeking to establish her legal rights and to procure the decision of the courts in affirmance of them. The Supreme Court in case supra, in characterizing the pleadings, said: ‘£ This record consists almost wholly of the pleadings filed by the several parties to the suit, which in many instances are very voluminous, and it would serve no useful purpose to incorporate even the substance thereof in this opinion.”
Our conclusion is that the report and recommendations of the master correctly define the rights of the parties. The decree of the Circuit Court is therefore reversed and the cause remanded to that court with directions to enter a decree in accordance with the recommendations of the master’s report, including the dismissal of all the cross-bills, and that the in junctional order of December 23, 1902, be vacated and set aside.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.