84 N.E.2d 380 | Ill. | 1949
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *418 This is a suit in equity filed in the circuit court of Peoria County for the partition of 200 acres of farm lands belonging to Peter Cahill, now deceased, and for the construction of his will. The case hinges solely on the construction to be applied to the third clause of the will which is the only clause before us for consideration on appeal. The clause reads as follows: "I give and devise to my nephew, Alexander P. Cahill, of Brimfield, Ill., the following: The South Half of the Southwest Quarter of Section Thirty (30), and the Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of section Thirty (30) and the Southwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section Thirty (30), all in Township Ten (10) North, Range Six (6) East of the 4th P.M., and the Southeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section Twenty-five (25), in Township Ten (10) North. Range Five (5) East of the 4th P.M., all of above described land being in the County of Peoria, and State of Illinois, upon the death of said Alexander P. Cahill said described property to become the property of his Heirs of Blood."
Alexander P. Cahill died testate January 6, 1947, leaving neither widow nor descendants. His heirs were his mother, Mary Cahill, his sister, Mary Cahill Roy, and the appellants, who are the children of his deceased brother, George Cahill. By his will he devised and bequeathed his entire estate to his sister, Mary Cahill Roy.
The appellants alleged in their complaint that the heirs-at-law of Alexander were Mary Cahill, his mother, Mary *419 Cahill Roy, his sister, Fabian George Cahill, his nephew, Rita Rosella Cahill Reinhardt, his niece, and Roderick Francis Cahill, his nephew; that each of said persons is an heir of blood of Alexander and together constitute his only "Heirs of Blood," and pray that the third paragraph of said will be construed to give Alexander a life estate and that upon his death the real estate vest in said "Heirs of Blood" in the following proportions, to-wit: Mary Cahill, an undivided one-third, Mary Cahill Roy, an undivided one-third, and Fabian George Cahill, Rita Rosella Cahill Reinhardt and Roderick Francis Cahill, an undivided one-ninth each, and prays that a decree for partition be entered. The complaint also alleges that Fabian George Cahill, Rita Rosella Cahill Reinhardt and Roderick Francis Cahill are the children of George Cahill, deceased, who was a brother of Alexander and who predeceased the said Alexander.
The appellees, Mary Cahill and Mary Cahill Roy, answered denying that the will of Peter Cahill devised only a life estate to Alexander P. Cahill and denying that the remainder vested in his heirs of blood at his death. Their answer further alleged that Alexander received a fee-simple title under said will but alleged that if the court should construe the will as giving Alexander only a life estate and the remainder to his heirs of blood, then, under such construction, the respective interests of such remaindermen were not as set up in the complaint, but that the appellee Mary Cahill would be seized of an undivided one-half, the appellee Mary Cahill Roy an undivided one-fourth, and each of the appellants an undivided one-twelfth thereof.
Appellee Mary Cahill Roy filed a counterclaim and asked for a construction of Peter Cahill's will, declaring that under and by virtue thereof the fee-simple title vested in Alexander P. Cahill.
The trial court decided the case on the pleadings, briefs and argument of counsel and held that the rule in Shelley's case applied to the third paragraph of the will of Peter *420 Cahill, and that by operation of said rule, Alexander P. Cahill received a fee-simple title to the premises which passed to the appellee Mary Cahill Roy, under the will of Alexander P. Cahill, upon his death, vesting in her fee-simple title.
It is contended by the appellants that (1) the court erred in overruling the plaintiff's motion to dismiss the amendment to answer and counterclaim. (2) The court erred in ruling that the rule in Shelley's case applied to the third paragraph of Peter Cahill's will; in holding that Alexander P. Cahill received a fee-simple title under the will of Peter Cahill; in holding that the defendant Mary Cahill Roy was now the fee-simple owner of the premises referred to in the third paragraph of the will; in dismissing the plaintiffs' complaint for want of equity and in ordering the defendant Wayne H. Mathis to account and pay over to the defendant Mary Cahill Roy the net proceeds of the rents and profits derived from said real estate. (3) The court erred in assessing the costs against the plaintiffs.
Appellees contend that (1) the third clause of Peter Cahill's will constituted an absolute devise to Alexander Cahill of the fee-simple title to the real estate therein described, and that the circuit court properly construed the will accordingly. (2) The circuit court properly dismissed the complaint for partition for want of equity. (3) The circuit court did not err in assessing the costs against the appellants. (4) The decree of the circuit court is in all respects correct and should be affirmed.
It is urged that the devise to Alexander comes within the rule in Shelley's case and further that the will should be construed as devising to Alexander an estate in fee by reason of the provisions of section 13 of the Conveyance Act, and upon the fact that by the fifth clause of the will the testator bequeathed to his brother, James W. Cahill, an annuity of $300, and made the same a lien upon the real estate devised to the testator's nephew George by the second *421 clause of the will and that devised to his nephew Alexander by the third clause, the testator expressly stating that in making the bequest a lien he intended thereby "that each of my said nephews, George and Alexander P. Cahill, shall pay to said James W. Cahill one-half of said annual legacy herein willed to him."
The first question for consideration is the character of the estate, whether for life or in fee, which the testator intended to devise to his nephew, Alexander. If it is manifest from the construction of the will as a whole, giving due weight to all the language used therein and every provision thereof, that the testator intended to confer on Alexander an estate in fee, then it is unnecessary to consider the rule in Shelley's case. This court has often held that the object to be attained in construing a will is to first ascertain the intention of the testator and then when such intention is ascertained, to give effect thereto if not in violation of public policy or some positive and established rule of law. (Hayden v. McNamee,
Section 13 of the Conveyance Act provides that every estate in lands which shall be granted, conveyed or devised, although words formerly necessary to transfer an estate of inheritance be not added, shall be deemed a fee-simple estate of inheritance, if a less estate be not limited by express words, or does not appear to have been granted, conveyed or devised by construction or operation of law. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 30, par. 12.) Before the passage of this act, the word "heirs" or an equivalent word was necessary in a grant, conveyance or devise to transmit the inheritance, and if such word was omitted a life estate only was created. (Baker v. Scott,
In the instant case the testator did not by express words limit the devise to Alexander to an estate for life only, but it is evident that he did not intend to give him anything more than a life estate. This is shown by the fact that he devised other lands to another nephew, George Cahill, who was a brother to Alexander and the father of appellants, adding to the devise the words "said property to become his to do with as he may desire." This is a strong indication that the testator appreciated the difference between a fee simple *423 and an estate for life, and that he intended his nephew George to have an estate in fee simple. The devise to George when considered in connection with the provision annexed to the devise to the nephew Alexander, that "upon the death of said Alexander P. Cahill said described property to become the property of his Heirs of Blood" indicates that he did not intend George and Alexander to have estates of the same character, but intended George to take an estate in fee simple and Alexander to take a life estate.
It is urged by appellees that the fifth clause of the will imposed a personal liability upon Alexander and is therefore sufficient to establish that he was devised a fee. This paragraph reads as follows: "I give to my brother, James W. Cahill, of Los Angeles, Cal., an annuity of Three Hundred (300) Dollars, to be paid him in quarterly installments of equal amounts during each year of his natural life. And I hereby make said bequest given to my said brother, James W. Cahill, a lien on the real estate hereinbefore willed respectively to my nephews George Cahill and Alexander P. Cahill, intending hereby that each of my said nephews, George and Alexander P. Cahill, shall pay to said James W. Cahill one-half of said annual legacy herein willed to him, in quarterly installments, as provided in said will, and this to continue until the death of said James W. Cahill; and said liens hereinabove constituted shall continue during the lifetime of said James W. Cahill."
Counsel, in support of their contention that this paragraph is sufficient to vest the fee in Alexander, cite the cases ofMcFarland v. McFarland,
The rule that where a gift is made subject to a personal charge against a devisee this tends to show the testator meant to pass a fee simple to such devisee is a rule of construction, the reason for the rule being that otherwise the devise might not prove a beneficial interest. (3 Page on Wills, 1089; McFarland v.McFarland,
It necessarily follows, since the will, when properly construed, discloses that the testator did not intend to devise to Alexander an estate in fee simple, but intended to give him an estate for life only, with remainder to his heirs of blood, the serious question presented is whether the rule in Shelley's case applies enlarging Alexander's life estate into an estate in fee simple. The rule in Shelley's case has been *425 stated in many different forms, none of which are essentially different.
One of the requisites of the rule in Shelley's case, and essential to its operation, is that the limitation of the remainder must be to the heirs of the first taker by the name of heirs as meaning a class of persons to succeed to the estate from generation to generation, and not to heirs as meaning or explained to be individuals, such as sons, children, or the like, of the person taking the first estate. (Baker v. Scott,
It is unnecessary and would only burden this opinion to point out the numerous cases under different situations in which the rule in Shelley's case is applied or denied. We are, however, of the opinion the decisions of this court hold that where in a grant or devise of a particular estate to an ancestor with a limitation in remainder to his heirs, there are added to the word "heirs" other words indicating that the heirs named as remaindermen do not include all persons who inherit as heirs or that they take as remaindermen a different estate from that which the law would give them as heirs, then the rule in Shelley's case
does not apply, but the grant or devise to the heirs takes effect as a contingent remainder to vest in the heirs as purchasers upon the termination of the particular estate. The will in this case devises a life estate to the testator's nephew, Alexander, and the remainder to his heirs of blood. Citation of authority or the persuasion of argument is unnecessary to show that such heirs are only those of his heirs who are related to him by consanguinity and would not include his widow, although the statute of this State has always, under certain conditions, made the widow an heir of her deceased husband, (Bundy v. Solon,
The next question pertains to the interpretation of the will to determine the amount or proportion that each of the life tenant's heirs of blood take as devisees of the remainder. This court has held that unless the intention of a testator is clearly manifest in his will, the courts construe a gift of property to a specified class as contemplating a division in analogy to the Statute of Descent. (Dollander v. Dhaemers,
The final contention is that the trial court erred in assessing the costs against the appellant. Under the statute of this State, costs in chancery cases, except where the plaintiff dismisses his own suit, or where the defendant has the suit dismissed for want of prosecution, rest in the discretion of the court. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 33, par. 18.) This discretion, however, must be exercised according to equitable rules and principles, or otherwise it is subject to review. (Highley v. Deane,
We have arrived at our determination in this case after an examination of many cases wherein the age-old rule in Shelly'scase has been invoked. We have not found, and no authority has been cited, wherein the phrase "his Heirs *429 of Blood" has been construed by this court and it has presented much difficulty of solution. From our analysis, however, of the instrument containing these words of direction, we are of the opinion the decree of the circuit court of Peoria County should be reversed. The cause is therefore remanded to that court, with directions to render a decree in conformity with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
Mr. JUSTICE DAILY took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.