CONTINENTAL ILLINOIS NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY OF CHICAGO,
v.
DONALD MERRILL CLANCY et al., Appellants. (FRANK B. CLANCY et al., Appellees.)
Supreme Court of Illinois.
*125 MacLEISH, SPRAY, PRICE & UNDERWOOD, of Chicago, (WINFIELD T. DURBIN, of counsel,) for appellants.
TENNEY, SHERMAN, BENTLEY & GUTHRIE, of Chicago, (KENNETH B. HAWKINS, of counsel,) for appellees.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. JUSTICE DAVIS delivered the opinion of the court:
This case presents a question of the construction of an inter vivos trust limiting gifts over to "issue" and "grandchildren" of the settlor. The plaintiff, Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago, as trustee, filed its complaint to construe a trust agreement entered into by Merrill C. Clancy on July 5, 1928. The sole questions raised by the pleadings are whether the defendant Donald Merrill Clancy is a legally adopted son of the settlor's son, Leslie M. Clancy, and whether he is a beneficiary under the irrevocable trust. The trial court held that neither Donald Merrill Clancy nor the issue of his body had any interest in the principal or income of the trust. Upon appeal the Appellate Court affirmed (
The pertinent language of the trust agreement sought to be construed is as follows:
"THIRD: Commencing with the date hereof, to pay the net income * * in equal shares, per stirpes, to the lawful issue of said party of the first part, [Merrill C. Clancy] from time to time surviving until the termination of this trust, * * *.
"FOURTH: This trust shall terminate upon the death of the last survivor of FRANK B. CLANCY, LESLIE M. CLANCY, MARION C. ATHERTON and LAURA L. CLANCY, children of said party of the first part, and upon the termination of this trust, said Trustee shall pay over, * * * in equal shares, to such of the grandchildren of said party of the first part as shall then be surviving, provided, *126 however, that if any grandchild of said party of the first part shall have died, leaving lawful issue then surviving, said Trustee shall pay to such issue the share to which the said grandchild, their parent, would have been entitled, * * *.
"FIFTH: In the event that upon the termination of this trust, there shall be no grandchildren of said party of the first part, nor lawful issue of any deceased grandchild of said party of the first part then surviving, said Trustee shall pay over, convey and deliver all of the principal or corpus of said trust estate to said party of the first part, if he shall be living at that time, and if not, then to the heirs at law of said party of the first part, * * *."
The theory of the defendant Donald Merrill Clancy is that he is the legally adopted son of the settlor's deceased son, Leslie M. Clancy; and that in the light of surrounding circumstances he is included in the word "issue" in the third paragraph and in the word "grandchildren" in the fourth paragraph of the trust. The other defendants, appellees here, insist that the trust is unambiguous and that the defendant Donald Merrill Clancy cannot qualify as either "issue" or a "grandchild" of the settlor. They further contend that he was not a legally adopted child of Leslie M. Clancy.
The settlor, Merrill C. Clancy, was born in 1858 and achieved success as a real-estate developer and builder in Illinois. Four children were born of his first marriage: Leslie, Marion, Frank and Laura. His first wife died in 1903, and the settlor and his children moved to Spokane where they lived until his second marriage to Estelle Baxter in August, 1916. Shortly before this marriage he created a revocable inter vivos trust consisting of $300,000 in securities which he segregated from his other assets. The income was to go to his four children or their lawful issue per stirpes until 1937 when the corpus was to be distributed to his surviving children or their "lawful issue."
In July, 1928, the settlor created the irrevocable trust in question. At that time his four children were living. Marion had two children, born in 1920 and 1923; Frank had one, born in 1920; and Laura, unmarried, had none. *127 Neither Marion, Frank nor Laura had adopted any children. In 1923, Leslie and his then wife, residents of Nebraska, who had no children, obtained a baby boy for adoption from the Christian Home Orphanage in Council Bluffs, Iowa. A formal adoption agreement was entered into in April, 1924, but was never recorded. The boy, the defendant-appellant, was named Donald Merrill Clancy. None of the children of Merrill C. Clancy, the settlor, ever had other children either adopted or born of their body. Merrill Clancy died March 28, 1949, leaving his four children surviving him. Leslie died on June 29, 1954, and thereafter the trustee instituted this suit for construction of the trust.
The case was heard below upon voluminous depositions and stipulations of fact. We have carefully examined the entire record, and, while there are conflicts in the testimony, many of the surrounding circumstances are undisputed. The settlor knew Donald well for about a year and a half prior to the execution of the 1928 trust. He apparently liked the boy and did not distinguish him or treat him in a manner different from the grandchildren of his blood. He knew Donald was not born of the blood of Leslie, but apparently did not question the legal sufficiency of the adoption proceedings. There is some testimony that occasionally when speaking to strangers, the settlor would introduce Donald as his grandson.
In construing this trust instrument, we must seek the intention of the settlor, insofar as it is ascertainable. In this effort we look first within the four corners of the instrument, (Storkan v. Ziska,
*128 Under the language of the trust instrument, the first gift of income was to the settlor's lawful issue per stirpes. Upon termination, the trust was to be distributed to the settlor's grandchildren or their lawful issue. In default of grandchildren or their lawful issue, the corpus was to go to the settlor's heirs-at-law. Even if we assume that Donald Merrill Clancy was legally adopted by the settlor's son prior to 1928, he would not ordinarily be included under the terms "lawful issue" or "grandchildren" under the law and statutes in force in 1928.
The term "issue" was then synonymous with "descendants" and meant those descending or issuing out of the stock or blood. It did not include strangers to the blood. (Stewart v. Lafferty,
While we are reluctant to construe the legal meaning of a written instrument by resort to surrounding circumstances, (Mitchell v. Snyder,
We do not consider that case controlling here. We there pointed out that a failure to so construe the will would result in a partial intestacy, and the courts should adopt any reasonable construction of a will, consistent with its terms, to avoid that result. (
Nor do we have a situation, like that in Coon v. McNelly,
In the case at bar, the settlor clearly excluded his wife and step-children and step-grandchildren from the benefits *130 of the trust. He named a specific class of takers his lawful issue. His intention, as expressed by the language of the trust, is not irrational and absurd, but consonant with long standing instincts and traditions. (Keegan v. Geraghty,
Counsel, however, contend that the decision of the California court in In re Clancy's Estate,
The California court, in construing the language of the will, was also faced with far different provisions. In the will itself, Donald was referred to as a grandchild of the testator; and he took under the will not as issue of the testator, but as issue of Leslie. The adoption statutes in effect in 1957 were much more liberal than those of 1928, and California courts were then stressing that it was public *131 policy to treat adopted children the same as blood children in the absence of a contrary expression by the testator. (
We have also examined other foreign cases cited by counsel in which "issue" or "children" have been construed to include adopted children. Most of these are collected in
This court is without omniscience to know what was in Merrill Clancy's mind in 1928 when he executed this trust. We do know, however, that with the aid of able counsel, he used well understood terms to limit the trust to his issue the descendants of his blood per stirpes. The mere fact that the settlor was very fond of the child Donald, not of his blood, assumed to have been adopted by the settlor's son, does not make this disposition unnatural or illogical.
From all the evidence in the record most favorable to Donald, we cannot find a clear intent to include him in the blood group for whom this trust, by its terms, was established. It is suggested that the intent to exclude Donald could have been more explicit. However, an intention to include him could readily have been expressed and would seem to appear as essential to one trained in drafting such instrument. We therefore conclude that the surrounding circumstances do not indicate an intention of the settlor *132 contrary to the settled meaning of the language used. It follows that the trial court and Appellate Court were correct in holding that Donald Merrill Clancy and his issue have no interest in the 1928 trust.
In reaching the foregoing conclusion we have assumed that Donald was the legally adopted son of Leslie Clancy. Consequently, it is unnecessary to determine the legality of the adoption proceedings. The decision of the Appellate Court in affirming the trial court is accordingly affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
