18 N.E.2d 202 | Ill. | 1938
Robert C. Gunnell and E. Mitchell Gunnell filed a bill in the circuit court of Knox county to quiet title to certain real estate in the city of Galesburg. Among the defendants named were the unborn descendants of Robert C. and E. Mitchell Gunnell, and a trustee was appointed by the court to represent their interests. From a decree granting complainants complete title in fee simple, the trustee appeals directly to this court, a freehold being involved.
Anna Chappell Gunnell died testate in 1924, seized of an undivided one-half interest in the real estate here involved, together with a mortgage on the other undivided one-half interest, title to which was in her brother. Mrs. Gunnell devised a life-estate in her one-half interest in the property to her husband with a remainder for life to each of her two sons. At the death of either son, his share was to vest in his descendants, but if he should die without descendants surviving, the entire remainder was to go to the descendants of the other son. If both sons should die leaving no descendants surviving, then the remainder was to vest in Lombard College and Galesburg Cottage Hospital.
In 1928, in the course of administering the estate, the executor obtained an order from the county court of Knox *208 county directing him to sell her one-half interest in this property for the payment of debts. Named as defendants to that proceeding were the devisees of the property, the life tenants, the unborn descendants of testatrix' two sons, (represented by a guardian ad litem appointed by the court,) Lombard College and Galesburg Cottage Hospital. The property was purchased from the executor by Robert C. Gunnell, one of the complainants, and the county court entered a final order approving the sale and directing the issuance of a deed to the purchaser. No appeal was taken from this final order. The executor also foreclosed the mortgage on the other undivided one-half interest in the property and the certificate of purchase was bought by E. Mitchell Gunnell, the other complainant here. In February, 1938, Robert C. and E. Mitchell Gunnell brought this suit to quiet title to the entire property. Among other possible defects in title, the bill alleged that neither Robert C. Gunnell nor E. Mitchell Gunnell has ever had any issue or descendants, but if any should be born such issue or descendants might claim an interest in the property by virtue of the will of Anna Chappell Gunnell. The circuit court, pursuant to a statute which became effective July 1, 1929, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 22, par. 6,) appointed R.L. Stuart as trustee of the interests of such unborn descendants and thereafter entered a decree confirming title in fee simple in complainants.
Generally, orders and decrees of a court, in any case in which jurisdiction has attached, are not open to contradiction or reexamination in any collateral proceeding. (Moffitt v. Moffitt,
Under the authority of these cases, it is clear that the county court had jurisdiction to enter an order binding the unborn descendants of Robert C. and E. Mitchell Gunnell. All the parties in being who had any interest in the property were before that court — the life tenants and the remote *210 contingent remaindermen. Regardless of whether the interests of the life tenants were adverse to those of the unborn descendants, we think the interests of such unborn descendants were adequately protected, here, by the presence of the alternative contingent remaindermen. It is true that their interests were more remote, yet in so far as the issues raised by the petition to sell such real estate to pay debts were concerned, the interest of such unborn children on the one hand, and the interest of Lombard College and Galesburg Cottage Hospital on the other, were identical. Until such time as there should be children born of one of the plaintiffs, the interests of the unborn children and of Lombard College and Galesburg Cottage Hospital were all contingent. All stood to have their contingent interests in the property extinguished should it be necessary to sell the same to pay debts of the estate, and all stood to retain such contingent interests should the prayer of the petition be denied.
In response to the allegations of fraud and collusion, we have examined the evidence of the transactions by which the two life tenants were able to cut off the interests of contingent remaindermen and acquire a fee simple in the devised property. While transactions of this character must be scrutinized more carefully than if the purchasers had been disinterested third parties, this fact, alone, is not sufficient to establish fraud and collusion. (Sheahan v. Madigan, supra; Reinhardt v. Seaman,
The constitutionality of the statute under which the circuit court appointed a trustee in the present proceeding to represent the unborn descendants of Robert C. and E. Mitchell Gunnell, is challenged. It is said the statute will deprive persons of property without due process of law because parties not in being cannot be given notice and an opportunity to be heard. As we have already indicated, the equitable doctrine of representation permits foreclosure of the interests of unborn contingent remaindermen where their rights are represented by parties properly before the court. We think the statute in question is, in part, designed to further safeguard those interests so represented. More important, the interests of unborn persons may more readily be brought within the jurisdiction of the court, when they are not otherwise represented, and a final determination of conflicting claims may be made with dispatch. The essentials of due process are fully satisfied by the provision in the statute which authorizes a court to appoint some competent and disinterested person as trustee of the interests of those not in being. (Loring v. Hildreth,
The decree is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.