13 N.E.2d 980 | Ill. | 1938
Herman Jahnke, William H. Selle, Marie Chambers and Minnie Breniman, uncles and aunts of Charles J. Jahnke, an intestate decedent, instituted proceedings for partition in the circuit court of DuPage county. Anna Selle, an aunt of said decedent, was made a party defendant, but the complaint alleged she had been adjudged a resident and an absentee decedent in the district court of Powesheik county, Iowa, and that her estate was fully administered, closed, and the assets distributed to her heirs, all of whom were made parties to this proceeding. Included among them was the appellant, Verne B. Selle. The complaint was amended, answers filed and evidence heard. The court entered a decree for partition which found that each of the uncles and aunts of decedent was entitled to an undivided one-fifth interest in the premises sought to be partitioned, and that the heirs of Anna Selle were entitled to the remaining one-fifth. The commissioners reported the land was not susceptible of division without manifest prejudice to the parties in interest and the court ordered it be sold by the master in chancery. Appellant gave notice of an appeal, but did not file a bond. The master proceeded to make sale of the land and reported his acts to the chancellor. His report was approved and the court ordered a distribution, dividing the proceeds into four parts instead of five, as was directed by the decree for partition. The portion excluded was the interest which was found to be in the heirs of Anna Selle. However, the decree for distribution provided that the plaintiffs give bond with security to indemnify and account to Anna Selle for the proceeds of her share, if she should be living, or to her heirs-at-law in the event it should hereafter appear that she, although not *270 now living or at any time hereafter not living, was, in fact, alive upon and immediately following the death of Charles J. Jahnke. Appellant gave notice of appeal from this decree and gave a bond. The appeals from both decrees were consolidated for hearing in this court.
Appellant claims that distribution should be ordered in eighths, one share each to the four living aunts and uncles, one to the missing aunt, and one share to each of the three groups of descendants of deceased uncles, who predeceased the intestate, to be divided among them per stirpes. He argues that paragraph 5 of section 1 of the Descent act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, p. 1217) should be so construed, or, if it cannot be so construed, it is unconstitutional as a special law changing the law of descent, in violation of section 22 of article 4 of the constitution of 1870.
Paragraph 5 of section 1 of the Descent act provides: "If there is no child of the intestate or descendant of such child, and no parent, brother or sister or descendant of such parent, brother or sister, and no widow or surviving husband, then such estate shall descend in equal parts to the next of kin to the intestate in equal degree (computing by the rules of civil law), and there shall be no representation among collaterals, except with descendants of brothers and sisters of the intestate; and in no case shall there be any distinction between the kindred of the whole and the half blood." In view of the very clear and explicit language of this section, there is no ground for the contention that heirs of deceased persons of the same degree as those inheriting shall take by representation. Appellant's contention is answered fully by the case of Chambers v. Chambers,
The claim that paragraph 5 of section 1 of the Descent act is unconstitutional as a special law changing the law of descent, is untenable. It applies to all persons falling within the class to which it relates. Such statutes are uniformly upheld as general laws. (Punke v. Village of Elliott,
Appellant also contends that no presumption of the death of Anna Selle was raised by the records of the Iowa court. He claims they were not properly authenticated as provided by the act of Congress relating thereto. (28 U.S.C.A. sec. 687.) Appellant did not object when the records were introduced in evidence, but made an objection when the case was reopened for additional evidence. He admitted they were then properly authenticated, insinuating *272
it had been done since the last hearing, but offered no proof of that. The records of the Iowa court were then reintroduced in evidence. They are properly authenticated and there was no error in admitting them in evidence. He next says that the Iowa proceedings, even if admissible, did not raise a presumption of death, but merely showed that Anna Selle was not in Iowa. The statutory requisites in Iowa for decreeing a person to be an absentee decedent, and for administering his estate, were that such person was a resident of Iowa, had without known cause absented himself from his usual place of residence, and had concealed his whereabouts from his family for seven years. The Iowa court found that Anna Selle had been unheard of without known cause for over nine years, after investigation by a person appointed by the court for that purpose, and after service by publication on Anna Selle and all persons who would be interested in her estate. These findings are sufficient to raise a presumption of death according to the well settled law of Illinois. (Hitz v. Ahlgren,
Finally, appellant claims that the order of distribution is erroneous on two grounds. First, he urges that, assuming *273
Anna Selle was presumptively dead, her share should be distributed to her heirs in harmony with the decree for partition. This contention is unsound. The Iowa decree appointing an administrator of Anna Selle's estate, after finding that she had been unheard of for nine years without known cause, was entered on January 22, 1934. Charles J. Jahnke did not die until July 25, 1935, so that Anna Selle was presumptively dead at the time of Jahnke's death. Under that presumption and the provision of section 1 of the Descent act, her heirs were not vested with any interest in the real estate of the intestate. The decree for distribution correctly provided for distributing the proceeds of the sale in fourths and requiring from the distributees a bond to refund in case Anna Selle should be found to be alive, or to have been alive, on the death of Charles J. Jahnke. (Cooper v. Martin,
The decree for partition is so modified and that decree and the decree for distribution are affirmed.
Decree for partition modified and affirmed. Decree for distribution affirmed. *274