Jones v. Bean

136 Ill. App. 545 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1907

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

A motion was made to dismiss the appeal on the ground that a freehold is involved and therefore this court has no jurisdiction. The bill does not allege that the deceased owned any real estate. It is alleged that Mary E. Bean owns certain real estate and that certain moneys of Ida J. Jones are invested in said property and prays that Mary E. Bean be decreed to pay to complainant the money invested in said property. The title to the real estate in the name of Mary E. Bean is not involved and the only relief sought is a personal decree against the party holding the title. If the relief prayed for be granted and the money of the deceased, if any was used in the erection of buildings on said property, should be decreed to be paid by Mrs. Bean to complainant and held to be a lien on the real estate, yet the title to the real estate would not be decreed to be in complainant even if under the prayer for general relief it should be held to be a lien.

“A freehold is involved within the sense of the constitution and the statute, only in cases where either the necessary result of the judgment or decree is that one party gains and the other loses a freehold estate or when the title is so put in issue by the pleadings that the decision of the case necessarily involves a decision of such issue.” Taylor v. Taylor, 223 Ill., 423; Prouty v. Moss, 188 Ill., 84; LaFleure v. Seivert, 188 Ill., 525; Malaer v. Hudgens, 130 Ill., 225. The title to the Aledo property is not put in issue, but the issue is, did the deceased invest money in it. The motion to dismiss is overruled.

Error is assigned on the ruling of the court in so far as the exceptions filed to portions of the hill were sustained. This fact is simply mentioned in the argument of appellant and it is not pointed out in what way the parts of the hill expunged were relevant or in what particular the ruling was erroneous, and therefore such assignments are abandoned.

The only question challenged in the argument is the judgment of the court on the demurrer. It is insisted that by the order of adoption the appellant became an heir of Ida J. Jones and entitled to her estate. Two petitions for adoption were filed; the first dated August 5, 1890, is signed by Asa H. Jones and Ida J. Jones and does not state the sex of the child to be adopted nor whether it had a guardian or not. The second petition is dated August G, 1890, and is the petition of Asa II. Jones, being signed by him alone; his wife did not join in it. The order of the County Court finds “that said petitioner is a resident of said county and desires to adopt said child” and orders and adjudges “that said Allen Y. Jones be the adopted child of said petitioner and capable of inheriting his estate.” Section one of the Illinois Adoption Act, provides “the prayer of such petition by a person having a husband or wife shall not be granted unless such husband or wife joins therein, and when they join the adoption shall be by them jointly.” The petition and order were for the adoption of appellant by Asa II. Jones only. Under the rule as laid down in Watts v. Dull, 184 Ill., 86, there being no adoption of appellant by Ida J. Jones, the wife of petitioner, the entire proceeding was invalid; but if the validity of the adoption proceedings so far as Asa II. Jones is concerned should be conceded, still the decree of the County Court does -not pretend to be a decree of adoption of appellant by Ida J. Jones, and the appellant cannot obtain any relief against her from such proceedings.

If complainant can recover in this suit he must recover on the written contract. The substance of the contract is that if appellant would live in the house of Asa H. Jones and Ida J. Jones until his majority performing all his duties as an adopted son, Asa H. Jones and Ida J. Jones would and “do hereby make said Allen V. Jones their sole and only heir. * * * and said Asa H. Jones and Ida J. Jones his wife, shall legally adopt by order of a competent court said Allen Y. Jones so that he shall inherit their estate as heir at their respective deaths.” The contract is signed and sealed by both Asa H. Jones and Ida J. Jones. An heir is a person appointed to succeed to an estate in case of intestacy. Smith v. Kimbell, 153 Ill., 368; Thomas v. Miller, 161 Ill., 73. If the contract was only to adopt complainant, and he should be adopted, then in case of intestacy he would take the estate under the statute of descent. An adopted son has no greater right in the estate of the adopting parent than a natural son and either may be disinherited by will. The contract which it is sought to enforce, however, is more than a contract to make complainant an heir; he is not only to be legally adopted, but it is to be done so that said Allen Y. J ones shall inherit their estate as heir at their respective deaths. It is alleged that it was represented to his relatives and to him that he would inherit the money received from the $5,000 life insurance policy and the $1,650 pension fund with the farm. In Wallace v. Rappleye, 103 Ill., 229 and 665, winch was a bill to enforce the specific performance of an oral contract for support and the right of inheritance, the court first found that the contract was not proved with that clearness and explicitness that is required where the contract affects land, and then held that before a contract can be made the basis of a decree for specific performance, it must be certain, fair and just in all its parts and be founded on a valuable consideration, and that the amount of property involved was too uncertain, and that, that is a circumstance to be considered by the court in the exercise of its discretion. The same question was passed upon in Woods v. Evans, 113 Ill., 186, where the suit was upon a lost contract, and it was held that the contract could not be enforced because the services rendered would not be regarded as an equivalent for the property agreed to be given, and a child’s part is too uncertain, as it would be changed either by the birth or death of other children, and if the property should be disposed of by will there would be nothing to descend. In the Woods case, the wife of the contracting party did not join in the contract, and the contracting party having no children he could not make a contract which would deprive her of the personal estate in such a case, and the contract if enforced would have materially affected her right's.

In the case at bar the husband and wife both joined in the execution of the contract. It is alleged that Ida J. Jones represented to complainant that upon her death and that of her husband, complainant would receive $1,650 pension money, $5,000 on the insurance policy and the farm if it should be redeemed from the mortgage upon it, and that both she and her husband were childless and without hopes of issue. It is alleged that complainant went into the Jones family in pursuance of the contract, that his services rendered to them were of the value of $2,000 and that he virtually maintained the family and paid the premiums on the insurance policy, thus keeping the pension fund unimpaired. Such services were a valuable consideration as distinguished from a merely good or moral consideration, and were a sufficient consideration for the making of the contract. If complainant by virtue of a contract made by his father with Moshier had expectations in that direction, and if that contract was broken because of the acts and influence of Ida J. Jones, and if complainant lost any right of inheriting from Moshier thereby, such loss might be a damage to complainant and at least a moral consideration for the contract. The clause at the end of the contract “do hereby make said Allen V. Jones their sole and only heir * * * so that he shall inherit their estate at their respective deaths,” must be taken and construed in the usual and common acceptance of the words used. They can only mean that he shall take their estate at their death—not a portion of their estate. It is as strong as if it had read, he shall inherit their estate and that they would not make any disposition of their estate which would interfere with the descent of the estate to him. “An owner of property may make a valid, enforceable contract binding himself not to dispose of his property by will and binding himself to allow the same to descend to his heirs as intestate property.” Jones v. Abbott, 228 Ill., 34. A person may make a valid agreement to make a particular disposition of his property by will, and the contract may be enforced in equity, after his decease, against his heirs, devisees or personal representatives. Whiton v. Whiton, 179 Ill., 32; Weingaertner v. Pabst, 115 Ill., 412. Such an agreement constitutes an equitable assignment of the property to vest in possession at the promisor’s death. Hudnall v. Ham, 183 Ill., 486. The language of the court in the Whiton case, supra., is applicable to this case. “There can be no doubt but that a person may make a valid agreement binding himself legally to make a particular disposition of his property by last will and testament. The law permits a man to dispose of his own property at his pleasure, and no good reason can be assigned why he may not make a legal agreement to dispose of his property to a particular individual or for a particular purpose as well by will as by a conveyance to be made at some specified future period or upon the happening of some future event. It may be unwise for a man in this way to embarrass himself as to the final disposition of his property, but he is the disposer by law of his own fortune and the sole and best judge as to the time and manner of disposing of it. A court of equity will decree the specific performance of such an agreement upon the recognized principles hy which it is governed in the exercise of this branch of its judisdiction. * * * This agreement, then, made between the complainant and his father, was a legal agreement, and this court should decree its execution, if in the exercise of its legal discretion, it can do it without violating any principle of equity, or doing injustice to any third party who may be involved in the transaction.” If the allegations of the bill as it now stands are true, the complainant is a purchaser for value of the estate of Ida J. Jones and has fully performed his part of the contract. Ida J.-Jones left no surviving husband or children for whose protection a court of equity might say, in its discretion, it is inequitable to decree a specific performance of complainant’s contract. When the contract was made the promisors considered that they had no hope of any children, and agreed in writing that complainant should “inherit their estate.” At that time they represented the value of their estate that he was to inherit under the contract to he substantially the same as is the value of the estate 'of Ida J. Jones.

We hold that the allegations of the bill set forth a good cause for equitable relief, and that the demurrer should have been- overruled. The cause is reversed and remanded with instructions to overrule the demurrer.

Reversed and remanded with instructions.