102 Ill. 307 | Ill. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a bill in the circuit court of McLean county, to •assign dower to the widow of Joseph Kershaw, who recently died intestate in that county, and to make partition of the real estate whereof he died seized, among his heirs at law. Before his death, and on the 14th of July, 1864, Joseph Kershaw conveyed to his son, John W. Kershaw, a tract of 133 acres of land in McLean county, inserting in the deed therefor the-following clause: “Said land is deeded as an advancement to said John W. Kershaw out of the estate of said Joseph Kershaw, and the deed is accepted by said John as his full and entire share of his father’s estate.” John W. Kershaw accepted this deed and placed it upon record, entered into possession of the property conveyed by it, and has, ever since, retained the same.
On the hearing in the court below, it was decreed that the land conveyed to John W. Kershaw should be brought into hotchpot, and valued as unimproved land, as of the date of the death of the intestate. John W.- Kershaw appealed from this decree, and has assigned errors therein; and the appellees have also assigned, as a cross-error, that the court below erred in decreeing that John W. Kershaw bring the land so conveyed to him into hotchpot, and that he be thereupon allowed to share in the partition of the estate of the intestate.
The acceptance of the deed by John W. Kershaw, and the enjoyment by him of the estate thereby conveyed, estops him from denying that the seal attached to the deed is his, as well as that of Joseph Kershaw. Torney v. Bank of Orleans, 9 Paige, 649; Atlantic Dock Co. v. Leavitt et al. 54 N. Y. 35; Carver v. Jackson, 4 Peters, 87; Sinclair v. Jackson, 8 Cow. 585; Newell v. Hill, 2 Metc. 180; Maine v. Comstock, 98 Mass. 317; Burbank v. Pillsbury, 48 N. H. 475. See, also, upon like principle, Byrne v. Morehouse, 22 Ill. 603; Pinckard v. Milmine, 76 id. 453; Illinois Ins. Co. v. Littlefield, 67 id. 368.
The seal being, in presumption of law, the seal of John W. Kershaw as well as that of Joseph Kershaw, there is no ground for the contention of counsel for appellant that the case is affected by the Statute of Frauds. Indeed, in Galbraith v. McLain, 84 Ill. 379, we went much further than this, and held, where a deed, in which there was no such clause as that in the deed before us, was shown, by parol evidence, to have been executed by a father to his son, and possession of the property was also shown to have been taken by the latter, upon the express understanding and agreement that the property conveyed by the deed was accepted in lieu of all claim which the son might have in the residue of his father’s estate upon his death, the transaction was unaffected by the Statute of Frauds. It was there insisted that both the Statute of Frauds, and certain provisions of the Statute of Wills, were in the way of the enforcement of the contract. But it was replied: “We do not think either statute can be invoked against the transaction. * * * Certainly not the Statute of Frauds, for there is a deed in writing for the 50 acres, accepted by appellant, the benefit of which he is enjoying, and as to his expectancy of an inheritance, that can not be said to be such an interest in land as he could not surrender by parol.”
In Parsons v. Ely et al. 45 Ill. 232, we held that an estate in expectancy, though contingent, is a proper subject of contract, and that all agreements by expectant heirs in regard to their future contingent estates, when fairly made, upon valuable consideration, will be enforced in equity. And in Bishop et al. v. Davenport, 58 Ill. 105, we held, where the heir of an intestate had received property from the intestate, in his lifetime, and by an instrument in writing, whether under seal or not, acknowledged the receipt thereof as his full share of the estate, the property so received not. having been charged to him, and the transaction being untainted with fraud, must be held to be in full payment and satisfaction of his share of the estate, by express agreement. The only difference between that case and the present is, there the parties signed receipts acknowledging that the amount received was in full of their part of the intestate estate, while here the party accepts a deed in which it is recited that “the deed is accepted by said John as his full and entire share of his father’s estate, ” places the deed upon record, and enters into possession and enjoys the property thereby conveyed; and this, as we have seen, makes him, in presumption of law, a party sealing the deed, and is, therefore, equally as conclusive upon him as if he had actually written his name beneath the clause. He is estopped, that is, not allowed, to deny that. the deed is accepted by and binding upon him, as its language declares; and, as has been seen in Galbraith v. McLain, supra, even a parol promise of an heir to accept a deed of certain property in lieu of his expected interest in his father’s.estate, followed by the execution and delivery of the deed and possession of the property, was held to be sufficient.
But counsel contend that John W. Kershaw was a competent witness to prove that it was not intended that this deed should have the effect of depriving him of future participation in the estate of Joseph Kershaw, and they cite Pigg et al. v. Carroll et al. 89 Ill. 205, and Mueller v. Rebhan, 94 id. 142, as sustaining that contention. These cases are simply authorities for holding that, in a contest between heirs or devisees, in regard to an estate, the exceptions in the statute under which parties are allowed to testify, notwithstanding their interest in the subject matter in controversy, do not embrace them. If it were competent to make the proof here proposed to be made by John W. Kershaw, by any witness, we are not disposed to controvert but that it might have been made by him. But we deny that, in the absence of fraud, accident or mistake in the execution or acceptance of the deed (and of neither of which is there the slightest eviclenee in the record), such proof is at all competent. The deed must speak for itself, and can not be contradicted by parol. This rule is so elementary and familiar that its repetition is barely excusable. In cases of advancement, parol evidence is competent to explain the transaction, and show what was done and said, in order to arrive at the intentions of the parties, and also to show the value of the property advanced, but not even then to contradict, explain or modify written instruments. But we have seen, here there was no advancement, but an executed contract, whereby an heir released his expectancy in his father’s estate in consideration of a present grant of real estate. The release and the joint one in writing are in the same instrument, and no attempt is made to set aside and cancel the instrument upon any established equitable grounds.
We deem it unnecessary to notice the cases cited by appellant as holding a different doctrine than that of Parsons v. Ely et al., Bishop et al. v. Davenport, and Galbraith v. McLain, supra. These cases were not hastily considered, but the conclusions were reached .only after mature consideration of the questions' involved, and we have no inclination, to now adopt another view.
The decree of the court below must be reversed on account of the cross-error assigned, and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The costs in this court will be taxed against the appellant.
Decree reversed.