King v. Bushnell

121 Ill. 656 | Ill. | 1887

Mr. Chief Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was á bill filed by the plaintiff in error, Nathan A. King, to recover dower in certain lands of which Ms wife died seized in fee, as he alleges.

The facts disclosed by the record are, that Curtis Bushnell died intestate April 24; 1859, leaving Zerilda J. Bushnell, Ms widow, and four minor children, Ms only heirs-at-law, surviving. Mm. At the time of Ms death Curtis Bushnell was seized in fee simple of four hundred and sixteen acres of land, which included the premises in controversy. Zerilda J. Bushnell was appointed guardian of the minor children during the year 1859, and remained their guardian until June, 1863, when she resigned the guardiansMp, and Nathan A. King, the plaintiff in error, was appointed her successor. On the 23d day of February, 1863, Nathan A. King.was married to Zerilda J. Bushnell, and he continued to discharge the duties of guardian of said minor children until August 19, 1865, when he separated from Ms wife and resigned said guardiansMp. Mrs. Zerilda Jf King was thereupon re-appointed guardian of the said children, and so remained until their majority, when she settled with her wards and' was discharged by the court. She died some time in the year 1880, without issue by plaintiff in error.

The lands of wMch Curtis BusMiell died seized were sold, under decree of court, by the administrator, for payment of ih& debts of the estate. There were two such administrator’s sales, one in 1860, at which Zerilda J. Bushnell became the purchaser of a portion of the premises in controversy, (she giving her note and mortgage on the land purchased, for the purchase money,) and the other sale was in April, 1865, at which S. H. Winchell, the husband of one of the minor children, became the purchaser of the remainder of the premises in controversy, for the purchase money of which he gave his note and mortgage on the land purchased. He, on the same day of the sale, conveyed the land he purchased, to the said Zerilda J. King, as had been previously arranged.

There was testimony to the effect that, prior to the administrator’s sales, there was an agreement between Zerilda J=. Bushnell, the children and the administrator, that she was .to* bid off the lands sold, for the children, and take a deed, and' hold the lands in her name, for the children, until they became* of age, when she would equally divide the land among them,, and convey it to them; that under this agreement she purchased and held the land in trust for the children, which agreement she carried out, in her lifetime, by conveying to her-children when they became of age; that by reason of the understanding that the land was to be purchased for the children, it sold for not more than one-third of its value; that at the-second sale the premises were bid off in the name of Winchell,. instead of Zerilda J. King, to obviate the necessity of her husband, Nathan A. King, from whom she was then separated,, joining in the mortgage for the purchase money; that the notes-given for the purchase money were paid with the children’s money; that after the purchases Mrs. King frequently spoke of the land as the children’s land, admitted that she bid’ it off and held it in her name in trust for the children. The latter (two of them being boys) farmed the land, raised' crops on it,, and the crops were treated as the children’s.. We can not say that -the facts which such testimony tended to* show were not sufficiently established by the evidence, and, upon such, facts, we are of opinion there was sufficient support for the- decree finding for the defendants and dismissing the bill. Where a person holds land in trust for another,- the husband or wife of such trustee is not entitled to dower in such premises. Bailey v. West, 41 Ill. 290.

The Statute of Frauds, which is relied upon, does not appear to be any sufficient answer to the facts set up in defence. In addition to the- objection of the.statute being a defence personal to the party making the verbal promise, of which King could not avail himself, and to the claim of there being a resulting trust from the purchase of the land with the children’s money, it is sufficient that there was an execution of the trust in the lifetime of Mrs. King, by her conveyance of the land to the children.

There is manifestly no force in the objection that the transactions through which defendants in error acquired title to the premises were tainted with fraud toward the creditors of the estate of Curtis Bushnell, deceased, and so their title should not be sustained. There are no creditors of the estate complaining here, and there is nothing in the record to show that such creditors have not been satisfied.

The decree will be affirmed.

Decree affinned.