Lambert v. Harvey

100 Ill. 338 | Ill. | 1881

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Catharine S. Harvey and Alma W. Kingsley, defendants in error, obtained a judgment in an action of ejectment in the Pike county circuit court, at its April term, 1880, against James W. Lambert and James Sharp, the plaintiffs in error, for the recovery of certain real estate in said county, to reverse which the present writ of error is prosecuted.

Defendants in error deraign title to the land in controversy through their father, Silas E. Shepherd, who died seized of the premises on the 12th day of October, 1877, leaving a widow, and defendants in error, his only children and heirs at law. It is claimed by plaintiffs in error, that under the will of the said Silas E. Shepherd, Catharine S. Harvey alone acquired the legal title to the premises in controversy, and hence there was no right of recovery in the names of both defendants in error, and this really is the only question presented by the record which we regard of sufficient importance to consider,—indeed, it may be said that it is the only question about which there is any just ground for controversy.

The provisions of the will relied on for showing title in. Mrs. Harvey alone, are as follows, to-wit:

“Item 7. As soon after the death of my said wife as it may conveniently and advantageously be done,. I direct that all accounts, notes, bonds and judgments be collected, and all property, both real and personal and mixed, be sold, and after defraying the expenses of executing this will, I direct that my daughter Alma W. Kingsley, be paid $1000, and that the remainder of my entire estate shall be given to my daughter Catharine S. Harvey, aforesaid.

“Item 8. If my daughter Catharine shall not be living at the time this will shall be executed, I direct that which is herein bequeathed to her shall be given to her daughter, Alma Harvey. ”

Her appointment as executrix," and these two items of the will, furnish the only grounds for the position that she took the exclusive legal title to the land in controversy.

The testator obviously intended that the disposition of his estate made by the will should not take effect until after the death of his wife,—or, in other words, it was his intention that no division of the estate should take place until after her death, and that when that event occurred such division was to be made with reference to the condition of things then existing, and not with reference to the condition of things at the time of the testator’s death. Whether Mrs. Harvey was to ultimately take any beneficial interest under the will, depended upon the contingency of her outliving the widow; for if the widow survived her, the daughter of Mrs. Harvey was to take under the will what her mother would otherwise have taken had she survived the widow. That the rights of the parties, so far as Mrs. Harvey and her daughter áre concerned, were to be determined by the condition of things at the time of the widow’s death, clearly appears from the 8th item of the will above cited. The testator declares, that “if my daughter Catharine shall not be living 'at the time this will shall be executed, I direct that which is herein bequeathed to her shall be given to her daughter, Alma Harvey.” By the expression “at the time this will shall be executed, ” the testator evidently refers to the time of converting the estate into money and distributing it under the will, which could not be done until after the widow’s death, and whether Mrs. Harvey or her daughter would take at this time, depended entirely upon the contingency already stated.

The will does not, specifically or by necessary implication, give the land of the testator, or any portion of it, to either of the daughters, and hence the legal title devolved by descent on both of them as tenants in common, .and the suit was therefore properly brought in both their names.

It is suggested, however, that inasmuch as the will directs the executrix to sell and convert the real estate into money, Mrs. Harvey, by implication, took the fee. We dó not think so. It is true there is a class of cases where executors are held to take the legal estate, by implication. This occurs where.they are required to perform certain-duties with respect to realty which can only be. performed by one clothed with the legal title. But there is no just ground for such a construction in the present case. A mere power to sell is all that was necessary in this case to carry into effect the objects of the will, and such a power only was conferred.

Judgment affirmed.