251 Ill. 481 | Ill. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court:
Charles Ferdinand Oehmich filed his bill in the circuit court of Cook county for partition, claiming an undivided one-third interest in certain lands in South Chicago,_ which are described and identified as parcels A, B and C and the residue of lot 58 on a certain plat filed as an exhibit with the bill. The answer of the defendants denied that the complainant had any title to the premises involved, and upon a hearing the bill was dismissed for want of equity. Complainant below has perfected an appeal to this court.
The lands involved belonged to Charles F. Oehmich, grandfather of appellant, who died in 1875, leaving a last will, under which appellant claims title in fee to one-third of the real estate in question. Both parties agree upon the general proposition that a one-third interest in the premises was devised to appellant by the will of Charles F. Oehmich. Conceding the title to have been in appellant, appellees contend that the title passed out of him by a conveyance made in accordance with the provisions of the will, and it is further contended that if the power under the will was so imperfectly exercised that the legal title did not pass by the conveyance made in pursuance thereof, appellant has lost all right of action to recover said premises for the following reasons: (1) That the Statute of Limitations is a bar to appellant’s action; (2) that appellant is barred by laches; (3) that a decree in a former suit adjudicated that the power of sale under the will was properly and legally exercised by the conveyance made, and that appellant is thereby estopped to deny that the power was well •exercised; (4) that appellant has, by receiving a portion of the proceeds of the sale under the power after he became of age, elected to ratify the conveyance and confirm the sale made under the will and has thereby estopped himself from attacking the power or questioning the sale made under it. All of these several defenses have been ably argued in the exhaustive briefs filed by the counsel for the respective parties, but in the view that we have of the case it will not be necessary to consider all of these matters of defense. The facts relating to one branch of the case which in our opinion presents an insuperable barrier to appellant’s right of recovery, are, in substance, as follows:
Appellant was born January 29, 1874. He was therefore about one year old when his grandfather, under whose will he claims the property in question, died. The will devised both real estate and personal property to appellant. The principal part of the personal property devised consisted of notes secured by trust deeds and mortgages. By his will the testator appointed trustees to manage, control and invest appellant’s estate, and under certain conditions the trustees were given the power to sell the real estate belonging to appellant. The will provided that appellant should be supported and educated out of the interest accruing on his share of the estate. The will further provided that when appellant reached the age of twenty-one all of the accumulated interest not previously paid out for his maintenance and education should be paid to him by the trustees; that when he arrived at the age of twenty-four he should receive one-fourth, at the age of thirty another fourth, and when he attained the age of thirty-five the balance of principal and accumulated interest should be paid and delivered to him. In 1882, when appellant was eight years old, the trustees, claiming to act under the powers given by the will, sold and conveyed the premises in question, with other lands, to Charles O. TenBroeke for the consideration of $13,927.66. This sale was approved and confirmed by the county court of Cook county, and appellees claim title by a regular chain of conveyances from TenBroeke. Two years after the sale to TenBroeke a bill was filed on behalf of the appellant by his mother as next friend, against the trustees, for an accounting as to the proceeds of the trustees’ sale, and two years later a decree was entered in that proceeding finding that the trustees had received on account of appellant the sum of $34,561.49 and had paid out on his account $6970.57, and that there was an unpaid balance due his mother for appellant’s support of $2870, and ordering that Catherine Oehmich, mother of appellant, be paid the sum of $65 per month thereafter, and until the further order of the court, for appellant’s support. The decree found that the trustee Gollhardt had faithfully administered the trusts reposed in him under the said will and had in all things complied with the provisions of the will, and all of the trustees’ acts and doings under the will were approved and confirmed. The court retained jurisdiction of this proceeding and entered several orders in the course of the administration of the trust. When appellant attained his majority this bill for an accounting was still pending in the circuit court, and appellant on his own motion was made a party complainant in his own proper person. Throughout this entire proceeding no question was raised by appellant as to the validity of the trustees’ sale. On the contrary, the bill alleged, and the decree found, that the sale was regularly and legally made and that appellant was entitled to the aid of a court of equity to compel the proper disposition of the proceeds arising from said sale. The evidence shows that the appellant diligently and persistently sought to collect from the different trustees into whose hands the funds successively passed, the proceeds of this sale, until finally, through the insolvency of one Schmid, who had succeeded to the trust, a substantial portion of' appellant’s estate was lost. The evidence shows that the appellant received, after he became of age, about $3000 in interest, a substantial part of which accrued on the proceeds of the sale of the real estate here involved. It also appears that appellant received a $560 dividend on his claim against the estate of one Schintz. Twenty-seven years after the sale in question had been made, during which time appellant had exhausted all efforts to collect the proceeds thereof, and in so far as such efforts were successful "he had collected, accepted and used the proceeds of said sale, and after appellant had attained the age of thirty-five years, the present bill was filed to set aside the trustees’ sale on the ground that said sale was void and that the title-to the real estate had during all these years remained in appellant. The evidence further shows that appellant attended the public schools until he passed through the seventh grade; that he then went to work, and that he resided with his mother in South Chicago, near where the lands in question are located, until after he was twenty-one years of age. He testifies that when he was fifteen years of age he learned that he was an heir to the estate of his grandfather and that he heard that some of the property he was interested in had been sold. He knew that his mother was supporting him out of money that she was receiving from his grandfather’s estate. When he was twenty-one years old he saw a copy of the will and read it. He must have known of the litigation against the trustees before he became twenty-one years of age. If he did not, he certainly had received full information in regard thereto when, after he attained' his majority, he became the complainant in that proceeding.
Under the facts presented by this record, which are briefly outlined above, and according to the plainest and best established principles of equity, appellant is clearly barred by acquiescence and delay from asserting any claim ta the real estate involved, regardless of all question concerning the validity of the sale. In Smith v. Clay, 3 Brown’s Ch. 640, the court announced the equitable principle which must control here, in the following language: “A court of equity, which is never active in relief against conscience or public convenience, has always refused its aid to stale demands where the party has slept upon his rights or acquiesced for a great length qf time. Nqthing can call fqrth this court into activity but conscience, good faith and reasonable diligence. Where these are wanting the court is passive and does nothing. Laches and neglect are always discountenanced, and therefore from the beginning of this jurisdiction there was always a limitation of suit in this court.” The principle announced above has often been recognized and applied by this court. Penn v. Heisey, 19 Ill. 295; Owen v. Peacock, 38 id. 33; Beach v. Shaw, 57 id. 17; Carpenter v. Carpenter, 70 id. 457; Hamilton v. Hamilton, 231 id. 128.
Appellant’s answer to the defense of laches is: (1) Appellant had no knowledge of the sale in question, or his rights thereunder, until 1906; and (2) because under the sale appellant was not entitled to the possession of any part of the premises until 1898, when he became twenty-four years of age, at which time he was entitled to one-fourth, to another fourth in 1904, and the remaining half was not to be delivered to him until 1909, when he attained the age of thirty-five.
As to the want of knowledge on appellant’s part, the evidence shows the situation from which actual knowledge on appellant’s part must necessarily be inferred. All of the sources of knowledge through which persons ordinarily obtain information respecting matters affecting their interests were open to appellant. It is inconceivable that a boy of ordinary intelligence would grow up to manhood under the immediate care of his mother and not learn from her that he was being maintained and educated out of funds derived from the sale of property left to him by the will of his grandfather. The probability that the appellant had such actual knowledge is greatly strengthened by the circumstance that litigation was pending between appellant and the trustees for more than ten years before he attained his majority, concerning the proceeds of this sale and other funds that came to appellant from the same source. Aside from the circumstances from which actual knowledge, as we have seen, must be imputed to appellant, all of the court proceedings in the case for an accounting were matters of record which were open to appellant, and we see no reason why the doctrine of constructive notice should not be applicable to appellant. But even if it be granted that appellant was ignorant of this sale until he became twenty-one years of age, at that time he admits that he read his-grandfather’s will and then voluntarily became the complainant in the chancery suit, in which the entire history of the trustees’ dealings with this estate was set out in detail. Having learned the facts at that time, if he did not know them before, equity enjoined upon appellant the duty to act within a reasonable time, and he cannot be excused for unreasonable delay on the ground that he did not know the legal consequences resulting from these, facts. Williams v. Rhodes, 81 Ill. 571.
Appellant’s second position upon this branch of the case is equally untenable. It is perfectly plain that appellant had a vested interest in remainder in the premises involved, from the date of the death of the testator. There was'no intermediate life estate or other interest to precede that of appellant. There was merely a postponement of the period of distribution and a devise over in case appellant died before he attained the age of thirty-five leaving no child or children. While appellant could not have maintained ejectment for the possession of his one-third interest until he attained the age of thirty-five, he might have filed a bill, as he has done in this case, when he became entitled to his one-fourth interest, — that is, when he became twenty-four years of age, — and in that proceeding the validity of the sale could have .been adjudicated. But we are clearly of the opinion that appellant’s equitable interest under the will was such that he could have maintained a bill against the trustees and the purchasers at the sale on the ground that the trust fund was being illegally diverted from the purposes contemplated by the will. This, of course, is upon the assumption that the sale was illegal and wholly without authority of law, as appellant now contends it was. That appellant was not required to wait until he became entitled to the complete enjoyment of the estate is well supported by authority. Waterman Hall v. Waterman, 220 Ill. 569; Robison v. Pierce, (Ala.) 24 So. Rep. 984; Wright v. Miller, 8 N. Y. 9.
Under the evidence in this record we are constrained to hold that the appellant is clearly barred from any relief in equity by his long, unexplained delay. In resting our judgment upon this single ground we do not mean to have it inferred that there is no other good defense to this action. Since the decree dismissing this bill may safely rest upon this defense we have not deemed it necessary to discuss other questions.
Finding no error in the decree below it will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.