246 Ill. 109 | Ill. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court:
It is the contention of the appellant that upon the death of William Wikoff his daughters, Emma Pingrey and Florence Rulon, by virtue of his will took a life estate in his farm property and became seized in fee, by descent, of said farm property, as his only heirs-at-law, pending the happening of the events upon which the fee to said farm property would vest in the living children and unborn children of Emma Pingrey and Florence Rulon by virtue of the terms of the will of William Wikoff, and that in consequence of the execution and delivery of the deed from Emma Pingrey and husband to Roy E. Pingrey and the deed from Roy E. Pingrey and wife to Emma Pingrey Emma Pingrey became seized in fee of the undivided one-half of the said farm property. In other words, that the conveyance of the life estate and the remainder to Roy E. Pingrey by Emma Pingrey and husband, and the re-conveyance of the entire estate by Roy E. Pingrey and wife to Emma Pingrey, under the doctrine announced in Bond v. Moore, 236 Ill. 576, worked a merger of the life estate and the fee in Emma Pingrey, and the interests of Roy E. Pingrey, Clayton W. Rulon, Lottie E. Rulon and Willet H. Rulon in the undivided one-half of said farm property were destroyed and the fee to that portion of the farm property was vested absolutely in Emma Pingrey. The soundness of the position of the appellant depends upon whether the interest in said farm property created in the children of Emma Pingrey and Florence Rulon by the will of William Wikoff is a contingent or vested remainder. If it is a contingent remainder, such interest could be destroyed by the method pursued by Emma Pingrey. If, however, the interest devised to the children of Emma Pingrey and Florence Rulon is a vested remainder, it could not be destroyed by the act of Emma Pingrey.
In construing a will the entire will must be considered. An examination of the will of William Wikoff will disclose that the testator sought td accomplish three objects by his will: (1) That said daughters should enjoy the use of his farm property for life, and in case of the death of one of his daughters, the child or children of that daughter should have the use of his or their mother’s share of the farm property during the life of the surviving daughter' (2) that upon the death of both of his daughters his farm property should belong absolutely to his four grandchildren, share and share alike, provided they should not come into the possession thereof until the youngest of said four children should become twenty-five years of age, and in case of the death of either of said grandchildren leaving a child or children him or her surviving, the share of the deceased grandchild should go to his or her child or children, and in the event such deceased grandchild left no child or children him or her surviving, the share of the deceased grandchild should, in case he or she died before coming into the absolute possession of said farm property, go to the testator’s surviving grandchildren; (3) that in case another child or children were born to the testator’s daughter Emma Pingrey or his daughter Florence Rulon, such child or children should take the same interest in his farm property as the four living grandchildren took therein, and subject to the same limitations in case of the death of said subsequently bom grandchild or grandchildren as the will imposed upon his living grandchildren, except that a subsequently born grandchild or grandchildren might enjoy the absolute possession of his, her or their share in said farm property before the youngest grandchild living at the time the will was made was twenty-five years of age.
A contingent remainder is one limited to take effect either to a dubious and uncertain person or upon a dubious and uncertain event, and a vested remainder is a present interest which passes to a party to be enjoyed in the future, so that the estate is immediately fixed in a determinate person after a particular estate terminates. (Haward v. Peavey, 128 Ill. 430; Golladay v. Knock, 235 id. 412.) We are unable to discover any uncertainty in the will of William Wikoff as to the person or persons to whom the farm property left by William Wikoff was to go on his death or any uncertainty in the event upon which said farm property was to go to the .persons named in the will. The will provides it is to go to Emma Pingrey and Florence3 Rulon for life, and upon the death of the survivor of them it is to go, share and share alike, to the four grandchildren, namely, Roy E. Pingrey, Clayton W. Rulon, Lottie E. Rulon and Willet H. Rulon. There is, therefore, no uncertainty as to the persons who will take the farm property or uncertainty upon what event they are to take the property. The persons who are to take the property are expressly named, and the event upon which they are to take the property is the death of the survivor of the two daughters, which necessarily must happen. The utmost that can be said is, that it is uncertain when the four grandchildren will be entitled to the full possession and enjoyment of the property, and an uncertainty in that particular does not make the interests in the farm property devised to the four grandchildren a contingent remainder. The law favors the vesting of estates, and an estate is vested when it is limited to a person in being and is to take effect on the determination of a preceding particular estate. (Scofield v. Olcott, 120 Ill. 362.) In Harvard College v. Balch, 171 Ill. 275, on page 280, it was said: “If the person to take a remainder is in esse and ascertained, and it is to take effect by words of express limitation on the. determination of the preceding particular estate, it will be vested.” In McArthur v. Scott, 113 U. S. 340, Mr. Justice Gray said: “Words directing land to be conveyed to or divided among remainder-men after the termination of a particular estate are always presumed, unless clearly controlled by other provisions of the will, to relate to'the beginning of enjoyment by the remainder-men and not to the vesting of the title in them.” He illustrated the application of the rule as follows : “For instance, under a devise of an estate, legal or equitable, to the testator’s children for life, and to be divided upon or after their death among his grandchildren in fee, the grandchildren living at the death of the testator take a vested remainder at once, subject to open and let in after-born grandchildren, although the number of grandchildren who will take, and consequently the proportional share of each, cannot, of course, be ascertained until the determination of the particular, estate by the death of their parents. * * *. The remainder, being vested according to the legal meaning of the words of gift, is not to be held contingent by. virtue of subsequent provisions of the will unless those provisions necessarily require it.”
It is our conclusion that Roy E. Pingrey, Clayton W. Rulon, Lottie E. Rulon and Willet H. Rulon took a vested remainder in said farm property under the will of William Wikoff, and that should there be other children bom to either Emma Pingrey or Florence Rulon, the title held by the grandchildren living at the testator’s death would open up and let in such subsequently born grandchildren; that the title to said farm property vested in said living grandchildren immediately upon the death of William Wikoff and the probate of his-will; that this being true, the deeds executed by Emma Pingrey and Roy E. Pingrey did not have the effect to vest the fee title to the undivided one-half of said farm property in Emma Pingrey, and that the only effect of said deeds, as against the minor defendants, was to cloud their title to said farm property.
It is further contended by the appellant that the four lots in Chenoa are intestate property. The will of William Wikoff gave to his daughters for life and to his four living grandchildren in fee, “all of my real estate, the same being situated in McLean county, Illinois,” and the will then proceeds, “and described as follows,” and the four lots in Chenoa, although in McLean county, are omitted from the particular description which follows the words “all of my real estate,” etc. The general rule is thus stated by the Supreme Court of Iowa in Barney v. Miller, 18 Iowa, 460, on page 466: “Where a deed of conveyance contains a general description of the property conveyed, which is definite and certain in itself and is followed by a particular description also, such particular description will not limit or restrict the grant, which is clear and unambiguous, by the general description.” And in Martin v. Smith, 124 Mass, hi, the demandant claimed under the third clause of the will of Bartholomew Garrity, which gave her “all the real estate I may die possessed of, to her and her heirs and assigns forever, which property is situate on the north side of North street, in said Lowell.” At the time of his death the testator was seized and possessed of two lots, one located on the north side of North street, occupied by buildings, the other a vacant lot on the south side of the street, being the demanded premises. The court held the devise covered both lots. On page 1x3 of the opinion it was said: “The general rule is undisputed that a gift by words of general description is not to be limited by a subsequent attempt at particular description unless such appears to be the intention of the testator from the whole will. (Allen v. White, 97 Mass. 504.) This will, in its words of general description, purports to dispose of all the property, real and personal, of the testator. There is nothing to indicate an intention to malee only a partial disposition of his estate. We are of opinion that the case falls within the general rule, and that the general description is not limited by the particular misdescription of the estate as being on the north side of the street.”
What was said in the Martin case can be said with equal propriety in this case. The will of William Wikoff, by general description, purports to devise all the real estate of the testator, and there is nothing in the will indicating an intention to devise only his farm property. The presumption is that the testator intended to dispose of all of his estate by his will. We are of the opinion the case falls within the general rule, and that the general description is not limited by the particular description which follows it; that the lots in Chenoa were included in the general description, and that the testator did not die intestate as to them.
It is next contended by appellant that the court erred in refusing the complainants in the original bill, after the court had announced that it would sustain a demurrer to said bill and before the order sustaining said demurrer had been entered, leave to dismiss their bill without prejudice. The general rule is, that a complainant has the right to dismiss his bill without prejudice (if a cross-bill has not been filed) at any time until a decree has been entered. The right of complainant to dismiss his bill before a cross-bill has been filed, at any time before final decree, may, however, be waived, and we think in this case it was waived. After the court had denied the complainants leave' to dismiss their original bill without prejudice, they did not abide their motion to dismiss but took leave to file an amended bill and immediately filed an amended bill, which prayed for the partition of the premises in controversy in addition to the relief prayed for in the original bill. By filing an amended bill and further invoking the aid of the court we are of the opinion the complainants waived their motion to dismiss their original bill. In order to preserve their rights it was not necessary for the complainants to proceed further after their motion to dismiss their original bill had been denied, and if, instead of amending their bill, they had stood by their motion to dismiss, the court would have been without jurisdiction to proceed further, but as they amended their bill and the trial thereafter proceeded upon the amended bill upon the merits, the error of the court in declining to permit them to dismiss their original bill was waived, and the error of the court in denying complainants’ motion to dismiss their original bill cannot be successfully assigned as error in this court upon this record.
It is also insisted by the appellant that the court erred in granting affirmative relief to the minor defendants on their cross-bill, after the original and amended bills had been dismissed, by canceling the Pingrey deeds as clouds upon their title. Complainants brought the minor defendants into court and relied upon said deeds as showing title in Emma Pingrey. The court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter, and upon dismissing the original and amended bills there was no error in entering a decree upon the cross-bill that disposed of the entire subject matter of the litigation upon the merits.
It is also suggested by the appellees that a court of equity had no jurisdiction to entertain a bill to construe the will of William' Wikoff and the Pingrey deeds at the suit of Emma Pingrey. We think this is true as to the original bill, as a court of equity will not entertain a bill to construe a will unless a trust is involved, (which is not the case here,) or for the purpose of settling legal titles. The amended bill prayed for partition, which was a subject of equity jurisdiction, and the court, in determining whether the complainant in the amended bill was entitled to partition, necessarily had to determine whether or not Emma Pingrey was the owner in fee of an undivided one-half of said farm property, which involved a determination of the legal effect of the will of William Wikoff and the Pingrey deeds. The amended bill did not, however, confer upon the court jurisdiction to detenuine the effect of the clause in the will prohibiting Emma Pingrey and Florence Rulon from selling, assigning, conveying or encumbering their life estates in the real estate of William Wikoff. As soon as the court held that the minor defendants had a vested remainder in the lands of which William Wikoff died seized, the amended bill of the complainant for partition failed, and the court could not legally retain the original or amended bill for the purpose of determining the effect of the clause of the will upon the life estates of Emma Pingrey and Florence Rulon which prohibited them from selling, assigning or encumbering the same.
We are of the opinion that the trial court, after the amended bill was filed, had jurisdiction to determine the rights of the parties to this litigation, and that the decree dismissing the original and amended bills and canceling the Pingrey deeds as clouds upon the title of the minor defendants was properly entered.
Finding no reversible error in this record the decree of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.