delivered the opinion of the court:
On October 10, 1951, a complaint was filed in the circuit court of Sangamon County by Floyd William Schramm seeking to set aside the wills of his father and mother, William F. Schramm and Ida May Schramm, as clouds upon his alleged title to certain Sangamon County farm land, (which he contends was given to him by his parents many years prior tO' their deaths), or in the alternative to imprеss an equitable lien upon the premises for the value of permanent improvements he had made thereon. His niece and nephew, Edna J. Keeney and Albert Ray Schramm, the remaindermen named in said wills, were made party defendants, and the matter was referred to a master who, after taking the evidence, found for the defendаnts and recommended that the complaint be dismissed
The real estate owned by William and Ida Schramm consisted оf six adjoining 40-acre tracts which lay in the shape of a huge “L”, four running from west to- east and two extending to the south. The corner 40-acre parcel contained the family dwelling and was itself divided into the east 5 acres, the south 8 acres, and the north 27 acres. The property now in question, a 125-acre tract which, for convenience, will be called the “East farm,” is composed of the 5-acre field and the three easterly 40-acre parcels. The remaining 115 acres, hereinafter referred to as the “West farm,” is made up of the 8-acre, the 27-acre, and the two southerly 40-acre areas. Title to the East farm, except the easterly 40 acres therеof, was acquired in 1911 by Ida and William Schramm as tenants in common of a 3/7th and a 4/7th interest, respectively, and in 1934 the balance of this property was deeded to them as equal tenants in common. The West farm, except the northerly 27 acres, was solely owned by William Schramm until 1936 at which time he conveyed an undivided one-half interest therein tо his wife, the 27-acre strip having been purchased in 1925 by him and his wife as tenants in common of an equal interest. From the date of said conveyances until their respective deaths in 1942 and 1949, record title to these properties remained unchanged in Ida and William Schramm. By their reciprocal wills, which were executed in 1936 and probated in 1949 аfter the death of the survivor, each of the parents left a life estate to the other, then provided: (1) that fee to the West farm should devolve upon their son, Fred Schramm; (2) that plaintiff, Floyd Schramm, take a life estate in the East farm with the remainder to- the children born to plaintiff after January 15, 1936, and, if there be no children born after that date, then the said remainder was to vest in
Plaintiff and his brother, Fred Schramm, were the only children of William and Ida and, prior to their own marriages, lived and worked on their parents’ land. Sometime prior to 1926, plaintiff married, a son being born of such union, but he returned to his parents’ home when the marriage ended in divorce. In 1926, plaintiff married his present spouse, Ruth Schramm, and moved with her into a dilapidated tenant house on the East farm, where they made many improvements necessary to make it habitable. Plaintiff farmed all that portion of the East farm then owned by the Schramms and, in addition, cultivated the northerly 15 acres of the West farm. Brother Fred continued to live with his parents and work the remainder of the West farm. On January 3, 1927, Fred also married and thereafter took up residence in the family dwelling upon the West farm, his parents having moved to a small house they had purchased in the nearby town of Waverly. Fred and Floyd continued to farm the same parcels they were originally allotted until the remainder of the East farm was purchased by their parents in 1934, at which time Floyd commenced to cultivate this acquisition, and Fred began farming the northerly 15-acre area. Taxes upon both farms were at all times paid either by or for William F. Schramm, and he continued to carry insurance thereon until after his wife’s death in 1942.
The substance of plaintiff’s complaint is that his parents divided their property in 1927, (at the time they moved from the farm home and took up residence in Waverly),
At the hearing on this cause, plaintiff and his wife, although incompetent to testify as to transactions with the decedents, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1951, chap. 51, par. 2,) were allowed to describe facts surrounding their occupancy of the East farm and the various improvements they placed upon the premises. Plaintiff told of reconditioning the tenant house to make it habitable, how he and Fred farmed the land between them, and of the subsequent purchase by his parents of the east 40-acre tract. He admitted that he paid rent for the premises during 1926, that he had insured
For the defense, Fred Schramm testified his parents owned only the farms and the Waverly house in which they resided, and had no income or savings except that receivеd from such real estate. He denied that he had ever been
1940— $ 250.00
1941— • 165.00
1942— 625.00
1943— - 600.00
1944— • 625.00
1945— 625.00
1946— 625.00
1947— 500.00
1948— 1000.00
1949— - 500.00
Plaintiff’s inсome-tax returns for the years 1941 through 1949 were produced and showed that he claimed as a farm
Evidence was also' introduced to show that the wills of Ida Schramm and William Schramm were admitted to probate on November 18, 1949, upon the verified petition of the plaintiff and that plaintiff was appointed and thereafter acted as administrator of his father’s estate. In this capacity plaintiff filed a verified inventory of his father’s assets on January 4, 1950, in which he listed the East and West farms as being оwned by William Schramm at the time of his death. Some nine months later plaintiff filed in the estate proceedings his sworn petition to sell the East farm to pay the debts of the decedent and therein made the following allegation :
“That William F. Schramm, deceased, and his wife, Ida Mae Schramm, deceased, acquired title to said lands by purchаse and inheritance and that William F. Schramm, by the will of Ida Mae Schramm, deceased, acquired a fee simple title to the above described real estate and had a fee simple title at the time of his death.”
On May 25, 1950, the attorney for the father’s estate wrote Fred Schramm to advise him that the taxes upon the “farms” were due аnd that Fred should pay his 1949 “rent” to the plaintiff so that this obligation could be paid. The sum of $550 was thereafter paid by Fred and accounted for in plaintiff’s annual report to the court.
Plaintiff’s complaint is based upon the theory that a gift of the East farm was made to him by his parents in
We do not see in this record the clear and convincing evidence needed to support a claim of gift. Rather, the facts would indicate that William and Ida Schramm sought to assist their sons by accepting only such rentals as were necessary to supply their needs and that the sons, in return, knew that this was their parents’ intent. Fred testified that his rents ranged around $5 per acre and plaintiff’s frequent payments of $625 per year to his father for his 125-acre tract tends to show a similar arrangement. It is no doubt true that statements were made by the parents to the effect that they had given a farm to each of their sons, but such is not necessarily inconsistent with their other acts or the provisions of their wills. Each of their children was given possession of a farm with leave to improve as they saw fit, and this same farm was given by will to that occupant. Of course, the West farm was given to Fred outright while plaintiff received only a life estate in the East place; yet in the eyes of a layman each could be considered as hаving received a farm. For reasons known only by themselves, the parents evidently sought to disinherit plaintiff’s first son by making sure that he could in no event receive the property as their heir. Aside from this, the wills are not unlike many others which seek to keep property within the testator’s direct line of descent. Admittedly, in prosecuting this action, plaintiff has relied heavily upon Bale v. Bale,
Nor do we believe that plaintiff is entitled to an equitable lien. The improvements placed upon the property were constructed for the occupant’s benefit, and plaintiff has received and will in the future, as the life tenant, continue to receive the advantages from those expenditures. There was no evidence presented showing the portion, if any, of the improvements which could be expected to pass to the remaindermen.
Plaintiff, in his brief to this сourt, has advanced the additional theories of adverse possession and verbal contract to convey. Suffice it to say that clear and convincing evidence, lacking here, is also required to sustain such claims. (McIntyre v. McIntyre,
Decree affirmed.
