WILLIAM H. TEGTMEYER et al. Defendants in Error, vs. DAISY TEGTMEYER, Plaintiff in Error
No. 20771
Supreme Court of Illinois
April 23, 1932
June 8, 1932
The decree is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Per CURIAM: The foregoing opinion reported by Mr. Commissioner Partlow is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court, and judgment is entered in accordance therewith.
Reversed and remanded.
RATHJE, WESEMANN, HINCKLEY & BARNARD, and SIMS, STRANSKY, BREWER & POUST, (FRANKLIN J. STRAN-SKY, and BERNARD BARNARD, of counsel,) for plaintiff in error.
G. L. WIRE, LORD, LLOYD & BISSELL, MOHLAND & KUHLEMEIER, and JOHN HARRINGTON, guardian ad litem, (A. C. WETTERSTORM, and L. DUNCAN LLOYD, of counsel,) for defendants in error.
Mr. COMMISSIONER PARTLOW reported this opinion:
Defendants in error, William H. Tegtmeyer and other heirs-at-law of Henry Tegtmeyer, deceased, who were beneficiaries under a written trust agreement, filed a bill in the circuit court of Cook county to compel plaintiff in error, Daisy Tegtmeyer, who was the widow and sole heir-at-law of the trustee, Edward Tegtmeyer, deceased, to account for a trust fund and the profits thereof which she had received. The cause was referred to a master to take the evidence and report his conclusions. He recommended a decree as prayed, exceptions to his report were overruled, a decree was entered as recommended, the Appellate Court affirmed the decree, and the case comes to this court upon a writ of certiorari.
The evidence shows that Henry Tegtmeyer, of Burlington, Iowa, died intestate on October 12, 1912, leaving an estate of about $13,000. His wife, Louise Tegtmeyer, had died intestate on March 19, 1907. They had six children, including Frank, who had been in the habit of disappearing from his farm near Burlington for short periods but his father had always found him and brought him home. In
The original bill was filed on March 11, 1925. It set up the facts substantially as above stated. After the bill was filed, Daisy Tegtmeyer on March 18, 1925, made a contract to sell the real estate in which the trust fund was invested. The Chicago Title and Trust Company refused to issue to the purchasers a title guaranty policy unless $10,000 was deposited with it to protect it against the outcome of this litigation. Daisy deposited the $10,000, and on April 20, 1925, a deed was executed to the purchasers and $46,240.01 was paid as the purchase price. The proceeds of this sale, including the $10,000 deposited with the Chicago Title and Trust Company, were invested by Daisy in stock of the Commonwealth Edison Company, the Middle West Utilities Company and the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. On May 1, 1925, an amended bill was filed. It described the real estate purchased by Edward and Daisy and alleged that it had been purchased in whole or in part with the proceeds of the trust fund in breach of the trust agreement, and that defendants in er-
Plaintiff in error urges as ground for reversal that Frank Tegtmeyer and his widow and children were the primary beneficiaries of the trust fund and any decree adjudicating
Plaintiff in error insists that the decree should be reversed because the defendants in error acquiesced in the purchase of the real estate and agreed to accept out of its proceeds of sale their distributive shares of the trust fund, with four per cent interest; that their acquiescence
Defendants in error were granted leave by this court to file in this court a certified copy of the brief and argument filed by plaintiff in error in the Appellate Court. It appears from the brief and argument filed by plaintiff in error in the Appellate Court that all of the contentions now raised by her in this court, with the exception of the one already discussed, were not raised in the Appellate Court but are raised for the first time in this court. Questions which were not raised in the Appellate Court will not be considered by this court. (Byalos v. Matheson, 328 Ill. 269; Deming v. City of Chicago, 321 id. 341; Buck v. Rosenthal, 273 id. 184.) Most of the propositions urged for the first time in this court are not covered by the plaintiff in error‘s assignment of errors in the Appellate Court, and this court has no authority to review them. Taylor v. Pierce, 174 Ill. 9.
We find no reversible error, and the judgment is affirmed.
Per CURIAM: The foregoing opinion reported by Mr. Commissioner Partlow is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court, and judgment is entered in accordance therewith.
Judgment affirmed.
