166 Ill. 80 | Ill. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court:
The circuit court of Douglas county sustained a general demurrer to the bill filed by appellant in this case for partition, and dismissed the bill for want of equity.
The facts averred which are material to the question involved are as follows: Charles Welliver, the owner in fee of the tract of land sought to be partitioned, devised the same by his last will and testament in the following words: “To my wife, Morganna, and her heirs by me.” He died January 13, 1880, leaving said Morganna Welliver, his widow, and Ama Welliver, their only child. Ama Welliver died intestate in September, 1880, leaving said Morganna Welliver, her mother, and complainant and others, her half brothers and sisters through former marriages of her said parents, as her only heirs-at-law. Morganna Welliver was afterward married to B. P. Coykendall, and they both died before this suit was commenced.
At the common law Morganna Welliver would have taken an estate in fee tail in the premises by virtue of the devise, and by section 6 of the act concerning conveyances, in force July 1,1872, such an estate was changed to a life estate in her, with remainder in fee simple absolute to Ama Welliver, her heir by the testator. (Butler v. Huestis, 68 Ill. 594; Blair v. Vanblarcum, 71 id. 290; Cooper v. Cooper, 76 id. 57; Lehndorf v. Cope, 122 id. 317.) As the event upon which the estate in remainder was to take effect was one that must happen some time, that estate was a vested one, and the fact that Ama Welliver died during the existence of the life estate did not affect its vested character. (Nicoll v. Scott, 99 Ill 529; Smith v. West, 103 id. 332; Lehndorf v. Cope, supra.) The title in fee simple so vested passed to the heirs of Ama Welliver upon her death, and it was wrong to sustain the demurrer.
The decree will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.