183 N.E. 458 | Ill. | 1932
This appeal comes from the circuit court of Morgan county, where in an ejectment suit a judgment was entered declaring that the right of possession of 200 acres of farm land was in Ona Woods, the appellee, in fee simple. The essential facts were stipulated and are as follows:
On December 24, 1902, Andrew J. Woods, then owning the real estate involved and being the common source of title through whom the appellants and appellee all claim, executed a certain deed in the following form: *495
"The grantors, Andrew J. Woods and Margaret E. Woods, his wife, for and in consideration of the natural love and affection which they have for their son, and for the further consideration of one ($1.00) dollar, in hand paid, convey and warrant to Newton E. Woods, of the county of Morgan and State of Illinois: [Description of land.]
"Reserving unto the said Andrew J. Woods and Margaret E. Woods, his wife, the sole use, control, benefit and income of all the premises and lands above described, during their natural lives. Said Newton E. Woods shall have full right and lawful authority to sell and convey all the lands above described at any time after the grantors' death during his lifetime, but in case said Newton E. Woods should die without living children and without himself having disposed of and conveyed the lands, then all the lands remaining unsold shall revert to grantors' estate, and be divided equally between their surviving children. The surviving child or children of any deceased son or daughter to receive the share the parent would have received if living.
"Situated in the county of Morgan in the State of Illinois.
"Hereby releasing and waiving all rights under and by virtue of the homestead exemption laws of this State.
"Dated this twenty-fourth day of December, A.D. 1902.
ANDREW J. WOODS, (Seal) MARGARET E. WOODS. (Seal)"
The foregoing deed was acknowledged on the date it bears and was filed for record October 1, 1907. The mother, Margaret E. Woods, died on May 8, 1907, and the father, Andrew J. Woods, died intestate on January 14, 1918, leaving surviving him his son, Newton E. Woods, and his daughters, the appellants, Effie Seymour, Lillie Kimber, Ella Rogers and Lettie McConnell, as his only heirs-at-law. Newton E. did not in his lifetime, after the death of his father, sell and convey or dispose of the lands described in the deed, or any part thereof, and died in 1926 without living children surviving him, his only child, Byron, having died unmarried and without issue in 1921, more than five years before the death of his father, Newton E. By his will Newton E. gave and devised to his widow, Ona, the appellee, his entire estate.
In behalf of the appellants it is contended that the deed to Newton E. Woods conveyed a determinable fee to him, *496 with an independent, limited power of sale, which was never. exercised, and that on his death without surviving children the limitation over took effect and the title to the land vested in the appellants as the surviving children of the grantors. The appellee, however, asserts that the power of sale in the deed was a part and parcel of the estate conveyed to Newton E., and that since he could have conveyed an estate in fee simple under this power in his lifetime, the attempted limitation over to the appellants was void.
It is a fundamental rule in the construction of deeds that the intention of a grantor, as gathered from a consideration of the whole instrument, will be given effect where not contrary to some positive rule of law. Where words of inheritance are not used the entire context may be considered, and every word used must, if possible, be given weight in determining the estate granted. (Bear v. Millikin Trust Co.
The language used in the deed before us leaves little room for doubt as to the grantors' intentions. They first reserved a life estate to themselves during their natural lives. They then conferred upon their son full authority to sell and convey the lands at any time after their death, during his lifetime. This was a restricted power of alienation, as it did not give Newton E. Woods the power of disposition by will and limited his power of sale to the period "after the grantors' death during his lifetime." The grantors in the same sentence further provided, "but in case said *497
Newton E. Woods should die without living children and without himself having disposed of and conveyed the lands, then all the lands remaining unsold shall revert to grantors' estate, and be divided equally between their surviving children." By this provision the grantors further restricted the fee by prescribing a limitation over in case Newton E. should die without living children and without having conveyed the lands. The language of the grant to Newton E. did not import an estate in fee simple, which is a pure inheritance, clear of any qualification or conditions, and must be given or granted generally, absolutely and simply. (2 Blackstone's Com. 104; 4 Kent's Com. 5.) By denying the right to dispose of the property by will the power of disposition was limited during the lifetime of Newton E. By also restricting the inheritance only to the living children of Newton E., rather than to his heirs generally, the fee was further limited. There was thus clearly expressed an intention on the part of the grantors that if their son did not convey all or any part of the lands deeded to him during his lifetime and left no children surviving him, such remainder of the lands unsold at the time of their son's death should revert to the grantors' estate and be divided equally among their blood relatives. This clearly expressed intention cannot be frustrated on the ground of repugnancy, for unless a fee is created with an unrestricted power of disposition, a subsequent clause conveying to others all property not disposed of in the lifetime of the first taker is not void for repugnancy. (Bohn v. Irvington,
No question arises here concerning an executory devise, as this case involves a deed — not a will. In construing a deed the rule is that the nature and extent of the estate *498
granted is to be determined, as a matter of law, from the instrument itself, and the intention of the grantor must be ascertained from the language used within the four corners of the instrument. (Harder v. Matthews,
Upon execution and delivery of the deed, Newton E. Woods, the grantee, took title conditioned as follows: (a) Subject to life estate of the grantors; (b) without power of alienation during the existence of the life estate; (c) with power of alienation only during the period between the date of the grantors' death and the death of Newton E. Woods; (d) without power to devise; (e) without right of descent (unless he left children); (f) subject to reversion if he should die without leaving children. The title thus lacks so many incidents to a fee that there is no basis for appellee's claim that he was vested with a fee. He could have conveyed a fee during his lifetime after his parents' deaths, but his power to do this was solely by virtue of the independent power of sale contained in the deed and not by reason of any fee simple title in him. Even his power of sale was a restricted power, as he could exercise it only between certain defined dates. Had he died without issue, at any time during the eleven-year period ensuing before the deaths of the grantors, neither he nor his heirs would have taken anything by the deed.
By reason of the restrictions above mentioned the grant to Newton E. Woods was not an estate in fee simple but was an estate subject to certain conditions. That it was less than a fee simple estate is virtually conceded by the appellee, who relies almost exclusively upon the operation of the rule of law by which if the first grantee or devisee has an estate which he can convey in fee simple so as to destroy an attempted limitation over, such limitation is void. (Williams v. Elliott,
The questions here involved were fully considered and the required distinctions made by this court in the case ofForbes v. Forbes,
The grant to Newton E. Woods was subject to the condition that should he die without living children the land should revert to the grantors' estate. It makes no difference where this condition was found in the deed, its presence reduced the estate to an estate less than a fee simple. Such a conveyance has been defined as a base or determinable fee. (Forbes v. Forbes, supra; Koeffler v. Koeffler, supra; Friedman v. Steiner, supra.) The power to sell and convey was separate and distinct and not a part of the estate granted to Newton E. Woods in the granting clause of the deed. This power of sale was limited as to time and extent and was entirely independent of the granting clause. The grant of a limited power of sale in the deed did not in any way enlarge the estate granted to a fee simple estate, as Newton E. was denied the full and complete power of disposing of the land either by deed or by will. This construction not only carries out the manifest intention of the grantors without rejecting any of the provisions of the deed, but also does no violence to any of the settled rules of law or previous decisions of this court. *503
The deed under consideration conveyed a base or determinable fee to Newton E. Woods, with an independent, limited power of sale, which was never exercised. On his death without surviving children the limitation over took effect and the land vested equally in Effie Seymour, Lillie Kimber, Ella Rogers and Lettie McConnell, the then surviving children of the grantors.
The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly reversed.
Judgment reversed.
DUNN and DEYOUNG, JJ., dissenting.