Boehm v. Baldwin

77 N.E. 454, 221 Ill. 59
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 454 (Boehm v. Baldwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boehm v. Baldwin, 77 N.E. 454, 221 Ill. 59 (Ill. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Benjamin Baldwin, of Greene county, died February 16, 1865, leaving a widow and ten children and the children of a deceased daughter as his heirs-at-law. He left a last will and testament by which he provided for his widow and disposed of his estate, devising various tracts of land to his children and grandchildren. The fifth item of the will was as follows:

“Item 5th—I give and bequeath unto my son, Elias V. Baldwin, one hundred and thirty acres of land on which he now resides, it being the east half of the 260 acres spoken of in the fourth item of this will, the whole tract is described as follows, to-wit (describing the land). I also give to E. V. B. forty acres, he having paid some part of the purchase money, it lying in the south-west corner of sec. (16) T. and R. above, said land as above described is given to Elias V. Baldwin and his children provided he should have children, by his wife. But. if he and his wife should have no children together and Elias should die before his wife she shall be entitled to one-third part of the proceeds of said farm, so long as she remains his widow. But if she should marry another man, her interest must cease in the premises from and after said marriage.”

Elias V. Baldwin was in possession of the land mentioned in item 5 when the will was made, as stated therein, and con-tinned in such possession until February 26, 1904, when he died, leaving a will disposing of his estate, and devising to his widow, Mary Baldwin, one of the plaintiffs in error, all his real estate for life, with power to sell and dispose of the same for her support and maintenance. The widow of Benjamin Baldwin is also dead, and the forty-acre tract mentioned in his will became the property in fee simple of Elias V. Baldwin through another source than said will. The tract of one hundred and thirty acres passed to Elias V. Baldwin under the will, and he and his wife, Mary Baldwin, mentioned in the will, never had any children. After the death of Elias V. Baldwin, the defendants in error, heirs-at-law of Benjamin Baldwin, filed their bill for partition in the circuit court of said county, setting up the will of Benjamin Baldwin as the source of their title, and claiming that under said will they were the owners in fee simple of said land, subject to the right of Mary Baldwin to one-third of the proceeds of the land so long as she should remain the widow of Elias V. Baldwin. The widow has not re-married, and she and the executor of her husband’s will, plaintiffs in error, by their answer denied that the title to the land was vested in the heirs-at-law of Benjamin Baldwin, and insisted that the will devised the land in fee simple to Elias V. Baldwin. The decision turned upon the construction of the will of Benjamin Baldwin, and defendants in error contended that inasmuch as Elias V. Baldwin had no children he was invested by the will with a life estate only; that no remainder in fee was disposed of by the will, and that a reversion in fee remained in the heirs of the testator, expectant on the failure of issue, and had become absolute in such heirs. The chancellor adopted that view, and entered a decree ordering a partition of the land among the heirs of Benjamin Baldwin, subject to the right of the widow, Mary Baldwin, to enjoy one-third of the proceeds thereof so long as she should remain unmarried. Commissioners were appointed to make the partition, who reported that the land was not susceptible of division, and a decree was entered ordering a sale. A writ of error was sued out of this court for the purpose of questioning the construction given to the will by the chancellor.

The testator first devised to his son, Elias V. Baldwin, the lands described in the fifth item of the will, in language which would give a fee simple estate to Elias V. Baldwin alone, but, following the description of the lands, stated that they were given to Elias V. Baldwin and his children provided he should have children by his wife. Words of inheritance not being necessary under our statute to a devise in fee, if there had been children of the marriage at the death of the testator, Elias V. Baldwin and his children would have taken an estate in fee simple as tenants in common. The question to be determined is whether the estate of Elias V. Baldwin was reduced to a life estate by the fact that he had no children to take the estate jointly with him as tenants in common when the estate vested, and that none were born subsequently.

In determining the intention of the testator, the presumption of law is that he intended by his will to dispose of all his property and to leave none as intestate estate. (Higgins v. Dwen, 100 Ill. 554; Hayward v. Loper, 147 id. 41; Bigger-staff v. VanPelt, 207 id. 611.) In Woman’s Union Missionary Society v. Mead, 131 Ill. 338, the court quoted approvingly from 2 Redfield on Wills, 235, as follows: “The idea of any one deliberately purposing to die testate as to a portion of his estate and intestate as to another portion is so unusual in the history of testamentary disposition as to justify almost any construction to escape from it.” In this case the presumption of law as to the intention of the testator is re-enforced by a definite statement at the conclusion of the will that he had thereby disposed of all his property, both real and personal, so far as known to him. In the devise in question there was no limitation over of any remainder on the failure of issue, and inasmuch as the devisee had no children, it would be not only against the presumption of law but the intention of the testator expressed in definite terms, to hold that it was the intention to leave the reversion entirely undisposed of, as intestate estate. There was a residuary devise to the executors, but counsel on both sides are agreed that it had no reference to a reversion in the land in controversy expectant upon the failure of issue, and that the only purpose was to provide, for the disposition of real estate which the testator might acquire after making the will. He attempted to limit the dower right of the widow by a provision that it should terminate upon her re-marriage; but that was clearly not a disposition of a remainder in fee or otherwise, and the attempt was, of course, ineffectual. The intention manifested by the will was to give the land in fee simple to Elias V. Baldwin, but in the event that he should have children by his wife they should be tenants in common in fee with him, and, unless the devise must be controlled by our statute, which turns a fee tail into a life estate in the devisee with remainder in fee to the person or persons to whom the estate tail would, on the death of the devisee, first pass, Elias V. Baldwin must be held to have been the owner in fee simple.

By the common law, which required words of inheritance for the devise of a fee if there had been children at the time of the devise, they and Elias V. Baldwin would have been joint tenants for life only, (Sheppard’s Touchstone, 440,) but under the rule in Wild’s case, 6 Coke, 17, if there were no children living at that time the devisee would take an estate tail. The decision in that case arose out of the common law in regard to life estates, and was adopted for the purpose of enlarging, by construction, a life estate into an estate tail. In the case of Davis v. Ripley, 194 Ill.

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Lewis v. Sedgwick
79 N.E. 14 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 454, 221 Ill. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boehm-v-baldwin-ill-1906.