Cheney v. Ricks

48 N.E. 75, 168 Ill. 533
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 75 (Cheney v. Ricks) 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
Cheney v. Ricks, 48 N.E. 75, 168 Ill. 533 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The court correctly refused to decree specific performance of the agreement between Dr. E. A. D’Arcy, deceased, and the appellant, Prentiss D. Cheney. This agreement was executed on the 13th day of May, 1862, and at the same time a similar agreement, relating to other tracts of said land, was entered into between said D’Arcy and F. H. Teese, husband of another daughter of said D’Arcy. The wife of the appellant, Cheney, and Mrs. Teese were the only children of D’Arcy, and while these agreements are in form contracts for the sale and conveyance of the lands mentioned in them, respectively, we think it very clearly appeared from the circumstances in proof, considered in the light of the relationship of the parties, that the primary purpose of the execution of the agreements was to arrange a disposition of so much of the property of D’Arcy for the benefit of his children. Nothing was done under either of these contracts prior to the death of said Dr. D’Arcy, which occurred April 25,1863. He left a will, the fifth clause of which provided for a different disposition of the lands mentioned in these contracts. Under the provisions of this will the title to the lands vested in the children of Mrs. Cheney and Mrs. Teese, subject to the life estate created by the will in Mrs. Cheney and Mrs. Teese.

In November, 1863, a few months after the death of Dr. D’Arcy, the appellant, Cheney, Catherine, his wife, P. H. Teese, and Caroline, his wife, in view of the provisions of the will of said D’Arcy, entered into an agreement in writing partitioning and allotting to Mrs. Teese and Mrs. Cheney said lands in severalty during the duration of the lives of the said life tenants under the will. This agreement also recited that one of the purposes of its execution was that of indemnifying the “said P. D. Cheney and F. H. Teese for any outlay they may make or be put to in taking care of, cultivating or improving said lands during the lifetime of their respective wives.” As a means of compensating said husbands for any such outlays, the agreement provided that in the event of the death of Mrs. Cheney during the lifetime of Mrs. Teese, said appellant, P. D. Cheney, or his assigns, should have and hold the premises allotted to Mrs. Cheney for a period of five years after the death of said Mrs. Cheney, and the same provision was made in the agreement for the protection of Teese in the event of the death of his wife.

The appellant, Cheney, acting for and on behalf of himself and his wife, under the provisions of this contract of partition and pursuant to the will of the father of his wife, entered into possession of the lands allotted to his wife, which included the 1920 acres in controversy in this proceeding. He remained in possession in the same capacity during the lifetime of his wife. Mrs. Cheney died April 23,1877, and, as was his right to do under the contract with Mr. and Mrs. Teese, appellant, Cheney, retained possession of the premises allotted to his wife, for a period of five years thereafter. Soon after the expiration of that period, appellant, Cheney, as complainant, in his own behalf and also in the capacity of next friend for Alexander M. Cheney, his son, filed a bill in chancery to the November term, 1882, of the Christian circuit court, in which he alleged that said E. A. D’Arcy died seized of the various tracts of land mentioned in complainant’s bill in this cause, and including the 1920 acres described in the agreement or contract executed to him for the sale of the land. The bill further alleged that said D’Arcy died testate, and set forth in Uceo verba the fifth clause of the will, which fifth clause is set forth in full in the statement of facts preceding this opinion. The bill alleged the partition of the said lands between Mrs. Cheney and Mrs. Teese, and the fact that possession passed to said parties according to said allotment. The bill then set forth the facts relative to the births and deaths of the children of the said Mrs. Cheney and Mrs. Teese, and that the appellant had inherited the interest in fee of two deceased children of himself and his said wife, and averred that “doubts have arisen as to the true construction of the will of the said E. A. D’Arcy as to the rights of the said Ann C. Teese and her children and as to the rights of complainant, P. D. Cheney, and his son, in the lands aforesaid, and the said Ann C. Teese claims, and by her husband, as her agent, acting for her and controlling said lands so allotted to her, gives out in speech, that the life estate created by the said will survives to her in the whole of said lands, as well those which have been so allotted and set apart to said Catherine as those set off to her, the said Ann C. Teese, who now claims under the will to hold and enjoy the whole of said land during her natural life, to the exclusion of your complainants.” The bill further alleged that doubts existed whether the life estate created under the will did or did not terminate as to both Mrs. Teese and Mrs. Cheney upon the death of the latter, and asked a construction of the will upon that point, and charged that if the life estate did so terminate, the complainants were entitled, under the will, to an absolute estate in fee in said lands, and prayed that if the court should decree that saiddife estate did so terminate, the court would decree partition of all the said lands of which the said D’Arcy died seized, between the said complainants, the appellant and his son, and the said Mary M. and Catherine M. Teese, according to their respective rights and interests in fee therein, accruing to them by force of the provisions of the said will, and that the court would appoint commissioners to make said partition. Amendments were afterwards made to the bill, which need not be otherwise noticed except to say they were designed to make more clear and explicit the claim of complainants to an interest in fee in the land in virtue of the will of his deceased wife’s father.

The defendants to the bill made answer thereto, and the cause was submitted to the court and a decree entered, from which the appellant, P. D. Cheney, prosecuted an appeal to this court, resulting in a reversal of the said decree and a construction of the will by this court. (Cheney v. Teese, 108 Ill. 473.) The cause was remanded and such subsequent proceedings had therein in the circuit court as resulted in a decree of that court construing the said will according to the directions of the Supreme Court, and adjudging and decreeing said appellant, P. D. Cheney, and his co-complainant, were entitled to and were vested of title in fee simple to an undivided three-fifths interest in said land under said will.

The participation of the said appellant, Cheney, in the amicable allotment of the life estate of his wife, his entering into possession of the lands under her right thereto asra devisee of the will of her father, E. A. D’Arcy, and the allegations contained in the bill filed by him against the other devisees of the same will, unmistakably indicate that appellant, Cheney, upon the death of his father-in-law abandoned all thought or intent of complying with or insisting upon the performance of the conditions of the contract for the purchase of the land. We also find in the record a number of letters written by the appellant, Cheney, framed upon the theory the will disposed of the title to the land, and asserting claims and rights in his own behalf wholly based upon that theory.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E. 75, 168 Ill. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheney-v-ricks-ill-1897.