Dauel v. Arnold

66 N.E. 846, 201 Ill. 570
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 846 (Dauel v. Arnold) 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
Dauel v. Arnold, 66 N.E. 846, 201 Ill. 570 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The testator by his will apportioned his mortgage indebtedness upon the respective tracts of land devised to his children, and such indebtedness is not drawn in question by this appeal. After his death his children, except Minor K. Bunn, met and estimated his other debts at §10,000, and made a written agreement apportioning such indebtedness among the devisees according to the basis of equality they deemed the testator by his will intended should be observed. But the county court found that the deficiency was §12,785.80, and that upon said basis the amount that should be paid by Minor K. Bunn or his successors in title to prevent a sale of the land devised to him was §1795.42, instead of §1405, as stated in the agreement. As said Minor K. did not sign the agreement, neither he nor his grantees are bound by it, and if it were true, as appellants allege, that the court enforced this agreement against the appellants without regard to their rights in the premises, they would have just cause to complain. But we do not so understand the decree. The evidence is not preserved, except as the facts are found and recited in the order and decree of the court. From the findings of the court we think it sufficiently appears that the basis upon which the agreement between eig'ht of the devisees apportioned the deficiency, was the correct one, the total of the estimated amount, only, being too small. There being no bill of exceptions or certificate of evidence we must presume the findings of the court of the facts stated in the decree are correct. It 'is immaterial that it does not appear upon what evidence or by what process of computation the court arrived at the conclusion reached. The tract of land which appellants obtained by mesne conveyances from Minor K. Bunn was properly subjected to the payment, in due proportion, of the debts of the testator, and from the record as it is presented to us we must presume that the court below did not impose on this tract any greater amount than its due share.

But appellants contend that the allegations of the petition are not sufficient to sustain the order or" decree, because they do not state what, or that any, advancements had been made to Minor K. Bunn by his father, and that unless said Minor K. was indebted to his father or had received advancements from him it would be impossible to sustain so large a finding against said tract. While the petition does not state the amount which he should contribute, it does set out the agreement signed by all except him, and then alleges that “upon the payment of said respective sums each of said devisees would be placed upon an exact equality as regards each other, and that any further sum necessary to be raised to clear said estate from all indebtedness should be paid by said devisees or realized from the sale of their respective lands devised, to them as aforesaid, pro rata.” If it were considered necessary to so allege, it is clear that the petition, as the question is here raised, was sufficient in the respect mentioned. The court was asked to make only an equitable apportionment of the burden, and it does not appear that any other was made. It is not pointed out wherein the petition failed to state all matters required, by the statute.

The appellants answered the petition, and the appellee filed a number of exceptions to the answer. Three of these exceptions were sustained, but no rule was asked for or entered requiring a further answer. The decree recites that the cause was heard on the petition confessed as to the defendants not answering, the answer of appellants, the exceptions and replication thereto, oral evidence heard in open court, and papers and exhibits on filé pertaining to the estate. Appellants insist that no decree could be entered until they had been ruled to file a further answer as to those matters to which exceptions had been sustained, and cite the statute, Stone v. Moore, 26 Ill. 165, and Holly v. Powell, 63 id. 139, in support of their contention. In Stone v. Moore a demurrer was filed to the answer, and the court held this improper. In Holly v. Powell the opinion recites the proceeding's, as follows: “The suit was a bill in chancery to foreclose a

mortgage, and an answer by defendant. To the answer complainant filed exceptions, which were allowed and a decree of foreclosure thereupon entered.” The court held the decree was premature on allowing the exceptions, and that the defendant should have been ruled to put in a sufficient answer, and reversed the decree for this error. It seems that there was no hearing, and that the bill was taken as confessed without giving the defendant an opportunity to answer further. No default pro confesso could be taken, under the statute, until a failure to put in a further answer, after a rule to that effect had been entered. The facts are entirely different in the case at bar, and it appears the parties went to a hearing on the issues as made, without objection. If parties go to a hearing without observing all the .technical rules required for arriving at the issue these requirements are waived. Jackson v. Sackett, 146 Ill. 646.

It is also assigned as error that the court sustained three exceptions to the answer of appellants. The petition alleged that there was not enough personalty left at the death of the testator to pay all the debts of the estate, and that the legal effect of the will was that all the indebtedness should be paid from the proceeds of the real estate devised to the children, and that the bequest of personalty to the widow should not contribute thereto. The answer alleged that there was sufficient personalty left to pay all the debts, and that it should have been appropriated to the payment of the debts of the estate, but that the widow appropriated and diverted a large portion thereof to her own use. An exception was sustained to this part of the answer, which referred to certain bank stock, of the value of §6300, specifically devised to the widow. The answer was neither insufficient nor impertinent on these points and no exception should have been sustained, but no harm came to appellants by, this ruling. The question of law sought to be raised in this manner arose on the construction of the will, and will be referred to in another place.

The petition further alleged that the heirs, with the exception of Minor K. Bunn, made an agreement as to the amount each of them should justly and equitably have to contribute in order to pay off the indebtedness on a basis of BIO, 000, arid that they each agreed to pay these amounts, and that the amount apportioned to Minor K. Bunn was just and equitable. The answer alleged that the agreement could be of no binding- force and effect without being concurred in by all of the heirs and appellant Ingram, who by mesne conveyances held title to the land devised to Minor K. Bunn, and the answer denied that any of the indebtedness should be charged to Minor K. Bunn. An exception was taken to the statement of the effect of the agreement, and sustained. That was a mere conclusion of the pleader, and could, at the most, only amount to impertinence. No harm was done to appellants by the sustaining of the exception. The court did not find in its decree that the agreement was binding on Minor K. Bunn and the appellants, but only that the basis on which it was made was just and equitable, and that the adjustment between the children should be upon that basis.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 846, 201 Ill. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dauel-v-arnold-ill-1903.