Dial v. Dial

38 N.E.2d 43, 378 Ill. 276
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1941
DocketNo. 26110. Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 38 N.E.2d 43 (Dial v. Dial) 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
Dial v. Dial, 38 N.E.2d 43, 378 Ill. 276 (Ill. 1941).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Farthing

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Iroquois county which construed the last will and testament of Robert H. Dial, deceased, and ordered partition of two parcels of real estate, one devised by the testator, and the other devised by the testator’s wife, to Earl H. Dial, now deceased. Appellee Mae A. Dial is the widow of Earl, and the appellant, Mildred Dial, is his sister.

Robert H. Dial died testate May 28, 1926, leaving his widow Florence E. Dial and their two children Earl H. and Mildred Dial as his only heirs. By the third section of his will he devised all his real estate to his widow for life. By the fourth section he devised to his son Earl, subject to the above life estate of his widow, an undivided one-half of all his real estate in fee. The controversy in this suit arises largely over the construction of the fifth section of the will, which reads as follows: “I give, devise and bequeath the remaining undivided half of my real estate, subject to the life estate therein of my said wife, to my said son, Earl H. Dial, as trustee for my daughter Mildred Dial, who is afflicted, and I enjoin upon him to see that she has proper care and attention as long as she lives. Upon the death of my said daughter, the title in fee to the share so bequeathed to my said son as trustee, shall go to my said son Earl H. Dial, in fee simple absolute.”

Florence E. Dial, the widow and life tenant, died testate November 11, 1935. She devised and bequeathed her entire estate to her son, Earl, stating she made no provision for her daughter because “she is amply provided for by the will of my deceased husband.” Earl Dial was given an improved parcel of real estate in Watseka under his mother’s will, and he and his wife Mae A. Dial occupied it as their residence. April 7, 1940, Earl Dial died intestate leaving his widow, Mae, and his sister Mildred as his only heirs. Prior to, at the time of, and subsequent to her father’s death, Mildred was an inmate of the Illinois Asylum for Feeble Minded Children at Lincoln, Illinois. Earl Dial was in possession of the farm devised under the fifth section of his father’s will until his death, and the parties agree that he furnished proper care and attention for his sister as long as he lived and that she has since received the same care.

The decree found the testator’s intention was to provide for the proper care of his daughter Mildred during her lifetime, and that Earl Dial had furnished such care and attention until his death; that to effectuate the father’s. intention might well require more than the trust estate could produce as income and that the “vested remainder” of Earl Dial created by the fifth section of the will might be cut down and, if necessary, exhausted, in order to carry out the testator’s intention with respect to Mildred. The court also found the language of the fifth section neither expressly nor inferentially disclosed an intention to build up a fund to be held for Mildred Dial, and that, hence, an accounting was not due from the estate of Earl H. Dial. It was decreed that Robert H. Dial’s will created a trust in an undivided one-half interest in his real estate and that a successor trustee be appointed to administer the trust. The decree held Earl’s widow, Mae A. Dial, was the owner in fee simple of (1) one-half of the real estate which was devised to Earl by the fourth section of his father’s will, (2) one-half of the remainder interest in the property devised to Earl by the fifth section of his father’s will, subject to the trust in favor of Mildred, and (3) one-half of the residential property in Watseka, together with an estate of homestead in this property. It follows that Mildred Dial received the other one-half interest in fee in each of these parcels of real estate, although the decree does not expressly so find. The decree also held that Mae A. Dial had dower in the other one-half of the property devised under the fourth section of Robert H. Dial’s will and the other one-half of the residence property in Watseka. Partition was ordered on the foregoing basis.

The first question to be determined is what interests were created by the fifth section of Robert H. Dial’s will. Whether a trust was created for the benefit of Mildred Dial, or whether an equitable charge was placed on the land as security for Mildred’s interest thereby created, depends upon the testator’s intention as revealed by the language of the will. Section 10 of the Restatement of Trusts points out both the similarities and the differences between a trust and a charge. They are alike in that in either case the one holding title holds it subject to an equitable interest in another person. They differ in that in the case of a charge, the one holding title is the owner of the land subject only to a lien on the property in favor of the equitable encumbrancer; in the case of a trust the trustee, though he has title, is not the beneficial owner of the property. There is a fiduciary relation between trustee and beneficiary but not between a holder of property subject to a charge and the equitable encumbrancer. One holding property subject to a charge may properly transfer his interest in the property to a third person (subject to the charge), but a trustee cannot unless expressly authorized. In discussing the nature of a charge, Perry on Trusts, section 567, says: “It seems more accurate to describe such a charge upon the devised or descended property as an equitable lien rather than a technical trust. The lien is merely the legatee’s security for payment of his legacy when it becomes due. Upon failure of payment after the legacy has become due, equity will enable the legatee to foreclose the lien even against a purchaser for value unless he has purchased without notice. Until the legacy has fallen due and there has been a failure to pay it, the only fiduciary duty of the owner of the property seems to be not to destroy the lien by transferring to a purchaser without notice and not to commit waste which would impair the value of the security.” The test laid down by the Restatement, (section 10,) to determine whether the interest created is a trust or a charge, is stated as follows: “If the transferor manifests an intention to impose a duty upon the transferee to deal with the property for the benefit of a third person and to give to the third person the beneficial interest therein, a trust is created; if he manifests an intention not to impose such a duty upon the transferee, but to give to the transferee the beneficial interest therein, and to give a security interest to the third person, an equitable charge is created.” Viewed in the light of the above principles, we think the testator created a trust for the benefit of Mildred Dial, and did not give her a mere charge or lien on the land as security for the payment of whatever amount might be necessary for her maintenance, care and attention. It is noteworthy that the interest of Earl H. Dial, while Mildred was alive, was twice stated to be that of a trustee, and a duty was imposed upon him to see that she received proper care and attention as long as she lived. At her death the title which he had theretofore held as trustee was to end and he was then to become the beneficial owner of the land. We think the language manifests an intention that Earl should deal with the property for the benefit of his sister Mildred, and not merely an intention that he should only refrain from committing waste or from transferring his title to an innocent purchaser for value.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E.2d 43, 378 Ill. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dial-v-dial-ill-1941.