Dick v. Ricker

78 N.E. 823, 222 Ill. 413
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 823 (Dick v. Ricker) 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
Dick v. Ricker, 78 N.E. 823, 222 Ill. 413 (Ill. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

As we understand the contention of appellants, it is that the deed vested in Eliza J. Williams simply an ordinary life estate; that Mary G. Williams was vested with the title to said real estate as the first holder under the fee tail estate, and as she died without any children or heirs of her body, the title to said real estate reverted, as one of the incidents of an estate tail upon failure of competent takers, to the grantor, his heirs or devisees. Appellants claim as heirs of Thomas Redmond.

If an estate tail was created by this deed, the word “children,” both in the granting and the habendum clauses, must be construed to mean “heirs.” The authorities have always held that in order to create this estate, words of inheritance as well as words of procreation are necessary. Blackstone says: “As the word heirs is necessary to create a fee, so, in further limitation of the strictness of the foedal donation, the word body or some other words of procreation are necessary to make it a fee tail and ascertain to what heirs in particular the fee is limited. . If, therefore, either the words of inheritance or words of procreation be omitted, albeit the others are inserted in the grant, this will not make an estate tail.” (Sharswood’s Blackstone, book 2, p. *115.) To the same effect are 1 Washburn on Real Prop. (4th ed.) *75; Butler v. Huestis, 68 Ill. 594; 11 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, (2d ed.) p. 372, and cases there cited.

If the word “children” is to be considered a word of purchase, and not of limitation, in the granting clause or premises of this deed, then, manifestly, it must be construed the same way in the habendum clause. Should these words be taken in their ordinary sense, without reference to the context of the deed, then clearly, if the habendum clause does not in any way limit or define the estate granted, under section 13 of our statute on conveyancing, Eliza J. Williams and Mary G. Williams would take an estate in fee in the property in question, because Mary G. Williams was the only child in esse at the time the deed was delivered, and a grantee must be in existence at the time the deed is executed in order that a present title in possession may pass. (Miller v. McAlister, 197 Ill. 72; Morris v. Caudle, 178 id. 9.) The son, John Williams, Jr., was not born until some time after this deed was executed. It may be said in passing, it appears from the record that his only heirs were his mother, Eliza J. Williams, and his sister, Mary G. Williams, hence the fee simple title would ultimately have all been in these two, even if he had been in existence at the time of the execution of the deed and had taken thereunder. Should the habendum clause be construed to limit or define the estate conveyed in the granting clause in accordance with the rule laid down in Riggin v. Love, 72 Ill. 553, Welch v. Welch, 183 id. 237, and Sassenberg v. Huseman, 182 id. 341, then, construing the word “children” not to mean “heirs,” but in the ordinary sense, without any reference to the context, and considering both the granting and habendum clauses together, it would not create an estate tail, but Eliza J. Williams would have taken the property for and during her natural life and Mary G. Williams would have taken the remainder of the estate. (Beacroft v. Strawn, 67 Ill. 28.)“ So that whether the habendum clause be considered repugnant to the granting clause, and therefore rejected, or whether it be construed as limiting and defining the granting clause, if the word “children” be construed not to mean “heirs,” and therefore not conveying an estate in tail, the ruling of the county court must be upheld.

The word “children,” however, when the context requires it in order to carry out the intent of the testator or grantor, has been construed to mean “heirs.” In Sweet-apple v. Bindon, 2 Vern. 536, (quoted in 1 Preston on Estates, 409,) it was held that where there was a gift by will, to be laid out by the testatrix in lands and settled to the use of the daughter, Mary, and her children, and if she died without issue, then over, “the court must take the will as - they found it; that Mary had an estate tail in the lands to be purchased.” Lord Hardwick is quoted as having said in discussing this question in Bagshaw v. Spencer, 2 Atkyns, 577: “There can be no magic or particular force in certain words more than others; their operation must arise from the sense they carry.” Justice Buller, in considering a similar question in Hodgson v. Ambrose, 1 Douglas, 336, said (p. 342) : “It seems to me to be a false logic to put a different sense upon any words from what, in general, they import to bear, by mere inference from the words themselves, unexplained by any others; though if other words manifest the intent, I know of no law that says the intent shall not prevail.” This court in Strawbridge v. Strawbridge, 220 Ill. 61, said (p. 63) : “The term ‘children’ is primarily a word of purchase, and is not to be construed as equivalent to ‘heirs’ in the absence of other words or circumstances showing it to have been used in that sense; but where there are other words in the will showing that the word ‘children’ was used in the sense of ‘heirs,’ the word will be construed as a word of limitation equivalent to ‘heirs.’ ” (See, also, 5 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—1092, and cases there cited.) This court has held that the words “heirs,” “issue” and “children” may be construed interchangeably when found necessary to effectuate the intention of the testator, and that the words “heirs” and “children” may be used synonymously in the same instrument. Butler v. Huestis, supra; Leiter v. Sheppard, 85 Ill. 242.

The grantor, Thomas Redmond, clearly intended to create an estate tail by this deed, therefore he must have used “children” in the sense of “heirs.” It is admitted by all. the briefs that if the habendum does not limit or define in some way the estate conveyed by the granting clause, then the granting clause, under the common law, would create an estate tail general, which, under the sixth section of our statute relating to conveyances, would vest in Eliza J. Williams a life estate with the remainder in fee to Mary G. Williams.

But appellants contend that the habendum clause defines the estate conveyed and that Eliza J. Williams took simply an ordinary life estate, independently of the entailed estate, and that Mary G. Williams was the first tenant to hold by virtue of the fee tail estate. They state in their reply brief that they have not been able to find any case in which a deed with similar language has ever been construed before a court of last resort of. any of the States. The question may never have been directly before any of the courts of this country, (although the case of Ross v. Adams, 28 N. J. L. 160, is very similar,) but some early English decisions on this question may be found construing words substantially the same as those in this deed, and it is evident that a careful consideration of the “old black-letter law” will furnish the true guide to the original nature and incidents of those estates which have been handed down from' those times, and particularly of one like fee tail,- which, having been practically abolished in our jurisprudence, is only to be found treated as a vital reality in the country and at the period in which it grew and flourished.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 823, 222 Ill. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dick-v-ricker-ill-1906.