Dieke v. Dieke

182 Ill. App. 13, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 349
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 9, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,836
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 Ill. App. 13 (Dieke v. Dieke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dieke v. Dieke, 182 Ill. App. 13, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 349 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1905 the appellant, Edith A. Dieke, filed her bill for separate maintenance, and a final decree was entered in the same year allowing her five dollars a week for the support of herself arid two minor children given into her custody, gome of this allowance was paid, but thereafter William Dieke, the husband, disappeared and was gone for about five years, by which time the accumulated and unpaid instalments of alimony amounted to more than one thousand dollars. In the attempt to collect this appellant filed a petition, now before us, in the separate maintenance suit, seeking among other things to reach the interest of her husband in the estate of his grandfather, who had made to him a devise by will. 'The petition prayed that such interest be subjected to the payment of the alimony by sequestration, and that the decree be made a continuing lien thereon; also that certain assignments made by the husband be declared null and void as to the petitioner. After hearing, the chancellor ordered the petition dismissed for want of equity, from which order appeal is made to this court.

Prior to the commencement of the suit for separate maintenance, William Dieke had executed an assignment of a portion, amounting to $1,600, of his interest in the estate of his grandfather, Henry Dieke, to Gustav H. and Jacob Bohlander and Martin H. Bormann, appellees herein, to secure them for losses sustained by them as sureties on William Dieke’s bond as tax collector for the town of Proviso, Cook county.

By the will of the grandfather, duly proved and admitted to record in the Probate Court in February, 1901, he devised to certain trustees “all the Beal, Personal and Mixed Property of every name, nature and description that I may die seized and possessed of;” and further he ordered said trustees when the youngest living of his grandchildren should arrive at the age of 21 years “to make a distribution of the trust property in their hands, names or under their control, among my said grandchildren.”

Apparently from the record before us, the youngest of these grandchildren was eighteen or nineteen years old in April, 1911, so that the time for the distribution of the trust property may have arrived at the present writing.

It is argued that William Dieke having at the date of the assignment to Bohlander and Bormann no present interest in Henry Dieke’s estate, he therefore had nothing which could be conveyed by the assignment to them. The general statement of the rule touching this point, as made in Cyc., vol. 4, p. 15, and supported by abundant authority, is:

“Whether the mere naked possibility or expectancy of an heir apparent or heir presumptive can be made the subject of assignment or release has been the subject of controversy; but it is now settled law that such assignment or releases, if made bona fide and for an adequate consideration, will be enforced in equity after the death of the ancestor.”

In Ridgway v. Underwood, 67 Ill. 419, the Court quotes with approval from Story’s statement of the rule in his Equity Jurisprudence, section 1040c, as follows:

“Contingent interests and expectancies may not only be assigned in equity, but they may also be the subject of a contract, such as a contract of sale, when made for a valuable" consideration, which courts of equity, after the event has happened, will enforce. But until the event has happened, the party contracting to buy has nothing but the contingency, which is a very different thing from the right to immediately recover and enjoy the property. He has not, strictly speaking, a jus ad rem any more than a jus in re. It is not a mere interest in the property, but a mere right under the contract. Indeed, the same effect takes place if there be an actual assignment; for, in contemplation of equity, it amounts not to an assignment of a present interest, but only to a contract to assign when the interest becomes vested. Therefore a contingent legacy, which is to vest on some future event, such as the legatees coming of age, may become the subject of an assignment or a contract of sale. So, even the naked possibility or expectancy of an heir to his ancestor’s estate may become the subject of a contract of sale or settlement; and, in such case, if made bona fide, for a valuable consideration, it will be enforced in equity after the death of the ancestor; not, indeed, as a trust attaching to the estate, but as a right of contract.”

Counsel for appellant correctly states the rule with reference to the time when an interest is vested under language of a devise such as was used in the will before us, that is, that where the distribution is to be when the youngest living of the grandchildren arrives at the age of twenty-one years, no interest vests until the happening of the contingency; but we do not understand that this renders void a contract by the devisee assigning this contingent interest. As Story says : “It amounts not to an assignment of a present interest, but only to a contract to assign when the interest becomes vested.”

In Ebey v. Adams, 135 Ill. 80, cited by appellant as in point, it was held that where the devisee had died before any estate vested in her, the grantees in her warranty deed seeking to convey her interest took nothing, but that is not a holding that the grantees would take nothing if the grantor had lived.

We cannot assent to the claim that the supplemental assignment to Bohlander and Bormann cannot be considered because it was made and filed after the commencement of these proceedings. Conceding that the first assignment purported to convey a present interest, and that the second assignment was executed to apply to future property, we do not see how appellant is in a position to complain. The order for the payment of alimony does not make this allowance a lien upon the property sought to be assigned. We discern nothing inequitable in giving consideration to the second contract of assignment to Bohlander and Bormann, and nothing appearing tending to impeach its good faith and adequate consideration, we are of the opinion that it is valid and that the order of the chancellor, in so far as it denied the prayer of the petition seeking to have it declared null and void, was justified and proper.

Without discussing appellant’s point, that by the terms of Henry Dieke’s will a spendthrift trust is created, we are content to say that the intention of the testator to create such a trust must clearly appear from the language of the entire will, and we find nothing herein even slightly indicating that Henry Dieke had any such intention.

The petition also averred a certain deed of assignment, dated November 1,1905, from William H. Dieke, the husband, to his brother, George Dieke, assigning the right and interest of said William H. Dieke to the extent of four thousand dollars in the estate of his grandfather, Henry Dieke, said petition averring that said assignment was made fraudulently and collusive,ly, with the purpose and intent of defrauding the petitioner and preventing her from collecting her alimony for the support of herself and her said minor children. The petition prayed that said assignment be declared null and void as to said petitioner.

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182 Ill. App. 13, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dieke-v-dieke-illappct-1913.