Fetrow v. Krause

61 Ill. App. 238, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 742
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 12, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 Ill. App. 238 (Fetrow v. Krause) 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
Fetrow v. Krause, 61 Ill. App. 238, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 742 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By his bill in equity the appellant sought an accounting from the estate of his grandfather, Jacob Fetrow, deceased, for certain moneys and property left him by the last will of his father, Cyrus J. Fetrow, deceased.

Cassie E. Krause, the appellee, was the widow of the said Jacob Fetrow, and residuary legatee and devisee under his last will.

It is said in the brief for appellant, and is seemingly acquiesced in by appellee, that the following facts are admitted by all parties, to wit:

“ 1. Cyrus J. Fetrow executed his last will and testament March 26, 1874, and died three days thereafter, making his father, Jacob Fetrow, his executor, leaving to Jacob Fetrow two hundred and fifty dollars ($250); to Susan E. Fetrow, his widow, twelve hundred dollars ($1,200); and the remainder of his estate to his son, Thomas C. Fetrow, the complainant herein; but provided in his will that Jacob should have charge of the same until Tom should become twenty-one years of age, using it as he might think best so as to increase it as much as possible, the whole to become the property of Tom when he should arrive at twenty-one years of age.

2. Under the authority given him in said will, Jacob Fetrow, although he never probated the will, received from various sources moneys belonging to Cyrus J. Fetrow’s es" tate aggregating $3,420.95, of which amount he was entitled to retain for himself $250, leaving a balance of $3,170.95.

3. Cyrus J. Fetrow and wife conveyed to Jacob Fetrow, by warranty deed bearing the same date as Cyrus’ will, eighty acres of land in Iowa.

4. Jacob Fetrow executed his last will and testament, bearing date the 14th of October, 1889, and died the 19th day of January, 1891, in and by which said last will and testament he provided:

1st. That his debts be fully paid.

2d. That complainant, Thomas C. Fetrow, his grandson, should receive under said will $2,000 in money, and real estate consisting of ten lots in Irving Park, Cook county, Illinois.

3d. That the mayor of Princeton, Illinois, should receive $500 in trust, and,

4th. That all the residue and remainder of his estate should go to his widow, Cassie E. Fetrow, whom he married in 1885.

This will was probated the 27th day of January, 1891, and makes no illusion in any manner to the funds that had been received by him as executor of Cyrus J. Fetrow’s will.

5. Jacob Fetrow retained his son Cyrus’ will in his possession, from the time of Cyrus’ death in 1874 until his death in 1891, and Cassie E. Fetrow, executrix of the will of Jacob Fetrow, found Cyrus’ will, unprobated, among the private papers of Jacob Fetrow after his death, and delivered the same to John S. Huey, guardian of Thomas C. Fetrow.

6. Jacob Fetrow at no time rendered any account, in his official or representative capacity as executor or trustee or guardian, of the moneys or property which came into his hands under his son Cyrus’ will.

7. Jacob Fetrow sold the Iowa land in 1885, which Cyrus conveyed to him three days' before his death, but neither he nor his estate has accounted to Tom for either the rents or the proceeds of sale derived from this land, although Jacob Fetrow charged the taxes on this land to Tom.

8. Thomas C. Fetrow, the complainant, is the only-child of Cyrus, and Cyrus was the only child of Jacob Fetrow.

9. Cassie E. Krause, the residuary legatee and devisee under Jacob Fetrow’s will, has received from Jacob's estate $10,000 cash from the sale of real estate which was devised to her under said will, and about $9,000 cash bequeathed to her under said will, and holds the title, under said will,'to a considerable portion of real estate devised to her, besides various notes and accounts which came to her under said will, while Tom has received the $2,000 bequeathed to him, and-the ten Irving Park lots.”

It was proved in the case that the Irving Park lots devised to appellant by his grandfather, cost Jacob Fetrow $2,400 in February, 1881, and, at the time of Jacob Fetrow’s death, were worth $10,300, or thereabouts.

Appellant, therefore, received under the will of his grandfather, Jacob Fetrow, the cash legacy of $2,000, and the devise of lots worth about $10,000.

■ The entire estate left by Jacob Fetrow was worth $30,000, or, perhaps, a little more.

After the death of appellant’s father, in March, 1874, he, the appellant, then being an infant about eight months old, went with his mother to live with his grandfather, Jacob Fetrow, and continued to live there uninterruptedly until the death of his grandmother, Jacob Fetrow’s first wife, a period of about ten years.

The master, to whom the cause was referred, found that he stayed with his grandfather from March 29, 1874, until June 8, 1884, and again, some time after that last named date and prior to March 21, 1890, thirty-four weeks; and from March 21, 1890, to January 19, 1891, which was the' date of his grandfather’s death, a period of forty-three weeks, and charged him, in the account he. stated, with six dollars a week for support by his grandfather during those periods.

We state the finding of the master in such regard for the purpose of showing that the appellant did, in fact, spend by far the greater part of the time with his grandfather after his father’s death, until the grandfather also died.

From the master’s report it further appears that after paying the specific legacies provided by the will of appellant’s father, and the expenses of his funeral and last sickness, there remained in the hands of Jacob Fetrow in trust for appellant, the cash sum of $1,808.84, and that Jacob Fetrow received $800 for the Iowa land on June 22, 1885. These two amounts comprised the entire estate of Cyrus J. Fetrow which remained in the hands of Jacob Fetrow for the benefit of appellant.

The master in his account allowed said sums in favor of appellant, and charged against them the support of appellant at the rate of six dollars a week during • the time in which he was found, as aforesaid, to have lived with his grandfather, and two claims of $100 each paid by the estate of Jacob Fetrow for the use of appellant, and some taxes paid on the Iowa land.

Allowing what was, perhaps, proper interest both ways, the master’s conclusion was that the charges for the support of appellant, together with said two claims, and the taxes, overbalanced what Jacob Fetrow received for appellant from his father’s estate by the sum of $788.32.

The master also found that the devise of the Irving Park lots and the legacy of $2,000 made by the last will of Jacob Fetrow to appellant, operated as a satisfaction of the debt or liability Jacob Fetrow was under to the appellant, growing out of his trust relationship to appellant under the will of the latter’s father, independently of the fact that, according to his account, the appellant had been overpaid in other ways.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ill. App. 238, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fetrow-v-krause-illappct-1895.