Hamsher v. Hamsher

8 L.R.A. 556, 132 Ill. 273
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 8 L.R.A. 556 (Hamsher v. Hamsher) 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
Hamsher v. Hamsher, 8 L.R.A. 556, 132 Ill. 273 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court r

The appellees in this case make many points, some of which may be stated as follows: first, that the appellant has not and never can have a vested interest in the lands in controversy,, but that the title, possession and control of the interest claimed by him is vested in the executors and remains there until after his death: second, that appellant is not a tenant in common with appellee Anna Hamsher, the widow of the deceased, and therefore not entitled to the partition prayed for in his cross- ! hill, but that the widow, as owner in fee of one half of the lands by virtue of her renunciation and election, and the executors, sis being vested with the title in fee of the other half by oper- : ation of the will, are tenants in common and the only parties , entitled to partition: third, that the right of the Board of Directors of the Young Men’s Christian Association of Decatur to receive and hold so much of the real estate devised by item-11 of the will, as exceeds in quantity ten acres, can only be-called in question by the State in a direct proceeding: fourth, . that the appellant, by accepting the bequest of $600.00 per year i to himself during his life, is estopped from setting up any right . of his own that will defeat the full effect and operation of every j part of the will: fifth, that “The Young Men’s Christian Association of Decatur, Illinois,” does not come within that class of ;religious corporations, which are forbidden by our statute to-receive by devise more than ten acres of land, including land already held.

As the view, which we take of the fifth and last point, disposes of the material issues involved in the cause, we do not deem it necessary to decide either of the other positions taken-by counsel for appellees.

David F. Hamsher died testate, leaving no child or descendants of a child. His surviving wife, Anna Hamsher, by reason of her renunciation and election under sections 11,12 and 13-of the dower Act, is entitled to take one half of all the real and personal estate, subject to the payment of debts. The-theory of the cross-bill, filed by the appellant in the court below, is, that item 11 of the will attempts to devise to “The-Young Men’s Christian Association of Decatur, Illinois,” 160 acres of land, reduced by such renunciation and election of' the widow to an undivided one half of 160 acres of land; that such devise is void under section 42 of our Act concerning corporations,1 which is hereinafter set forth; that, by reason of' the void character of the devise, the land embraced in it must be regarded as intestate estate, and belongs to the appellant,, as the father and sole surviving heir of the deceased testator..

Assuming the contention of the appellant to be correct, that the will devises to the Association in question land exceeding-ten acres in quantity, including that already held by the Association, we are brought to the consideration of the question whether or'not the Association can hold the land so devised-

Section 42 of the “Act concerning corporations,” approved April 18, 1872, in force July 1, 1872, (Starr & C. Ann. Stat.. page 623) is as follows: “Any corporation that may be formed for religious purposes under this Act, or under any law of this-State for the incorporation of religious societies, may receive, by gift, devise or purchase, land not exceeding in quantity (including that already held by such corporation) ten acres, and. may erect or build thereon such houses, buildings or other improvements as it may deem necessary for the convenience and comfort of such congregation, church or society, and may lay out and maintain thereon a burying ground; but no such property shall be used except in the manner expressed in the ■ gift, grant or devise, or, if no use or trust is so expressed, except for the benefit of the church, congregation or society for which it was intended.”

From an examination of the sections, which precede, and of those, which follow, section 42, it becomes manifest that the corporations, intended to be designated by the latter section, are those churches, congregations or societies, which are organized for the purposes of “religious worship.”

Sections from 29 to 34 inclusive of the Act have reference to “corporations not for pecuniary profit,” providing for the mode of their organization,- defining the nature and extent of their powers, specifying the methods of electing their trustees, of effecting their dissolution, of distributing their property, of changing their articles of association, etc. Sections from 35 to 46 inclusive have reference to “religious corporations.” Section 35 begins as follows: “The foregoing provisions shall not apply to any religious corporations; but any church, congregation or society, formed for the purpose of religious toorship, may become incorporated in the manner following, towit

The mode of organizing such a religious corporation is essentially different from that prescribed for organizing a corporation “not for pecuniary profit.” In the latter case, three or more persons, desiring “to associate themselves fof any lawful purpose, other than for pecuniary profit,” make a certificate stating the name of the association, its business, the objects of its formation, the number and names of its trustees, managers or directors, etc., and file such certificate with the Secretary of State, who thereupon issues a certificate of organization, etc.

But in the organization of the religious corporations referred to in the statute, the church, congregation or society holds a meeting and elects or appoints two or more of its members “as trustees, wardens and vestrymen,” etc., and adopts a corporate name; and, where the chairman or secretary of the meeting has made and filed in the recorder’s office of the county an affidavit as to the holding of such meeting and its action as aforesaid, the body politic and corporate is created.

The words, “such congregation, church or society,” as used in sections 36, 41, 42 and 48, refer back to section 35, where "the “church, congregation or society” intended to be designated is described as being “formed for the purpose of religious worship.”

The view here expressed has been adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States. In Gilmer v. Stone, 120 U. S. 586, that Court had occasion to construe the section 42 now under consideration, and Mr. Justice Harlan, in delivering the opinion in that case, uses the following language: “The counsel for the plaintiff in error seem to lay stress upon the more general words, “formed for religious purposes,” in the 42d section of the act; but manifestly the other parts of the same section, and previous sections, show that the only corporations intended to be restricted in the ownership of land to ten acres, were those formed for the purpose of “religious worship,” and not organizations commonly called benevolent or missionary societies.”

It now becomes necessary to inquire whether or not “The Young Men’s Christian Association of Decatur, Illinois” is a corporation organized for the purposes of “religious worship.” If it is not such a corporation, then the legislature, whether wisely or unwisely, has failed to place any restriction upon its receiving by “gift, devise or purchase” a quantity of land greater than ten acres.

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8 L.R.A. 556, 132 Ill. 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamsher-v-hamsher-ill-1890.