Harris v. Rhodes

130 Ill. App. 233, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 609
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 130 Ill. App. 233 (Harris v. Rhodes) 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
Harris v. Rhodes, 130 Ill. App. 233, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 609 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by Eli S. Harris, an intervening petitioner, from an order of distribution entered by the Circuit Court of Piatt county, in the matter of the will of Isaac Thompson, deceased, of which said Will, appellee is the surviving executor.

The facts which are undisputed, briefly stated, are substantially as follows: Isaac Thompson died childless, on or about March 13, 1895, leaving his wife, Mary E. Thompson, him surviving. By his will he nominated his wife and appellee, Thomas Bhodes, as executors thereof, and upon the will being proved in the County Court, k letters testamentary were issued to them. The "portions of said will which we deem material to the issues here involved, are as follows:

“2nd. It is my will that my wife, Mary E. Thompson, shall have all my personal property, money, and effects of whatever kind of which I may die seized or possessed, as her absolute property.”

“3rd. It is my will that my said wife shall have the real estate of which I may die seized or possessed, of whatever kind or wherever situated, for and during the term of her natural life, such life estate subject, however, to the conditions mentioned in Clause 1, of this my said will, and to the further provision that if my said wife should deem it necessary for her support and maintenance or for her general comfort or convenience to sell and convey absolutely and in fee any or all of said real estate of which I may die seized or possessed, she may in her discretion do so, or may, by mortgage or otherwise, encumber any portion of said real estate for her said support and maintenance. ’ ’

“5th. On the death of my said wife, it is my will that such of my real estate as shall not have been, sold under this my said will, shall be sold by my surviving executor, and the proceeds of such sale and whatever may remain of the proceeds of any sale of real estate made under this will before the death of my said wife shall be divided as follows:

“To my nephew, Joseph Braucher, six hundred dollars, to my sister Elizabeth Slater, five hundred dollars. * * * After the last two foregoing specific bequests are satisfied, then whatever may remain of my said real estate, I will shall be equally divided among the heirs-at-law of my said wife. *f * * ”

On October 1, 1896, Mary E. Thompson, widow of said testator, was married to appellant, Harris, with whom she continued to live until her death which occurred on September 15, 1905. No children were born as the issue of said marriage. The widow failed to exercise the right conferred upon her by said will, to sell or encumber the real estate for her support. At the October term, 1905, appellee, as surviving executor, filed in the County Court a petition in which, after representing that the said Mary E. Harris left surviving her no children or descendants of children as her heirs at law, and that • she left her surviving appellant, her husband, Sarah Oldfield, Hannah Braucher and Eliza Woodward, her sisters; William Trigg, her brother; Thomas, Charles, Samuel and George Rhodes and Eliza Priestly, children of a deceased sister; and George, Henry, Charles and Albert Trigg, Vina Sullivan and Minnie Marvel, children of a deceased brother—he prayed that an order be entered directing him to sell the real estate in question, and after discharging all liens thereon, to divide the remainder of the proceeds among the persons named in said petition, other than appellant. Upon the property being sold, the court approved the sale; found the heirs at law of Mary E. Harris to be the persons mentioned in the petition, other than appellant; and ordered the net proceeds of the sale to be divided in accordance with the prayer of the petition. Whereupon appellant filed an intervening petition alleging that he had not been made a party to said proceeding; that he was the surviving husband of Mary E. Harris and as such entitled to the entire net proceeds of said real estate under the will of Isaac Thompson; and praying that the order of distribution be vacated. The intervening petition was denied and appellant appealed to the Circuit Court, where the order of the County Court was affirmed. Whereupon the present appeal was taken.

The only questions presented by this record for our determination are whether appellant under the terms of the will of Isaac Thompson is entitled to all or any of the proceeds of the real estate in question, and if so, to what proportion thereof.

Appellant contends that he is an heir at law of Mary E. Thompson, his deceased wife, and- that she having died intestate and without issue, he is entitled to the entire fund in controversy. In support of such contention he relies upon section 1 of the statute entitled “Descent,” which reads, in part, as follows:

“That estates *’ * * of residents * * * in this state dying intestate * # * shall descend to and be distributed in the manner following, to wit, * * * Third. When there is a widow or surviving husband and no child or children, or descendants of a child or children of the intestate, then * * * one-half of the real estate and the whole of the personal estate, shall descend to such widow or surviving husband as an absolute estate forever,” etc. Rev. Stat. (1905), 763.

Appellee first contends that the statute of “Descent” has no application to the questions under consideration, for the reason that the property involved was not that of Mary E. Harris, and could, therefore, in no event, descend to appellant as heir at law. That the words “heirs at law,” being used by the testator to describe a relationship to a person other than the testator, were intended by hbm to be used in the sense of “heirs apparent.” '

In Richards v. Miller, 62 Ill. 417, where the construction of the clause “I give, devise and bequeath to my ‘heirs at law,’ the remainder of my estate” was under consideration, the court said:

“Is the husband an heir ? The statute unquestionably makes him such when it says that upon certain contingencies, one-half of the real estate of the wife shall descend to him as his exclusive estate forever. An heir is one who inherits. He takes an estate and land from another by descent, as distinguished from a devisee, who takes by will. . He is the one upon whom the law casts the estate immedi-' ately upon the death. * * * Can we according to the rules of interpretation and with nothing in the context to aid, construe the words ‘heirs at law’ in the popular sense? Can we say tibe next of kin were intended? To do so would be a bold advance toward overturning established rules.”

In Alexander v. N. W. M. Aid Ass’n, 27 App. 29, the benefit certificates in controversy were payable to “the devisees or to the heirs at law” of one Elijah S. Alexander. It was there held that as Alexander died leaving no children, his surviving widow was his sole heir at law and entitled to the proceeds of the certificates. In Lawwill v. Lawwill 29 App. 643, the facts and legal questions involved were substantially similar to those in the case last cited, and a like conclusion was reached.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 Ill. App. 233, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-rhodes-illappct-1906.