Harrison v. Weatherby

54 N.E. 237, 180 Ill. 418
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 237 (Harrison v. Weatherby) 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
Harrison v. Weatherby, 54 N.E. 237, 180 Ill. 418 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case comes up from an order of the court below sustaining a demurrer to the bill and dismissing it for want of equity. Therefore, as to the facts we are confined to the allegations of the bill. Both appellants, who were complainants below, and appellees, who were defendants below, claim title under one Richard Smith, who, in his lifetime, was a resident of Wake county in the State of North Carolina, and died testate in that State in the year 1852. A copy of his will, dated October 10,1851, is attached to the bill, and referred to therein as an exhibit. Richard Smith left surviving him a widow, named Penelope Smith, and one child only, a daughter named Mary A. Smith, his only heir-at-law. The widow is dead, and the daughter, who married one Morehead after the execution of the deed hereinafter mentioned, died on January 4,1891, leaving no issue, and without having had any child or children. Morehead is also dead. At the time of his death Richard Smith owned in fee thirty-five quarter sections of land situated in Adams,' Pike, Calhoun,. McDonoug'h, Schuyler, Fulton, Peoria, Stark, Knox, Warren, Henderson, Mercer and Henry counties in Illinois.

On February 20, 1856, Penelope Smith and Mary A. Smith executed a warranty deed to one Silas T. Green of Richmond, Kentucky, conveying to him all the lands in Illinois, which Richard Smith owned at his death, describing them as “all those certain tracts of land situated in the military bounty land district in the State of Illinois.” The grantors in the deed are described as “Penelope Smith, widow, and Mary A. Smith, only child, together sole heirs of Richard Smith, deceased, late of Raleigh, North Carolina.” A copy of the deed is referred to in the bill and attached thereto as an exhibit. The deed contains no reference whatever to any will of Richard Smith, and no intimation that the grantors held as devisees, or otherwise than as heirs of a deceased intestate. The deed to Green was recorded in many of the counties where the lands are situated. After Green had conveyed away “most, if not aR, of said lands” he died in Kentucky where he lived, and left certain persons as his heirs, who are made defendants under the name of unknown owners.

The appellees, defendants below, hold under Green, and claim that the deed, executed by Penelope Smith and Mary A. Smith to Silas T. Green in 1856, passed the title to the lands to Green, and that they, as holding under Green, are the owners of all of said lands. On the contrary, appellants claim that, under the will of Richard Smith, his daughter, Mary A. Smith, took an absolute title to only an undivided one-third part of all his lands, including those in Illinois, and had merely an interest as life tenant in the remaining undivided two-thirds of said lands. The appellants allege in their bill, that the fee of the said two-thirds remained in abeyance until the determination of the life estate of Mary A. Smith, and then descended to the heirs-at-law of Richard Smith, the testator, his brothers and sisters and their descendants, and vested in those, who survived Mary A. Smith at her death, and is now held by them as tenants in common. Appellants claim to be the heirs-at-law of Richard Smith, who were such at his daughter’s death in 1891, or to hold under or through such heirs-at-law.

The contention of the appellants is, that the deed from Mrs, Smith and her daughter to Green conveyed to him the fee simple title to an undivided one-third of the lands, and the life estate of Mary A. Smith in the other undivided two-thirds thereof, but did not convey to him the fee of said two-thirds; that, since the death of Mary" A. Smith in 1891, and the termination thereby of her life estate, the grantees of Green, or those holding under him in any way, have no further interest in said two-thirds; and that the two-thirds of the lands are now owned by the appellants, as tenants in common with those holding the other third under the deed from Green.

Upon the theory thus stated, that appellants are the owners of two-thirds and appellees of one-third of these lands, the present amended and supplemental bill was filed against appellees for partition on February 16,1898, more than seven years after the death of Mary A. Smith. The original bill appears to have been filed on January 3, 1898, but there is no copy of it in the record, and nothing to show what its contents were.

There were two codicils to the will. The amended and supplemental bill, which was demurred to below and dismissed, alleges that the “will and codicils thereto were duly probated in the proper court for the probate of wills in said county of Wake, North Carolina.” But the certificates appended to the copy of the will, attached to the bill as. an exhibit leave it in doubt whether the proceedings for the probate of the will were taken in the county court for Wake county, or in the court of pleas and quarter sessions for that county.

The bill further alleges that, during all the time from the execution of the deed to Green on February 20,1856, until the death of Mary A. Green on January 4, 1891, a period of nearly thirty-five years, Green, his grantees and assigns, remained and continued in the control and management of said lands; that neither the appellants, nor any of the heirs of Richard Smith, had any right of possession, or right of entry into or control over said lands until after the death of Mary A. Smith; and that, until that time, it was the duty of her g'rantees and those of Green to pay the taxes.

The abstract of the record as filed here does not correctly set forth paragraph 7 of the bill. The abstract represents orators as showing, “that, soon after the death of said Richard Smith, said will and codicils of said Richard Smith, together with the probate thereof, were recorded in the several counties in the State of Illinois in which said lands respectively lie.” Paragraph 7, as found in the récord, is as follows: “Your orators further show unto your honors, that the said will of the said Richard Smith, deceased, together with the codicils thereto, were, soon after the death of the said Richard Smith, duly probated in the proper court for the probate of wills of Wake county, North Carolina, and a copy thereof, together with the probate, was duly recorded in the several counties in the State of Illinois in which said lands respectively lie.”

Between 1849 and 1857 foreign wills and the probate of them could only be filed in Illinois in the office of thé county clerk. An act passed in 1857 authorized them to be filed in the office of the recorder of deeds. The foregoing allegation of the bill is technically inaccurate in averring merely, that the copy was recorded in the several counties, without stating whether it was so recorded in the county clerk’s office or in the recorder’s .office, and in omitting to state that the copy so recorded was an authenticated copy.

First—If it be admitted for the present, that the construction placed by appellants upon the will of Richard Smith is the correct one, the first question, which arises, is whether the copy of the will and of the certificates appended thereto, as recorded in Illinois, had the effect of passing the title to the lands in the latter State. The claim of appellants to these lands, if valid, must be made out under and based upon the copies of the will as recorded in Illinois. If it were true, that the will gave Mary A.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 237, 180 Ill. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-weatherby-ill-1899.