Hart v. Hart

43 N.E.2d 853, 316 Ill. App. 89, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 689
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 17, 1942
DocketGen. No. 9,784
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 N.E.2d 853 (Hart v. Hart) 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
Hart v. Hart, 43 N.E.2d 853, 316 Ill. App. 89, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 689 (Ill. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

The issue in this case is as to how the net income from a testamentary trust created by the last will of Albert E. Hart, deceased, shall be divided between the two beneficiaries, Hazel Carton, appellant, who is the daughter of the decedent, and Maude E. Hart Mazur, appellee (formerly Maude E. Hart), decedent’s widow and stepmother of appellant.

The controversy involves that portion of the will which reads:

“After all my just debts are paid I want all my property put in trust for the benefit of my heirs as hereafter stated. My wife Maude E. Hart is to have the entire net income, If she lives until my daughter Hazel Carton is not teaching or unable to .teach Then Hazel Carton is to receive one half of the net income from my estate less whatever income she may receive from other sources and the balance of said net income is to be paid to Maude E. Hart my wife. In case that eather dies the other is to receive the entire income and in case both die, after their funeral expenses is paid the^alnet income is then to go to Jabez W- (Jay) Hart my Grandson.”

The cause is here on the daughter’s appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Winnebago county, holding a former decree is res adjudicada, and ordering that the net income from the estate be divided into two equal shares, from one of which shares the income received by appellant from other sources shall be deducted; that whatever remains of that share shall be paid to her, and that appellee be paid all the rest and remainder of the income from the estate.

Appellant has been a school teacher in the city of Detroit, Michigan, since September 1919. At the time the decree appealed from was entered (October 24, 1941) she had been on leave of absence since June 30th of that year, on account of high blood pressure and nervous exhaustion. Her physician advised her she should not teach any more if she did not have to' do so. She owns an incumbered two-family apartment building in the city of Detroit. One of the apartments is occupied by a tenant. She and her husband live in the other apartment. The decree further orders that in computing her income there shall be included the rent actually received, together with the fair rental value of the apartment occupied by her and her husband, less the interest on the mortgage, cost of heating, light, water and taxes, but not including depreciation. It further orders that any money appellant receives in the future as benefits or pension, from the Detroit teachers’ pension fund, less any future assessments, be treated as income, without deduction for any assessments theretofore paid by her.

Appellant claims that under the terms of the will, an amount equal to her income from other sources should be deducted from the entire net income from the estate, the remainder divided into two equal parts, one of which should be paid to her, and all the balance of the net income from the estate should be paid to appellee. She also claims the rental value of the apartment occupied by her and her husband should not be counted as income, and that payments made by her to the teachers ’ pension fund before the decree was entered are deductible. The decree is in accord with the claims of appellee.

The decedent died in February 1937. The circuit court first took jurisdiction of the trust estate under a petition filed by the widow in April 1937, individually and as executor of the will, for the construction thereof and the appointment of a trustee. The petition alleges, among other things, that “An ambiguity and uncertainty appears in the terms of the clause of the will with reference to the amount of the net income to be paid by the trustees to the daughter, Hazel Carton, and in respect to the time when said daughter should receive any portion of the net income from said trust estate.” The daughter answered. The pleadings set out the respective contentions of the parties. The decree appointed Swedish American National Bank of Rockford as trustee, found that it was the intention of the testator that when the daughter “ceases to be a school teacher, either from her own volition or from any other cause, she shall then become entitled to receive one-half of the net income from said estate, less whatever income she receives at that time from other sources”; that it was not the intention of the testator that she should receive such income during the usual three months summer vacation, but only when she has definitely quit teaching or is not teaching when school is ordinarily in session; and in case, after receiving such income, she should resume teaching, no income shall be paid to her while she so continues to teach. The decree has never been appealed from or modified.

In July 1941, the trustee filed a petition for further construction of the will and further directions to the trustee, detailing the disagreements between the widow and the daughter. Each of them filed an answer, and a counterclaim setting out their respective claims. On the hearing, the decree appealed from was entered. It sets out the above quoted portion of the former decree, finds that it is res adjudicaba, and orders distribution of the net income from the estate in the manner above mentioned.

The question as to the method to be employed in dividing the net income from the estate is whether appellant’s income from other sources is to be deducted from such entire net income or from one half of such net income. Assuming that appellant’s income from other sources will be less than the entire net income from the estate, so as to be deductible at all, then, regardless of the specific amounts' of either of such incomes, if the method ordered by the decree is followed, appellee’s income from the estate will always exceed appellant’s total income, including her income from outside sources. If the method which appellant claims to be correct is used, appellee’s income from the estate will exactly equal appellant’s total income, including that from outside sources.

Appellant argues that the will shows an intention of the testator to treat the beneficiaries on an equal basis, as shown by three things: that whoever survives is to receive the entire net income; that when either dies, the funeral expenses are to be paid from the trust fund; and that both beneficiaries are named as executors. The argument leaves out of consideration the fact that the testator first provides that the widow is to have the entire net income. It is only upon the contingency that the daughter ceases to teach during the widow’s lifetime that there is to be any division thereof. There is nothing in the wording of the will which indicates an intention of the testator that the phrase: 1 ‘ one half of the net income” shall be split up so as to eliminate the words “one half of” in making such division, and that the phrase be held to mean that the daughter’s income from other sources is to be deducted from the “net income.” On the contrary, interpreting the words as used, in their natural, general, popular sense under the established rule (Welsch v. Belleville Savings Bank, 94 Ill. 191; Taubenhan v. Dunz, 125 Ill. 524), they indicate the testator meant the phrase to be used in its entirety, and that the deduction shall be made from “one half of the net income.” As suggested by appellee the testator negatived equality of benefits when he provided that the daughter should receive less than one half of the net income.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.E.2d 853, 316 Ill. App. 89, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-hart-illappct-1942.