Ireland v. Geraghty

15 F. 35, 11 Biss. 465, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1987
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 8, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 15 F. 35 (Ireland v. Geraghty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ireland v. Geraghty, 15 F. 35, 11 Biss. 465, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1987 (N.D. Ill. 1883).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

The original bill in this case is filed by complainant to obtain a judicial construction of the trusts under which complainant claims to hold certain real and personal estate, conveyed to [36]*36him in his life-time by Michael E. Keegan, now deceased, and the cross-bill is filed by Peter Gféraghty, who claims said property as the sole heir at law of Mary Gertrude Keegan, the only child of said Michael E. Keegan, and seeks to have the alleged trusts declared void and set aside, and the property in question awarded to the complainant in the1 cross-bill. The material facts in the case, as they appear from the record, are briefly these: Michael E. Keegan, who had been a resident of the city of Chicago for 10 or 12 years, died in said city on November 15,1879, leaving no widow, and but one child, Mary Gertrude Keegan, and she died on the twenty-sixth of December, 1879, aged a little over four years, leaving as her next of kin and sole heir at law the complainant in the cross-bill, who is her maternal grandfather. In the month of August, 1874, Keegan married Bidelia M. Geraghty, the mother of the child Mary Gertrude, and the wife died in the latter days of July,' 1879. For some time prior to his death Keegan had expressed the intention of leaving his property in the hands of the Et. itev. John Ireland, then and now coadjutor Catholic bishop of the .diocese of Minnesota, in some form of trust for the benefit of this child, Mary Gertrude, and, in the event of her death, for some charity; and on or about the first day of January, 1879, he forwarded to Bishop Ireland a tin box containing all or nearly all the notes, bonds, and other securities for the payment of money which he, Keegan, then held; and on the fourth day of February, 1879, Keegan executed an unconditional deed in fee-simple to Bishop Ireland, conveying to him all the real estate he, Keegan, then owned-No consideration was paid by Bishop Ireland for this conveyance, and there is no doubt from the proof that this conveyance was made upon such trusts as Keegan should direct or create; that is, it was not a gift to the bishop individually, but a conveyance to him in trust for such purposes as the grantor in the deed should appoint.

At about the same time, perhaps simultaneously with the execution of this deed, but probably some months later, and on or about the eighteenth of April, 1879, Keegan executed and delivered to Bishop Ireland a written paper in the following words:

“To the Bight Reverend John Ireland, Coadjutor Bishop of St. Paul, Minnesota:
' “Right Reverend Sir—The real and personal property which I have heretofore and may hereafter convey to you are for the benefit of my infant child, .Mary Gertrude Keegan, born November 15, A. D. 1875, to be delivered to her, with its accrued profits, rents, and interest, when she shall become of age. Should, she die before coming of age, and leave no issue, then to your[37]*37self, for the purpose of providing an agricultural home for poor boys, in connection with an industrial school.
« Witness my hand and seal this fourth day of February, A. D. 1879.
[Signed] “Michael Keegan. [Seal.]”

And underneath this instrument is written an acceptance by Bishop Ireland, of the following tenor:

“ I hereby accept the above trusts for the purposes above specified.
[Signed' “John Ireland.”

Upon tho back of this instrument is written the following letter from Keegan to Bishop Ireland:

Right Reverend John Ireland, 1). 1)., Coadjutor Bishop of St. Paul, Minnesota :
“Eight Reverend Sir—To wliat is written on the other I add further that if my child should refuse to comply with your orders and wishes, and go from under your control, then while she so remains she is not to receive a dollar from you, either towards her support or education; but in case of her sickness do as your heart suggests. If she should become a religious, which God grant, before coming of ago, place §10,000 at her disposal when fully professed, and the balance when she is 21 years old. Should she marry before becoming of age, she can have §5,000 on her marriage, to be placed at interest, and have the yearly interest of it until she is of age; the yearly interest or rent is to be put in staple coupon stocks, andas it falls due. But 10 per cent, of the interest or rent is to be regularly deducted from the income and devoted to such charities as your lordship thinks proper; hut one-third of this 10 per cent, is to be given for masses for my soul, in union with the souls in purgatory, and tho masses are to be said by priests in poor missions, or who need a little help. Regarding my wife, I will hereafter make a separate statement, which must be satisfactory to your approval. But if I should die suddenly, then let her have a decent support while she remains unmarried. These conditions are to apply to my property in your hands at the time and after my death.
“I remain, my lord, most respectfully, your most obedient servant,
“Michael E. Keegan.”

The proof shows that the deed to Bishop Ireland, and the declaration of the trusts upon which the deed was made and the personal property delivered to him, were both prepared at the same time by the same attorney, and after consultation between Keegan and his attorney as to the best mode of creating the trust, so as to probably cause the least trouble to the bishop, and, if possible, to avoid litigation with any prospect of success; and whether the declaration or statement of the trusts was signed and delivered simultaneously with the deed, or at a subsequent date, in my estimation is of but littlo consequence. It may be, as I have already suggested, that the [38]*38statement of the trusts was not signed and delivered to the bishop until the bishop was in Chicago, some time in the month of April, and possibly the letter upon the back of the declaration of the trusts was written thereon at or before the time it was delivered to the bishop. This, however, seems to me to be of little consequence, as there can be no doubt of the proposition that if a conveyance is made to a trustee upon trusts thereafter to be declared or designated by the grantor, and the trustee accepts the designation of uses so made by the grantor, the trustee is bound'by such declaration and designation as- completely as if the deed and declaration of trust were simultaneous, and part of.one and the same transaction. There can be no doubt of the fact that by the conveyance of the property in question to the bishop he. became a trustee, and until the objects of the trust were designated he was a mere naked trustee; but as soon as the grantor had in writing indicated the uses to which the property was to be applied, and the trustee had accepted the terms of the trust so indicated, the transaction was complete; so that even if we assume or admit that the letter on the back of the declaration of trust was written there before the delivery of the instrument and the acceptance of the trusts, then the written declaration of trust, dated February 4th, must undoubtedly be considered as modified' by the letter of April 18th; but the modifications so made are of no importancé. at this time, as they only related to the management of the estate during the life and minority of the child, and during the life of the wife after her husband’s death and while she remained a widow.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. 35, 11 Biss. 465, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ireland-v-geraghty-ilnd-1883.