Johnson v. Pendarvis

248 Ill. App. 406, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 64
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 24, 1927
DocketGen. No. 7,734
StatusPublished

This text of 248 Ill. App. 406 (Johnson v. Pendarvis) 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
Johnson v. Pendarvis, 248 Ill. App. 406, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 64 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court.

The pleadings in this case are numerous and varied. It is sufficient to say that this is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court construing a will with reference to a distribution of the testatrix’s estate.

Sarah E. Alpaugh, on April 10, 1913, then being a widow of the age of 70 years, made the will in question. Her death occurred November 5, 1923. She left surviving her no child or children or descendant thereof. Her only heir-at-law was the appellee, Dorothy Johnson, a daughter of an adopted child of the testatrix. The mother of appellee lived with her parents by adoption from infancy until her death with the exception of about four months immediately following her marriage. For some reason not disclosed by the record the testatrix and her husband, Emanuel, who was then living, obtained from their adopted child a release of all her rights as an heir expectant for the sum of $500. The parents were then the owners of property valued in excess of $30,000.

The clauses of the will over which the controversy in this case arose are the third, fourth, twenty-first and twenty-second.

The THIBD CLAUSE directs the executor to sell 80 acres of land in Henderson county, Illinois, and out of the proceeds of sale to pay, as a bequest, $500 to each of the children of her brother, Elwood Corzatt, and $1,000 to said brother, Elwood, and a like sum to her brother, Frank. It then directs that after the said bequests have been fully paid, the residue and remainder of the net proceeds of the sale of said land shall, upon final settlement, be paid to the executor as trustee for the benefit of the Illinois Children’s Home and Aid Society.

The FOUETH CLAUSE directs the executor to sell a tract of land containing 50 acres in Henderson county, aforesaid, and to pay, as a bequest, out of the net proceeds of the sale $1,000 to the trustees of the Rari-tan Cemetery Association, for the care of the graves of her father, mother, husband, and herself, and to keep the cemetery fence painted, upon condition that if the proceeds of said bequest are not so applied, said money shall revert to her heirs, and $500 to the appel-lee, Dorothy Lucille Johnson. The remainder of the net proceeds of the sale are to be equally divided among Rachel Kephart, Effie Alpaugh, Mervin Al-paugh, Anna Yorger, Maggie Stryker and Sarah Ada Kephart, share and share alike.

The TWENTY-FIRST CLAUSE is a residuary clause and provides that after the payment of the above and foregoing bequests and the expenses incurred in the administration of the estate:

“Then it is my will that my executor shall pay all the rest, residue, and remainder of my estate to Media State Bank in trust to be kept safely loaned and invested in note or notes secured by real estate mortgage or mortgages and the net proceeds thereof to be divided equally among and paid annually to the governing bodies properly qualified to receive the same of the Reform Church, of the Baptist Church, and of the Methodist Episcopal Church, respectively, of Raritan, Henderson county, Illinois, provided that in the event of the failure of either of any of the churches named to hold regular religious services then the survivor or survivors of them shall succeed to the benefits of this bequest, and in the event of all of said churches failing to hold regular religious services then said money shall revert to my heirs. ”

The TWENTY-SECOND CLAUSE "nominates Charles R. Pendarvis, the appellant, as executor and authorizes him to sell at public or private sale “any and all real estate necessary and required to be sold for carrying out the provisions of this my last will and testament.”

The litigation arises over certain lapsed bequests. Elwood Corzatt and Frank Corzatt mentioned in the third clause died prior to the death of the testatrix. Effie Alpaugh, Mervin Alpaugh and Maggie Stryker, mentioned in the fourth clause, also died prior to the death of the testatrix.

The chancellor held that the purported release executed by Mattie Alpaugh Perrine, mother of appellee, to her parents by adoption, was wrongfully obtained, invalid and insufficient to deprive appellee of any of her rights as an heir-at-law of Sarah R. Alpaugh, deceased; that the lapsed bequests above mentioned did not pass to the residuary estate and are not to be disposed of by either the third, fourth or twenty-first clauses of the will, but are to be distributed as intestate property to the appellee as the sole heir-at-law; and that she is entitled to the rents collected by the executor arising from such intestate property. None of the residuary legatees contested the allegations of the bill, but each of them made default. The only appellant is the executor.

It is conceded that the bequests to the above-named ■ deceased persons lapsed by reason of the deaths of such persons prior to the death of the testatrix. Appellant claims that the amount of such bequests, which approximates $4,500, became a part of the residuary estate, and should be disposed of under the residuary clause, and should not be distributed as intestate property to the heirs-at-law. He treats the lapsed bequests as personal property and invokes the rule of law as laid down in English v. Cooper, 183 Ill. 203, and Crerar v. Williams, 145 Ill. 625, that lapsed legacies will pass under a general residuary clause instead of descending as intestate property, in the absence of an express contrary intention of the testator. Such rule of law is well established and is controlling in all cases where it can be properly applied. Its application, however, must rest upon two essential premises: First, the bequest must be of personal property, and second, the residuary clause must be broad enough in its terms to show an intention of the testator to dispose of the lapsed legacy; The rule above stated concerning a bequest of personal property is no better settled than is the one in reference to a lapsed devise of real estate. The policy of the common law with reference to a lapsed devise is that it shall pass to the heir rather than sink into the residuary estate, unless there is a special provision of the will showing a contrary intention. This policy has been adopted in this State. (Belleville Sav. Bank v. Aneshaensel, 298 Ill. 292, 299.)

The question naturally arises whether the lapsed bequests in this case are to be treated as lapsed legacies or lapsed devises. Where a testator directs his real estate to be sold and bequeathes the proceeds of the sale to certain named beneficiaries, the law treats the thing which ought to be done as having been done. This gives rise to the doctrine of equitable conversion and the bequest is deemed to have been made of money and not of land. (Germain v. Baltes, 113 Ill. 29; English v. Cooper, supra.) But an equitable conversion, whether it be an “out and out” conversion or one necessary for the purposes of the will only, from force of reason, can never take place without a beneficiary appointed by the will to receive the bequest. Thus, if a testator directs that all of his real estate be sold by his executor and the proceeds divided amongst A, B and C, there can be no conversion in the event of the death of A, B and C pridr to the testator’s death, because the purpose of the testator in directing the conversion will have wholly failed.

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Related

Germain v. Baltes
113 Ill. 29 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1885)
Crerar v. Williams
21 L.R.A. 454 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1893)
English v. Cooper
55 N.E. 687 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1899)
Emmerson v. Merritt
94 N.E. 955 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1911)
Belleville Savings Bank v. Aneshaensel
298 Ill. 292 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
248 Ill. App. 406, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-pendarvis-illappct-1927.