Jordan v. Jordan

274 Ill. 251
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 274 Ill. 251 (Jordan v. Jordan) 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
Jordan v. Jordan, 274 Ill. 251 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

James A. Jordan and Charles A. Jordan, plaintiffs in error, filed in the circuit court of Ford county their report as trustees of the estate of Andrew Jordan, deceased, showing a balance of $3207.07 in their hands, and their petition for an order of distribution to the beneficiaries under the will of Andrew Jordan who might be entitled thereto. The defendants in error, Nettie B. Jordan, Chloa Day Jordan, James Blaine Jordan, Cenoth L. Jordan, William McKinley Jordan and Homer Jordan, grandchildren of the testator, (children of William N. Jordan, who died after the testator,) were made defendants, with others. Plomer Jordan was an infant and a guardian ad litem was appointed for him. The court made an order for the distribution of .$3000, in which the heirs of William N. Jordan were charged $451.50 for a debt due the estate from their father. The heirs were also charged with $1932.87 which Orvis F. Jordan, a son of William N. Jordan, owed the estate. From that part of the decree charging the children of William N. Jordan with these two items the defendants appealed to the Appellate Court for the Third District. The court made another charge of $347.30 to four of the defendants in error, Nettie B. Jordan, Chloa Day Jordan, Cenoth L. Jordan and James Blaine Jordan, for money loaned to them by the trustees at the time of their father’s funeral and which was due the trustees. There was no dispute about that charge and no error was assigned upon it in the Appellate Court but it was expressly excepted from the assignment of errors. The Appellate Court, however, considered that item with the other two and reversed the whole, and remanded the cause to the circuit court to re-state the account and enter a decree directing distribution according to the opinion of the Appellate Court. It is admitted that the Appellate Court erred with respect to the charge of $347.30, about which there was no complaint. A writ of certiorari was allowed to bring the record to this court, and the controversy here, as in the Appellate Court, is concerning the two items of the indebtedness of William N. Jordan and Orvis F. Jordan.

Andrew Jordan died on June 28, 1901, leaving a widow and five children. He was the owner of 880 acres of farm lands, a house and four lots in Gibson City, a vacant lot in a suburb of Chicago and personal property of the value of about $20,000. The farm lands were incumbered for about $40,000 and there was a considerable amount of unsecured indebtedness. He left a last will and testament, naming his1 sons James A. Jordan and Charles A. Jordan, the plaintiffs in error, as executors and trustees, and devising to them his entire estate upon trusts therein declared for the purpose of paying off the incumbrances from the income of the farm lands. Directions were given for leasing the lands, mortgaging the same and renewing incumbrances, the payment of taxes and keeping up repairs, and by that means discharging the incumbrances. The portions of the will material to this controversy are as follows:

“That after said incumbrances are paid in full and all the liens against the said lands shall be fully paid and discharged my said executors shall continue to pay the taxes and insurance and keep up reasonable and necessary repairs, and shall then' divide the income from said lands, which they shall continue to rent in the manner aforesaid, among my children, share alike, and in case of the death of any one of my said children the same to be paid to the heirs, or in case of minority, to the legal guardian of such child or children, share and share alike. The shares from said income to be paid in money to the parties entitled to the same, and to be paid to them in their own hands and not upon any written or verbal order, nor upon any assignment or transfer by my said children or grandchildren.”

“That after the death of my said children William N. Jordan, John H. Jordan, Nancy E. Campbell, wife of R. W. Campbell, and the payment of all incumbrances aforesaid, it is my will and desire and I hereby devise to my said grandchildren, and to the heirs of the said Charles A. Jordan and James A. Jordan, and the heirs of each taking the share of such deceased parent,—that is, such share as such deceased parent would take had not this will been made,—share and share alike, it being my intention by this will that at the time, and not before, the title to said real estate shall vest in the heirs of my children or their descendants, and in cáse of the death of any of my heirs, the children and heirs of each taking the share of the deceased parent, share and share alike.”

“That I have advanced considerable money, and may still expend more, for the education of my grandson Orvis Jordan, for which I have taken his promissory notes, and will take such notes for further advancements, and it is my will that he pay the same to my executors, and that in- default of his paying the same that the amount due on said notes shall be deducted from any money that may eventually go to his father, William Jordan, and that such sum so deducted shall be distributed equally between all my children, share and share alike, and in case of the death of any of my said children leaving children surviving him, that the children of such deceased parent share and share alike.”

William N. Jordan, son of the testator and father of Orvis F. Jordan, died on February 4, 1910, before the debts of the estate were paid and never having been entitled to anything from the executors from which the debt of Orvis F. Jordan could have been deducted. He left eight children,—Orvis F. Jordan, Nellie Jordan McCormick and the six defendants in error. The report of the trustees filed on April i, 19x3, represented that all debts and obligations of the estate had been fully paid and that they had in their hands the above stated sum of $3207.07 to be distributed. The court decided that the debts of William N. Jordan and Orvis F. Jordan were charges on the shares of the children of William N. Jordan and should be deducted from such shares pro rata, and made an order of distribution accordingly.

It is contended that the Appellate Court erred in reversing the decree because there was a proceeding in the circuit court of Ford county in which the trustees were the complainants and William N. Jordan one of the defendants, in which a decree construing the will of Andrew Jordan as claimed by the plaintiffs in error was entered in 1904. By that decree the court found that the sums then due the estate by Orvis F. Jordan, and that would be due in the future, were chargeable to the share of the rents and profits accruing to his father, William N. Jordan, to be paid out of that share before William N. Jordan should receive any part of the rents and profits. The argument is that this decree was res judicata between the present parties and conclusive of the rights of the defendants in error. But that position is incorrect. William N. Jordan was living at the time of the decree, and he had only an equitable life estate and no interest in the remainder now vested in his children. The will specifically provided that the advancements to Orvis F. Jordan should be chargeable to his father, William N. Jordan, but the father died before anything was charged to him or he ever became-entitled to anything. The defendants in error took their interests in the estate direct from the testator under and by virtue of the will and not as heirs of their father, William N. Jordan.

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117 N.E.2d 769 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1954)
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82 F. Supp. 183 (E.D. Illinois, 1949)
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Bluebook (online)
274 Ill. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-jordan-ill-1916.