Lord v. Andrus

266 Ill. App. 395, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 565
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 17, 1932
DocketGen. No. 35,431
StatusPublished

This text of 266 Ill. App. 395 (Lord v. Andrus) 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
Lord v. Andrus, 266 Ill. App. 395, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 565 (Ill. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal it is sought to reverse a decree of the superior court of Cook county, entered May 16, 1931, nunc pro tunc as of March 26, 1931. After reciting that the cause came on to be heard upon the bill of Charles L. Lindley, the answer of defendants, Inin Louise Andrus and Philip L. Marshall, and the answer and disclaimer of defendant, Susan C. Whitney, the court in the decree made findings as follows:

That by the true construction of the last will of Susan 0. Knight, deceased, Laura Marshall Lindley “acquired no interest in the real estate described in the bill which she could dispose of by will”; that in and by said will Mrs. Knight “directed that upon the death of her husband all her estate, not otherwise disposed of, be divided among all her children, share and share alike, with full rights of representation in favor of the descendants of any deceased child”; that Laura Marshall Lindley died after the death of Mrs. Knight, “leaving no descendants and never having had any descendants”; that her interest, if any, in the estate of her mother, Mrs. Knight, “terminated upon her death and no interest in said real estate passed under the last .will of Laura Marshall Lindley”; that Charles L. Lindley, therefore, “acquired no interest in any of the real estate devised by the last will of Susan C. Knight, and he has not and never did have any interest in the fund of $7,750, mentioned in the bill, and is not entitled to be paid out of said fund the sum of $2,518.61, or any other sum”; and that the entire fund of $7,750 “belongs and should be paid to the defendants, Inin Louise Andrus and Philip L. Marshall, share and share alike.”

And the court ordered and adjudged that said sum of $7,750, “which has been retained subject to control of counsel for the respective parties, be paid over and delivered to said Inin Louise Andrus and Philip L. Marshall in equal shares, and that the costs of this suit be paid by complainant.”

On the day the decree was entered Charles L. Lindley prayed and was allowed an appeal to this court. Subsequently, and before the time allowed for the filing of an appeal bond had expired, his death was suggested, and by stipulation it was ordered that the executrix of his estate, Florence Marion Lord, be substituted as complainant and that she be allowed to appeal, etc. Her appeal bond was approved and filed, and her appeal perfected in this ‘ court, — all in apt time.

In complainant’s bill, filed November 25, 1930, he alleged that Susan C. Knight (hereinafter called the testatrix), a resident of Chicago, died on February 7, 1893, leaving a last will (copy attached); that she was first married to James M. Marshall and they had six children,- — -two of whom died unmarried and prior to the death of said testatrix; that three of said children are still living, viz., Inin Louise Andrus, Susan C. Whitney and. Philip L. Marshall; that Laura Marshall Lindley, when said testatrix died, was the wife of one Albert F. Lunt, and that Laura died in 1917; that the testatrix and James M. Marshall did not adopt any children; that after the death of James M. Marshall the testatrix married John B. Knight, who was her husband when she died; that she and John B. Knight had no children and adopted none; that the will of said testatrix was probated in the probate court of Cook county on July 7, 1893, and her estate thereafter duly settled; that John B. Knight, as trustee under said will, took possession of the estate given and devised to him as trustee by the terms of said will, including certain improved; property on South State street, Chicago (hereinafter called the State street property), and retained possession of said estate, or of so much thereof as he did not convey or otherwise dispose of, until the time of his death on January 30, 1927; that after the death of said testatrix her daughter, Laura, obtained a divorce from her first husband (Lunt), for his fault, and married Charles L. Lindley, who was her husband when she (Laura) died in 1917, leaving a last will (copy also attached), which was duly probated in Ocean county, New Jersey, on March 22, 1917; that Laura had no children by either of her marriages and did not adopt any children; and that subject to divers incumbrances placed thereon by John B. Knight, he as trustee, until his death, retained title to said State street property, which is expressly mentioned in paragraph VI in the will of said testatrix.

Complainant further alleged that John B. Knight executed various trust deeds purporting to incumber said State street property as security for notes executed by him as trustee; that the last of said incumbrances was a trust deed to one Frank H. Jones, as trustee, dated April 9, 1914, recorded April 16, 1914, purporting to secure the principal note of said Knight, as trustee, for the sum of $137,500, dated April 9,1914, payable on or before five years after date, with interest at five per cent per annum; that substantially all of the proceeds of the loan evidenced by said note were used and applied by Knight to pay and discharge certain incumbrances which, as trustee under said will, he had theretofore placed upon said State street property and upon other real estate in Chicago acquired and held by him as trustee under the will of said testatrix; that the principal of said note of April 9, 1914, remained unpaid at the time of his death (January 30, 1927); that on July 1,1927, one Mark Oliver, claiming to be the legal holder and owner of said note, filed a bill in the superior court of Cook county to foreclose the Jones trust deed against Mrs. Andrus, Philip Marshall, Susan C. Whitney and complainant; that in said suit Mrs. Andrus and Philip Marshall filed a cross-bill, disputing the validity of the trust deed and praying for a partition of the State street property, but the controversy afterward was settled by agreement of all parties and the case dismissed; that pursuant to the terms of the settlement, and as a part thereof, Mrs. Andrus, Philip Marshall, Mrs. Whitney and complainant conveyed and quitclaimed to the nominee of Mark Oliver all their interest in said State street property; and that said Oliver paid to them, or for their benefit, the net sum of $19,540.52.

Complainant further alleged that said Susan 0. Whitney, by deed dated October 31, 1924, and duly recorded, conveyed to Mrs. Andrus all her interest in the State street property and in the estate of said testatrix and she (Mrs. Whitney) does not now claim, nor does she now have, any interest in said money so paid by Mark Oliver as aforesaid; that the only persons interested or claiming any interest in said sum of $19,540.52, are Mrs. Andrus, Philip Marshall and complainant; that complainant claims that, “by the true construction of the last will of said testatrix” (Mrs. Knight), he is entitled, as sole devisee and legatee of his wife (Laura Marshall Lindley), to that part of the proceeds of such settlement which she (Laura) would be entitled to receive if living, whereas Mrs. Andrus and Philip Marshall claim that complainant is not entitled to any part of the proceeds of said settlement; that by agreement the sum of $11,790.52, from the proceeds of said settlement, has been paid over to Mrs. Andrus and Philip Marshall, and the balance of said proceeds ($7,750) “has been retained subject to the control of counsel for the respective parties as security for the payment of any part of said proceeds to which the court may adjudge complainant to be entitled. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
266 Ill. App. 395, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-andrus-illappct-1932.