McCartney v. Ridgway

32 L.R.A. 555, 160 Ill. 129
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 32 L.R.A. 555 (McCartney v. Ridgway) 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
McCartney v. Ridgway, 32 L.R.A. 555, 160 Ill. 129 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The original bill herein filed by one of the owners of the estate in remainder, and the cross-bill filed by the life tenants and the present trustee, seek to charge the administrator of the deceased trustee and the sureties on his bond with what is alleged to be due upon an accounting from the estate of said deceased trustee. The only defendants below, who appealed from the decree of the circuit court, were the sureties upon said bond.

The bill here is not a bill to enforce either of the agreements set forth in the record; nor is this a controversy between the parties to those agreements as to the proper construction to be given to either of them. The real dispute is between the remainder-men and the life tenants on one side, and the sureties upon the bond of the deceased trustee on the other side, as to whether such sureties should be held liable for what may be due from said trustee or his estate. The question is, whether the trustee who was the principal in the bond, and the parties to the agreement, the performance of which was secured by the bond, entered into any agreement which so changed the duties and obligations of the trustee, or the terms of the trust imposed upon him, as to release the sureties from their liability upon the bond.

The bond, which was executed on May 15, 1871, recites that the obligees therein, to-wit: the widow, and son, and three daughters of Orval Pool, and the husbands of said daughters, did, on November 2, 1871, execute a certain instrument in writing, providing for a division of the estate of said Orval and the appointment of a trustee to execute and carry into effect certain duties and trusts therein created and defined, and that George H. Potter had been duly appointed trustee under the provisions of said instrument in writing. The condition of the bond is, that Potter shall discharge the trust imposed by the agreement of November 2, 1871, and perform such duties “as may be now or hereafter imposed upon him by or otherwise arise” under said last named agreement, and pay over and account for all moneys and property coming to his hands as such trustee “at such times and in such manner as is provided for” in said agreement of 1871.

After the execution of the bond of May 15,1871, to-wit: on November 19, 1872, the same parties who signed the agreement of November 2, 1871, to-wit: the widow, and son, and daughters of Orval Pool, and the husbands of the latter, together with Potter, the trustee, executed h new agreement. Thereafter Potter performed his duties as trustee, and managed the interests of the trust, under and in accordance with the provisions of the new agreement of November, 1872, or, if not wholly under the latter agreement, certainly under the latter agreement in connection with the agreement of November, 1871. Inasmuch as the obligations of the bond were based upon the agreement of 1871, it becomes important to inquire whether the new agreement of 1872 produced such changes in the duties and obligations of the trustee, or in the terms and conditions of the trust as fixed by the agreement of 1871, that the sureties can be said to have been released from their liability on the bond.

Whether or not such a change was wrought can only be determined by a comparison of the terms and conditions of the one agreement with those of the other. A preliminary question, however, arises as to the nature of the interests of the' remainder-men mentioned in the agreement of 1871 thereunder, and whether the parties executing the agreement of 1872 had any power to change the agreement of 1871 so far as the latter agreement had reference to the children of Mary Pool Docker and Ellen Pool Peeples. The shares of said Mary and Ellen were to be limited to them during their lifetime and at their decease to descend to their children, etc. The children or remainder-men did not sign either contract. It is not denied, that the widow and son and daughters and sons-in-law of Orval Pool, who signed the agreement of 1871, had the power to change it by a subsequent agreement so' far as it affected themselves or their own interests; but it is claimed on the part of the appellants, that the parties so signing the agreement of 1871 could not change it so as to affect the interests of the remainder-men, and that, this being so, there was no change wrought by the agreement of 1872 which could release the liability of the sureties to the remainder-men. As a reason for the contention that the later contract did not change the earlier one so far as the interests of the remainder-men are concerned, it is urged that, by the contract of 1871, the children of Mrs. Docker and Mrs. Peeples were equitable owners of one-half of the estate subject to the life estates of their mothers, and had the right to have the trust created exactly as proposed in the contract of 1871, and to have the trustee’s liability to them measured by that contract. On the part of the appellees it is claimed, that the agreement of 1871 created an incomplete, voluntary trust, and that, therefore, it was within the power of the signers of the agreement to change it by a subsequent one.

A court of equity will not aid a mere volunteer to carry into effect an imperfect gift, or an executory trust. But where a voluntary trust upon a meritorious consideration has been perfectly created, it is irrevocable and may be enforced in equity. Whether a trust has been perfectly created is largely a question of fact in each case. (27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, pp. 11,12; Perry on Trusts, sec. 99). Hence, it may be well to examine the terms of the agreement of 1871 with reference to the question whether it provides for an executed or an executory trust.

The will of Orval Pool, having devised certain lands worth about §9041.33 to his daughters, Mrs. Docker and Mis. Peeples, for life with remainder over to their children, vested the title to these lands in remainder in said children, and, of course, their interests in remainder therein could not be and were not affected by the agreements of 1871 and 1872, to which they were not parties. All the rest of the property having been devised to M. M. Pool and Mrs. Townshend, the title thereto was held by them when the agreement of 1871 was made. That agreement makes no declaration, that M. M. Pool and Mrs. Townshend hold such title for the benefit of their sisters or of the children of their sisters, nor does it transfer or convey any of the property of the estate to a trustee for their benefit. It is executory in its character. (Pool v. Docker, 92 Ill. 501). It names no trustee, but provides for the selection of one by the parties, and, in case of their failure to select, for the appointment of a trustee by a judge of the circuit court of Gallatin county. It further provides, that the interest of Mrs. Docker and Mrs. Peeples “in the moneys, personal property and proceeds of real estate that maybe converted into money,” as therein directed, “shall, within a reasonable time, by a proper and suitable conveyance or conveyances, be conveyed and transferred to” the trustee so to be appointed. Nothing is presently conveyed to the trustee, but thereafter, in the future, moneys, personal property and, not real estate, but the proceeds of real estate to be converted into money, are to be conveyed to the trustee. While it is true, that there was a good and valuable consideration for the agreement of 1871 as between the parties who signed it,, so that it could be enforced in equity as between them, yet no consideration for that agreement moved from the children of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
32 L.R.A. 555, 160 Ill. 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccartney-v-ridgway-ill-1895.