McNeill v. Caruthers

4 Ill. App. 552, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 241
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 8, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ill. App. 552 (McNeill v. Caruthers) 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
McNeill v. Caruthers, 4 Ill. App. 552, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 241 (Ill. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

This was a bill in chancery, brought in the Circuit Court of Cook county, III., by Malcom Caruthers, appellee, to obtain a construction of a wiil made, by his grandfather, Malcom McNeill, a citizen and resident of Christian county, Kentucky, who died in February, 1875, having made his last will and testament November 8th, 1873.

The will was duly probated in the County Court of Christian county, Kentucky, at the March term 1875, thereof, and John B. Crudup, of Granville, North Carolina, Malcom McNeill, Jr., then of the State of Mississippi, and appellee, Malcom Caruthers, then of the State of Tennessee, were, by the will, appointed executors thereof, and letters testamentary were duly issued to them by the County Court of Christian county. The testator left a large amount of real and personal property in the States of Kentucky, Illinois and elsewhere, of the estimated value at the time of the testator’s death, of about $1,-000,000, to be destributed according to the provisions of his will. The testator left him surviving Catharine McN eill, his widow, Martha Boddie, his daughter, wife of William P. Boddie, who lives in Christian county, Kentucky; also grandchildren by his son, Thomas Henry McNeill, as follows: Flora Caruthers, wife of John P. Caruthers, Harry C. Mc-Neill, Malcom McNeill, Thomas H. McNeill, living in Chicago; Mish Crudup, wife of John P. Crudup, living in Granville county, North Carolina; B. Franklin McNeill, living in Christian county, Kentucky, and Kivers McNeill, William McNeill and Alexander McNeill, minor's, living in Chicago, of whom Malcom McNeill is guardian ; and appellee, Malcom Caruthers, the only surviving child of Elizabeth Caruthers, deceased, and who was a daughter of the testator, Malcom McNeill.

The bill prays for an accounting of the rents received by the executor since the death of "the testator, and that the complainant may be decreed to have a fee simple title to lots 5 and six in block 116, in School Section addition to Chicago, free from all liens, rights and encumbrances whatsoever; and may be let into the immediate possession thereof.

The defendants to the bill appeared and filed answers. A decree was rendered in the Court below in favor of appellee, according to the prayer of his bill, from which decree appellants have brought the case to this Court, and assign as errors: (a), that the Court below had no jurisdiction of the case; (b), that the decree is against the law and the evidence; and (c), that the Court should have entered a decree dismissing the bill.

The main question presented for our consideration, is as to the proper construction of that clause in the will which bequeaths to appellee, Caruthers, the rents of the property therein described, and the fee thereof, upon arriving at the age of thirty years; and whether he then took the property relieved from any burden or debts, except such as had then been actually created by the executors as directed by the will; or whether this property, he having arrived at the age of thirty years, is still held by him, charged with the burden of contributing ¿my; rata from its rents to the building fund until all the designated vacant lots of the testator have been supplied with buildings.

In order to a proper solution of this question, a brief summary of the provisions of the will, so far as they relate to the testator’s property in the city of Chicago, is necessary.

The testator first directs that his debts be paid from the proceeds of the rents from his Chicago property. lie next disposes of his real and personal estate in Kentucky and elsewhere outside of Chicago, the terms of which are not here called in question. But in this clause of his will lie says:

“ I also give my wife one thousand dollars per annum during her life, to be paid to her in two equal semi-annual payments, from the rents of my Chicago property, so long as she may live. This to be in lieu of dower. * * ”

He further directs “ that each piece of property at any time and all times rented to be taxed pro rata agreeable to its rents, to be held liable and subject to the payment of this annuity during my wife’s lifetime, so she is fully and clearly protected in her annuity, i. e., one thousand dollars as long as she lives.”

The testator next gives to his daughter, Martha Boddie, the rents of certain houses and lots in the city of Chicago, enumerating and describing them, during her life, and then adds:

“ I give the rents of all the above named lots, with the houses on said lots, and those lots that now have not houses on them, to my daughter, Martha Boddie, during her life, subject always to the payment of my debts and the annuity to my, wife, as before stated, and after her death the said property and rents, subject as stated above, to the payment of my debts and annuity to my wife, Catharine; then the residue of rents, after my debts are paid, if there be any then existing, and the annuity to my wife if she be still living, I give to the then living children of my said daughter Martha; they to receive them until the rents thereof of all the property that she received the rents from, until.her youngest child is twenty-one years old, or if dead, would be twenty-one years old if living; then when her youngest child should be twenty-one years old, the fee simple title of all and of the portion pointed out in this will in which she received rents on, shall vest in fee simple and absolutely and completely in her then living children. Should any of her children have died before said period, and leaving children or child living, it or they shall heir as their parent would have done if living.

“ The rents of the above lots and houses are, as before expressly named, to be subject to the payment of my wife’s annuity, and the payment of my debts contracted by me before my death, and the debts contracted by my executors for me in building such houses on my lots as I may hereafter direct; * * * * and my wife is to receive her annuity from the rents pro rata on the rental property as long as she, my wife Catharine, lives.”

He adds: “ I wish here to remark that I have, prior to this, made my grandchildren, the children of my daughter Martha, deeds to certain lots and houses, in the city of Chicago, which gift, having been made prior to this, is to h&ve nothing to do, nor no bearing on, this my last will.”

The testator next devds.es to the children of his deceased son, Thomas Henry McNeil], the rents of certain specified lots without “houses,-and with those houses that I may put on, or direct to be put on, said lots; subject always to the pro rata payment of my wife’s annuity during her life, and to the payment of my debts created by me in my lifetime, and the debts I may direct my executors to create in building houses on those lots that houses were burnt off of in the great fire of Chicago, in 1871.”

This bequest to the testator’s grandchildren, by his son, Thomas Henry McNeill, contains á similar clause to that in the bequest to appellee, except that the time limited is until Alexander McNeill, the youngest child of Thomas H. McNeill, and grandson of the testator, shall have arrived at the age of twenty-one years.

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Related

Cook v. Holmes
11 Mass. 528 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1814)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ill. App. 552, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneill-v-caruthers-illappct-1879.