Meacham v. Bunting

28 L.R.A. 618, 156 Ill. 586
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 L.R.A. 618 (Meacham v. Bunting) 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
Meacham v. Bunting, 28 L.R.A. 618, 156 Ill. 586 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

Urban D. Meacham and Prudence G-eddis were married in 1836. They removed from Wisconsin to Freeport, this State, in 1852, and there lived as husband and wife until 1862. One son born of this marriage in 1836 is still living. On the 29th of November, 1856, the husband purchased of one Sindling'er lots 6 and 7, in block 5, in Wright & Purinton’s addition to the city of Freeport, the deed conveying the same to him “in trust for the use and benefit of Prudence Meacham,” then his wife. Both went into possession of the property in 1857, and occupied it as a home until 1862, and the husband continued in possion until his death, in January, 1892. In 1864 he obtained a decree of divorce in the circuit court of Ogle county from his wife, and by a second marriage became the father of a daughter, Jessie, and a son, James. The mother of these children resided with the father on the premises until her death, and the children continued to live with him until he died. By a general devise in his last will their father gave these children the title he then held, if any, to the lots. The former wife also remarried, her present name being Prudence Bunting. In 1893 she brought this action of ejectment in the court below, claiming said property as owner in fee, and making Jessie and James Meacham, with others, defendants. Issue being joined, and a trial by jury, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, and entered judgment accordingly. The defendants appeal.

By the pleadings the issue whether plaintiff’s right of action was barred by the twenty years statute of limitations is properly raised, and is the controlling question in the case. The parties agree that by the terms of the deed from Sindlinger to Urban D. Meacham the latter became the naked trustee of his wife, Prudence, and that the legal title to the property conveyed would therefore, under the general rule, vest in her by force of the Statute of Uses.- It is also conceded that, inasmuch as she was not sui juris under the law in force at the time the deed was executed, the title did not immediately vest in her, but was left in her husband for her use. But counsel for appellants say, the statute took effect, and she became seized of the estate in her own right, upon the dissolution of the marriage, in 1864, and from that time the possession of the husband was adverse, and therefore the statute then ran against her. On behalf of the appellee it is contended, that even if the legal title did vest in her at the date of the decree of divorce, still, by reason of his marriage and the prior birth of issue, her husband took an estate in the property, upon the execution and delivery of the deed from Sindlinger, as tenant by the curtesy initiate, and hence this right of action did not accrue until his death. Opposing counsel insist that it is held the title does not, in such cases, vest in the cestui que trust immediately, for the very purpose of excluding all marital rights of the husband, and therefore Urban D. Meacham never became tenant by the curtesy, and even if he did, the decree of divorce destroyed that as well as all other marital rights in him. Appéllee’s counsel also deny that Urban D. Meacham’s possession was at any time adverse to her.

First, did Urban D. Meacham have a life estate in the premises prior to the divorce? If the Statute of Uses had operated, at the time of the conveyance, to vest the estate in the cestui que trust, (the wife,) there being issue then born, the husband would have become tenant by the curtesy initiate, precisely as though the deed from Sindlinger had been directly to her; but being a married woman, the Statute of Uses did not execute the trust, and the legal title remained in her husband, the trustee, for her use. (Dean v. Long, 122 Ill. 447, citing Perry on Trusts, sec. 310.) This author says: “If an estate be given to trustees upon a trust for a married woman, for her sole and separate use, * * * the legal estate will vest in the trustees, and the statute will not execute it in the cestui que trust. In all these cases, the court will give this construction to the. gift, if possible, for if the statute should execute the estate in the married woman, certain rights would arise to the husband which might defeat the intention of the donor. These are not the only words necessary to prevent the estate from vesting. Any words that show an intent to create an estate or a trust for the sole and separate use of a married woman will have the same effect.” Other authorities are to the same effect, and it seems to be the settled rule that where the trust is expressly “for the separate use,” or “for the sole use and benefit,” of a married woman, courts will not allow the statute to execute it in her, because the effect might be to let in marital rights of her husband, and thereby deprive her of the sole and separate use, contrary to the intention of the party creating the trust. Nevertheless, it is understood that a husband’s right to an estate by the curtesy may attach to an equitable as well as a legal estate held by his wife during coverture, and there can be no doubt that he may have such right in real estate conveyed to another for her use. Whether she holds the property by a direct conveyance, or as the cestui que trust therein, if it appears that the grantor intended to exclude the husband from the curtesy, courts will give effect to that intention. (Pool v. Blakie, 53 Ill. 495; Monroe v. Van Meter, 100 id. 347.) But the husband can be deprived of his marital rights only when the intention to do so clearly appears. Carter v. Dale, 3 Lea, 710; (31 A. R. 660); Cushing v. Blake, 30 N. Y. Eq. 689 ; Hill on Trusts, 405 ; Stedman v. Pulling, 3 Atk. 423.

There is nothing in the language of the deed in question to indicate a purpose on the part of the grantor to convey the property for the sole and separate use of Prudence Meacham. In fact, the fair inference is that Sindlinger, the grantor, had no purpose whatever in conveying the lots in trust except to carry out the wish of Meacham, who purchased them. That he, the husband, intended by the words, “in trust for the use and benefit of Prudence Meacham,” to exclude himself from all right in the property by the curtesy cannot be presumed, and his conduct after the divorce was wholly inconsistent with any such intention. We think the authorities fully sustain the position that he, at the date of the Sindlinger deed, became tenant by the curtesy initiate in the premises. Was that estate destroyed by the decree of divorce? While the evidence does not show the grounds upon which it was obtained, it does appear that it was upon the application of the husband, and must therefore have been rendered, not for his fault, but that of the defendant, his wife. While many cases hold “a divorce a vinculo destroys the husband’s right to curtesy,” they speak of such a divorce as at common law, which rendered the marriage void ab initio. Although the only divorce known to our law is “a vinculo,” it may, under the statute, be granted for causes arising after the marriage, and the decree does not avoid it from the beginning. The marriage is legal until dissolved, and we think rights acquired during its legal existence can not be destroyed by its dissolution unless the statute so expressly provides. This view is sustained by the case of Wait v. Wait, 4 Comst. 95.

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Bluebook (online)
28 L.R.A. 618, 156 Ill. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meacham-v-bunting-ill-1895.