Miller v. Miller

193 Ill. App. 541, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 690
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 16, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 193 Ill. App. 541 (Miller v. Miller) 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
Miller v. Miller, 193 Ill. App. 541, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 690 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Eldredge

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court construing the bill of John W. Miller, who died October 6,1908. The testator left surviving him, Dilcy C. Miller, his widow, Lewis Boss Miller, William Price Miller, Mary E. Greenup, Jenarie M. Cassidy and J. Marcus Miller, his children. Ward Miller, Louisa Norris, Walter Miller, Vance Miller, Grace Miller Bauer, Orville Miller, James Marcus Miller, Jr., and Nellie Miller are the children of appellant, J. Marcus Miller. The bill was filed by the executors and trustees named under the will to construe the fourth and sixth clauses thereof.

The fourth and sixth clauses of the will are as follows :

“Fourth: I have already given to my son, Lewis Boss Miller, the sum of $500.00; to Mary E. Greenup, $700.00; to Jenarie M. Cassidy, $700.00; to William Price Miller, $500.00, and to J. Marcus Miller, $1,015.97, which said amounts were given to them as advancements, and which said amounts shall be charged against them so that the said children may be equal before any division is made of any personal property, or the proceeds of any real estate, and I direct that my executors, as soon after my decease as practicable, pay to said children a sufficient sum to make them equal, and that the balance of my estate be divided equally among my said five children, William Price Miller, Lewis Boss Miller, J ames Marcus Miller, Mary Ellen Greenup and Jenarie M. Cassidy, the undivided one-fifth interest in and to the proceeds of my estate which remains after deducting the debts, funeral expenses, widow’s bequest and the equalization, above mentioned, to be paid to them, as hereinafter provided, except that portion devised to my said son, J. Marcus Miller, which said one-fifth interest, so devised and bequeathed to my said son, J. Marcus Miller, shall be held by my executors, hereinafter named, during the lifetime of the said J. Marcus Miller, but in case he should become unable to support himself, then the said executors shall use such portion of his interest in said estate as shall be necessary for his support during said incapacity or sickness, and at his death, said executors shall divide the remainder of the portion, so belonging to my said son, J. Marcus Miller, equally among his children, as they become of lawful age.”
“Sixth. I give, devise and bequeath to Diley C. Miller, William Price Miller, Lewis Boss Miller and Albert Greenup, my executors, hereinafter named and appointed, all my real and personal property and estate of whatsoever kind and nature, in trust for the execution of this will. I give to them, or the survivor of them, full power and authority to dispose of same, at public or private sale, at such time and place and upon such terms and in such manner as to them shall seem proper. And I will and ordain that my said executors, hereinafter named, shall allow and permit my said son, William Price Miller, to have the use of the farm that he is now farming as long as his mother lives, if he desires to stay, on the same terms that he now rents the same, to-wit: one-half of everything raised on the farm and one-half interest in the stock and farming implements on the farm, my said executors to pay the taxes on the land, and the said executors to pay one-half of the personal taxes, and my said son the remaining one-half, and at the death,of my said wife that said executors at once sell all of said property, either at public or private sale, as to them shall seem best for said estate, and I do hereby give full power and authority to my said executors, or the survivors, to grant, bargain, sell and convey, all of said land above described, and that from the proceeds thereof said executors shall pay to my said children, to each, the undivided one-fifth part thereof, at the time of said sale, to hold in fee simple forever, except the interest of the said J. Marcus Miller, which shall be held as above provided.”

J. Marcus Miller filed a third amended cross-bill praying that the fourth clause be construed to give him an undivided one-fifth interest of said estate absolutely on the ground that the trust attempted to be asserted is uncertain, indefinite, incapable of being enforced, and void; that the intention of the testator is that the body of the trust,' attempted to be created for the benefit of his children, may be used by him in his lifetime and that by reason thereof it is uncertain that there will be any remainder of said trust fund at his death, for which reason the attempted trust is incapable of being enforced.

The decree finds that the fourth clause is clear and unambiguous, and creates a trust whereby the one-fifth part of said estate shall be held in trust by the executors of the will as trustees during the life of J. Marcus Miller, unless he shall become unable to support himself, in which event the said executors shall use such portions of said trust as shall be necessary for his support during such incapacity or sickness only, and at his death the remainder of said trust fund shall be divided equally among his children; that no part of said one-fifth interest so held in trust shall be paid to said J. Marcus Miller in fee, but only such amounts shall be paid to him during his incapacity and sickness as shall be necessary for his support during such time, and that he is not entitled to the income of said-trust fund during his lifetime.

Appellant relies upon the cases of Mills v. Newberry, 112 Ill. 123, and Wilce v. Van Anden, 248 Ill. 358, to sustain his position. While it is true that the language used in those cases might imply that such a distribution of property, on account of the uncertainty as to whether there would be any part of the trust fund remaining at the time of the death of the legatee, is void, yet in the later case of Burke v. Burke, 259 Ill. 262, both these cases were very thoroughly analyzed and it was held:

“The proposition upon which Mills v. Newberry was decided (and the same applies to Wilce v. Van Anden), was, not that the possible exhaustion of the fund by its application to prior demands upon it before its application to the purposes of the trust renders the subject-matter of the trust uncertain, but that there is no fund which can be the subject-matter of a trust where its application to the purposes of the trust depends upon the absolute and unconditional discretion of the person in control of the fund. In such case there is nothing which a court of equity can lay hold of,—nothing binding on the conscience. The chancellor cannot direct what disposition one shall make of property which is given to him to dispose of as he chooses. This was the character of both the cases cited and of the authorities on which the opinions in those cases rely. Wherever a clear discretion or choice to act or not to act is given; wherever the prior dispositions of the property import absolute and uncontrollable' ownership; wherever the trustees have an option to withdraw the funds from the purposes of the trust and apply them in their own discretion, the court cannot execute such a trust. This was the character of both the cases cited. The rule laid down in them goes to this extent and no farther and is amply sustained by the numerous authorities cited. ’ ’

The present case is unlike either the case of Mills v. Newberry or Wilce v.

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Related

Mills v. Newberry
1 N.E. 156 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1885)
Arnold v. Alden
50 N.E. 704 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1898)
Wilce v. VanAnden
94 N.E. 42 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1911)
Burke v. Burke
102 N.E. 293 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
193 Ill. App. 541, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-illappct-1915.