Moore v. Reddel

102 N.E. 257, 259 Ill. 36
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 257 (Moore v. Reddel) 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
Moore v. Reddel, 102 N.E. 257, 259 Ill. 36 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The record in this case presents the question whether the remainder limited by a deed from Joshua Brown to the heirs of the body of' his son, Marshall Brown, was vested in the children of the grantee before his death or' was contingent, and the decision depends upon the following facts:

On October 5, 1881, Joshua Brown executed the deed conveying the real estate, from and after his death, to Marshall Brown, “to' have and to hold to him, the said Marshall Brown, for and during t the term of his natural life, but without power to sell, alienate, mortgage or in any manner encumber said estate or render same liable for the debts of said Marshall.Brown, with remainder to the heirs of the body of said Marshall Brown and their assigns forever.” Joshua Brown died in 1897 and Marshall Brown took possession of the land. Marshall Brown was married and was the father of the following named children: Ida R. Moore, Elsie B. Hauptman, Elo-ra Williams, Jessie Brown, Russell Brown, . William H. Brown and Marshall F. Brown, Jr. On February 14, 1901, Marshall Brown and his wife, Ida R. Moore and husband, Elsie B. Hauptman and husband, Flora Williams and husband, Jessie Brown, Russell Brown and William H. Brown, executed their warranty deed of the' premises to William E. McReynolds for a consideration of $13,600. Marshall F. Brown, Jr., was a minor fifteen years of age, and the grantors in the deed "to McReynolds covenanted with him that they would cause the interest of the minor to be conveyed to him by proceedings in the county court of McLean county. Sarah L- Brown, mother of Marshall F. Brown, Jr., was his guardian, and by proceedings in the county court his interest in the land was conveyed to McReynolds by a guardian’s deed dated April 16, 1901, for a consideration of $1101. On June 10, 1907, Ida R. Moore died intestate in the lifetime of her father, Marshall Brown, leaving Charles H. Moore, Rolland Moofe and Florence Moore, her children, the heirs of her body. November 27, 1907, Marshall Brown died, leaving Elsie B. Hauptman, Flora Williams, Jessie Brown, Russell Brown, William H. Brown and Marshall F. Brown, Jr., his only surviving children, and the three grandchildren above mentioned, children of Ida R. Moore. These were the persons answering the description of heirs of the body of Marshall Brown at the time of his death. On November 25, 1904, McReynolds and wife conveyed the property, by warranty deed, to Herman L. Reddel, one of the defendants in error, and the other defendant in error, George Sierks, is his tenant. On October .9, 1911, the plaintiffs in error, Rolland Moore, by his next friend, Florence Moore, by her next friend, Charles H. Moore and Marshall F. Brown, Jr., filed their bill in the circuit court of McLean county against defendants in error for partition of the land, each claiming an undivided one-ninth interest and admitting that the defendant in error Herman L- Reddel was the owner of the remaining five-ninths. They claimed the four-ninths on the following grounds: (1) That the deed of Joshua Brown vested an estate for life in Marshall Brown, with remainder in fee simple to such persons as should at his death be alive to answer to the description of heirs of his body; (2) that the remainder to the heirs of the body of Marshall Brown was contingent until his death and never vested in Ida R. Moore, who died prior to his death, so that her warranty deed conveyed nothing when made and was not operative to convey after-acquired title because the title never vested in her; (3) that the guardian’s deed conveyed nothing, because the remainder to Marshall F. Brown, Jr., was contingent and vested only - upon the death of the life tenant. The chancellor sustained a demurrer to the bill, and the plaintiffs having elected to stand by the bill it was dismissed for want of equity, at their costs.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error admit that this court has decided in a series of cases covering a period of forty years, that under section 6 of the Conveyance act the remainder under any devise, gift, grant or other conveyance which would have created an estate in fee tail by the common law, vests in fee simple in the children of the life tenant in his lifetime and descends tO' other heirs the same as any other fee, and that the rule was re-affirmed as recently as the case of Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Hoppin, 249 Ill. 406. They insist, however, that in some of the cases a decision of that question was not necessary, in others that the decision was wrong, and in still others that the reversion in the grantor which descended to his heirs was mistaken for a remainder in the heirs and treated as such. Whether any of the decisions might have been based on- different grounds, or whether, when the question was presented, plausible arguments on both sides might have been made, the rule has been established by numerous decisions, and having been relied upon by attorneys and conveyancers in drawing wills and deeds as establishing a rule of property, ought not now to be changed. We do not regard the decisions, however, as being without good foundation in reason and in view of the history of the law concerning similar titles, and perhaps it will be worth while to again consider such.history briefly.

Prior to the statute of Westminster the Second, estates in fee limited to particular heirs, exclusive of others, as heirs of the body, were known as conditional fees, by reason of the condition expressed or implied that if the donee died without such particular heirs the land should revert to the donor. As soon as the donee had a Child born his estate was absolute by performance of the condition, so far as to enable him to alienate the land and bar both his issue and the reversion. Upon the birth of issue he alienated the land and re-purchased, thus obtaining a fee simple that would descend to his heirs general, according to the course of the common law. To put a stop to this practice the statute de donis conditionalibis above mentioned, under which estates tail were created, was passed. That statute enacted that from thenceforth the will of the donor should be observed, and that 'the tenements given to a man and the heirs of his body should at all events go to the issue if there were any, or if there were none, should revert to the donor. The judges then created a new kind of estate, denominated a fee tail, which would descend to the particular heirs, while the donor had a reversion. expectant on the failure of issue. About two hundred years after the enactment of this statute it was decided in Taltarum’s case that estates tail were barred by common recovery, by which the tenant in tail could dispose of the land for the purpose of defeating the entail.

The argument for the plaintiffs in error rests upon the ground that the remainder to the heirs of the body in such fee tail estate at the common.law was contingent by virtue of the maxim that no living person has heirs. Counsel contend that the purpose of the General Assembly in enacting section 6 was to cut off the entail beyond the first degree but not to change the character of the remainder; that the estate was to pass according to the course of the common law, and that the individuals composing the heirs of the body could only be ascertained upon the death of the life tenant.

The statute concerning conveyances was enacted January 31, 1827, and as revised appeared as chapter 24 of the Revised Statutes of 1845, and section 6 was repeated in the same language in chapter 30 of the Revised Statutes of 1871-72.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 257, 259 Ill. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-reddel-ill-1913.