Phelps v. Seeley

119 N.E.2d 923, 3 Ill. 2d 210, 1954 Ill. LEXIS 403
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1954
Docket33111
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 119 N.E.2d 923 (Phelps v. Seeley) 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
Phelps v. Seeley, 119 N.E.2d 923, 3 Ill. 2d 210, 1954 Ill. LEXIS 403 (Ill. 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Schaefer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree entered by the circuit ■court of Cumberland County in a partition suit. The interests of the parties in the real estate in question depend upon a construction of the will of W. H. Seeley, who died in 1905.

W. H. Seeley was married three times. He was survived by his third wife, Leahbelle Seeley, and nine children. Four of the children were born of his first marriage and none of his second. On March 29, 1902, when he executed his will, four children, Inez, Daniel, Jacob and James had been born of his third marriage. A fifth child of the third marriage, Roy Seeley, was born after the will was executed but before his father’s death. A sixth child of the third marriage, Golda Seeley Phelps, was born four months after her father’s death.

At the time of his death, W. H. Seeley owned the real estate in question in fee simple. The pertinent portions of his will are the second and fourth paragraphs: “Second, I hereby give and devise all of my property, both Real and Personal to my wife LEahbellE SEELEY, subject to the payment of debts and funeral expenses, to have and hold for the use and benefit of herself and our three sons Daniel Seeley, Jacob Seeley and James Seeley, So long as She.-shall.remain my .widow. * * * Fourth, After the death of my wife, or if she should remarry, then it is my will that said Real Estate shall be immediately divided between said three sons in equal parts according to the value thereof, and if either one should die before coming into possession of the same the survivor or survivors shall take the same in equal parts. * *

Roy Seeley, who was born after the will was executed but before his father’s death, died intestate in 1942, leaving his widow, Ruah Seeley, his mother, and twenty-one collateral heirs-at-law. James Seeley, one of the three sons named in the will, died in 1948, leaving as his heirs-at-law his wife, Mabel, and their three children, Raymond Seeley, Phyllis Akin and Wilma Pedigo, who are the defendants in this action. Thereafter, in 1950, Leahbelle Seeley, the" testator’s widow, died intestate without having remarried.

In 1936 Daniel Seeley executed a real estate mortgage of a part of his interest in the property to Charles M. Connor to secure a promissory note. After default, a decree of strict foreclosure was entered in the circuit court of Cumberland County and it is not controverted that on December 19, 1941, Connor became the owner of an undivided one-fifth interest in the property.

By their complaint, the plaintiffs, Golda Seeley Phelps, Jacob Seeley and Daniel Seeley, set forth alternative theories to be applied in the construction of the will. The facts were stipulated. The decree adjudged that the devise to James Seeley created a determinable or base fee which terminated upon his death before the death of his mother, the life tenant; that his heirs have no interest in the property; that the after-born children, Roy Seeley and Golda Phelps, take no part of the estate of their father, and that the fee-simple interests in the real estate are: Jacob Seeley, a one-half interest, Daniel Seeley, three tenths, and Charles M. Connor, one fifth.

The issue principally argued, and the only issue open for our consideration, is the correctness of the decree insofar as it holds that the defendants, the heirs of James Seeley, take nothing under the will. The decree is attacked upon the ground that the words of survival in the fourth paragraph of the will, properly construed, mean that in order to take under the will each of the three sons named in it was required only to survive his father, the testator, and was not required to survive his mother, the life tenant. James Seeley met this requirement, and therefore, defendants contend, they take his interest under the will as his heirs.

Of his eight children who were living when he made his will, the testator favored only three, excluding four by his first marriage and one by his third. And as to the three favored children, only the “survivor or survivors” was to take. Whether survival refers to the death of the testator or to the death of the life tenant, the heirs of any of the three favored children who failed to survive were excluded under the will. With the wisdom of these provisions we are not concerned. Our business is to ascertain the testator’s intention. Barnhart v. Barnhart, 415 Ill. 303; Harris Trust and Savings Bank v. Jackson, 412 Ill. 261 ; Vollmer v. McGowan, 409 Ill. 306.

That intention seems to us to be clear, and to be expressed without ambiguity. By the second paragraph of his will, the testator created a life estate for his wife so long as she should remain his widow. Having made provision for his wife for her life or until her remarriage, the testator proceeded to dispose of his property when either event occurred. He said, “* * * then it is my will that said real estate should be immediately divided * * The word “then” is sometimes used as an adverb of time and sometimes as referring to an event. (Tolley v. Wilson, 371 Ill. 124, 133.) Here, the use of the two words “then” and “immediately” in the same clause indicates a clearcut reference to time. The following words in the same sentence, “and if either one should die before coming into possession,” show that the testator was providing for a contingency. The phrase “coming into possession” refers directly to the preceding words “immediately divided.” The contingency having been described, the testator stated that “the survivor or survivors” should take his property in equal parts. In our opinion the language employed reasonably admits of but a single conclusion: that only those of his three named sons, Jacob, James and Daniel, who should be living when the life tenancy terminated, whether by death of the life tenant or by her remarriage, should “come into possession” and take the property.

In support of their contention that the phrase “coming into possession” refers to the time of the testator’s death, the appellants argue that the language used in the second paragraph of the will devising a life estate to the widow, “to have and hold for the use and benefit of herself and our three sons,” created a trust in the widow and an immediate equitable estate in all the sons living at the testator’s death. Even if we assume that such an equitable interest might satisfy the requirement of “coming into possession,” we hold that no such equitable interest was created.

The language in question shows concern that the testator’s wife enjoy the income from the property so long as she needed it. The words “for the use and benefit of 'herself and our three sons” express the purpose which induced him to make the devise, and do not create a trust. In Dee v. Dee, 212 Ill. 338, the testator devised to his wife “all of my property, both real and personal to her use during her life or as long as she shall remain my widow to receive all the rents and profits thereof for the benefit of my family.” Holding that a trust was not created, this court said: “In using that expression [for the benefit of my family] we think he had in mind the group of persons residing in his household, consisting of his wife and children, and that his design was that his wife should use the income from all his property as her discretion directed for the benefit of those persons so long as they continued members of that household.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 N.E.2d 923, 3 Ill. 2d 210, 1954 Ill. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelps-v-seeley-ill-1954.