Plummer v. Worthington

152 N.E. 133, 321 Ill. 450
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1926
DocketNo. 16500. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 133 (Plummer v. Worthington) 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
Plummer v. Worthington, 152 N.E. 133, 321 Ill. 450 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The question in this case is whether the ownership of a certain quarter-section of land in Rock Island county is in the heirs of Howard Worthington or in the heirs of Alan-son L. Sayre. The circuit court of Rock Island county, upon a bill for partition, decreed in favor of the Worthington heirs, and the Sayre heirs have appealed.

The land formerly belonged to Alanson L. Sayre, and on February 4, 1889, he and his wife, Mary, conveyed the west half of the quarter-section to their daughter, Cyrilda Worthington, the wife of Howard Worthington, by a statutory warranty deed for an expressed consideration of one dollar. Following the description in the deed appears the following language: “To have and to hold the premises above described, with the appurtenances thereunto belonging, unto the party of the second part, her heirs forever. Provided, nevertheless, that the said party of the second part shall pay, or cause to be paid, to the parties of the first part the sum of $40 per annum during their natural lives. Now, if the above sum of $40 is not paid annually by the party of the second part, then everything herein contained shall be null and void.” At the same time Sayre and his wife conveyed the east half of the quarter-section to their son, Perry W. Sayre, by a similar deed, containing the same words following the description. The grantees took possession of the land conveyed to them, respectively. Perry conveyed the east half of the quarter-section to Worthington on October 8, 1891, for a consideration of $4500, his deed containing the same condition for the payment to Sayre and his wife of $40 annually during their natural lives. Cyrilda Worthington died on June 18, 1908, leaving no child or descendant but leaving a will devising all her property to her husband. The amount of money mentioned in the deeds accruing from their date to February 4, 1904, was paid by Perry W. Sayre, Howard Worthington and Cyrilda Worthington, but no payment, except two or three, was made during the year in which it was due. The payments, except those two or three, were all made after the expiration of the year from a few days to a few months, and the payments for the years 1896, 1897 and 1898 were all made together on March 1, 1899. Sayre’s wife died on April 15, 1903, and on May 1, 1904, Worthington paid the amount due to the latter date. Worthington and his wife lived with Mr. and Mrs. Sayre on a forty-acre tract adjoining the quarter-section from the date of the deeds until Mrs. Sayre’s death, and after her death Worthington and his wife and her father continued to live there together until 1905. In that year Worthington built a new house on the quarter-section which cost more than $3000, and he and his wife and her father moved into it. Later he built a barn at a cost of more than $2000, and a cattle barn and corn-crib. After the death of Mrs. Worthington Sayre continued to live with Worthington on the land for several months, and after that lived with some of his other children until his death, on December 9, 1912. Worthington leased the land to tenants in 1911 and 1912, and after the death of Sayre he leased it to Roy Long, who was the grandson of Sayre and one of his heirs, for one year ending March 1, 1914. Worthington died on January 31, 1916, and Long, who had continued in possession of the land as tenant from year to year, remained in possession thereof the next year. On December 19, 1916, Alice R. Plummer, a sister of Worthington and one of his heirs, filed a bill for partition against his other heirs and against Long as tenant. Long on January 17, 1917, answered, denying that he was only a tenant of the premises and denying that the heirs of Worthington had any title to the premises. On February 17, 1917, the defendants, who were Worthington’s heirs, answered and filed their cross-bill, averring Long’s tenancy under Worthington, his holding over after Worthington’s death and attornment to his heirs, and showing that the Sayre heirs were claiming title to the premises, disputing the title of the Worthington heirs and conniving with Long, who was also one of the Sayre heirs, to gain possession of the premises. The Sayre heirs were made defendants to the cross-bill, which prayed that the title to the land be adjudicated and determined. A receiver was appointed. The Sayre heirs answered, showing a conveyance of the quarter-section by Sayre and his wife, the conveyance by Perry W. Sayre to Worthington, the death of Cyrilda Worthington and the devise of all her property to her husband. Their answer alleged that the payments were not made by Cyrilda or Howard Worthington; that thereby the deeds became void, and after the death of Sayre and his wife the heirs of Sayre entered into possession of the premises and were the owners thereof in fee as such heirs. On October 25, 1917, the cross-complainants, by an amendment of their bill, denied the failure of Howard and Cyrilda Worthington to pay the annual sum of $40 during their lives to Alanson and Mary Sayre, alleging performance of the conditions, and that “Howard H. Worthington, and those through whom he claimed and traced his title to said lands, at all times kept, paid and performed each and every covenant and condition by him or them to be kept and performed to the entire satisfaction of the said Alánson L- Sayre and his wife, and neither he nor her ever at any time made or declared, or attempted to make or declare, any forfeiture or make an entry upon any of said lands, and waived any right of forfeiture, if any they ever had, which your orators deny.” A replication was filed to the answer of the Sayre heirs and issues were made on the bill and cross-bill. Long left the farm on February 26, 1917, and the same day his brother, Orin, and his uncle, Allen Sayre, went on the land and into the house with some blankets and bedding, cooking utensils and provisions. They stayed there that night. Nobody else was there, but on the next day the Worthingtons tried to enter and take possession, and some of them did effect an entrance to the house by breaking a window, and this condition remained, with some of the contestants on each side on the premises, until the appointment of a receiver, to whom the possession was surrendered.

The appellants’ contention is that the language of the deeds of Alanson and Mary Sayre created a condition subsequent, of which there was a breach; that there was a reentry, or its equivalent, by the Sayre heirs, which terminated the estate conveyed by the deeds; that Worthington forfeited his estate in his lifetime and so notified Sayre; that he did not die possessed of any estate and his heirs therefore took none; that Sayre’s heirs had the same right to declare a forfeiture as Sayre himself; that under the pleadings the appellees’ defense to the forfeiture was performance and not waiver.

The condition for the annual payment of $40 in each deed was clearly a condition subsequent. Whether or not it was also a covenant it is unnecessary to determine. The stipulation that upon failure to make an annual payment everything contained in the deed should be null and void was equivalent to an express stipulation for the forfeiture of the estate and a right of re-entry by the grantor. (Sherman v. Town of Jefferson, 274 Ill. 294.) A breach, also, was shown. Statements of Worthington that he had not made the annual payments and did not intend to do so were shown by a number of witnesses, and there was no evidence to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 133, 321 Ill. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plummer-v-worthington-ill-1926.