Pratt v. Skiff

124 N.E. 534, 289 Ill. 268
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1919
DocketNo. 12344
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 124 N.E. 534 (Pratt v. Skiff) 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
Pratt v. Skiff, 124 N.E. 534, 289 Ill. 268 (Ill. 1919).

Opinion

Mr.' Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Thurlow H. Pratt, administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Addie Wing Williams, deceased, filed a bill in chancery to the April term, 1918, of the Morgan county circuit court against the heirs, devisees and legatees of the testatrix for the purpose of obtaining a construction of her will.

The testatrix, Addie Wing Williams, died December 3, 1916, leaving as her. only heirs-at-law her sisters, Lucy Wing Skiff and Nellie Wing Hemenway; her nephews, Jewett F. Wing and Harold E. Wing, and her niece, Edith M. Wing. She also left surviving her Daisy Em-rich Charlesworth, a foster-daughter, whom she and her husband had taken at the age of ten or twelve years and who lived with her at her death. They had talked of adopting her but had never done so. The testatrix died seized of her homestead in Jacksonville, Illinois, and also a house and lot in Chapin, Illinois, worth about $2000. She left household goods of the value of about $120, and notes, mortgages and other assets of the value of $17,800. The will was dated March 31, 1915. She first gives and bequeaths, after the payment of her debts, funeral expenses and other expenses, the following legacies to her cousins: To Arthur Ames Woodward the sum of $3000; to Nellie Bean Woodward, "Stella Bean, Emma Bean and Nellie Wing Lewis, $1000 each; to Abbie S. Wing $1000, to be given at her death to the Congregational (Vermont) Home Missionary Society, to be applied to the endowment fund of said society. To Elizabeth Meyers she bequeathed the sum of $300; to the Woman’s Board of Missions of the Interior, (Congregational,) incorporated under the laws of Illinois, $1000, to be used as an endowment fund for foreign missions; to the Deaconess Home in Pana, Illinois, $500, to be used by the Congregational trustees of the home for the deaconesses in Pana; to the trustees of Concord, Illinois, cemetery $100 in trust, the interest on said sum to be used to care for “the Williams lot in said cemetery;” $50 “in trust by the trustees,” the interest of said sum .to be used to keep up the J. E. Wing lot in the Bridgeport, Vermont, cemetery; to Thorsby Institute $300 for a piano. The devise and bequests to Daisy Emrich Charlesworth are in the following language: “I give and bequeath to my adopted daughter, Daisy Emrich Charlesworth, the sum of three thousand dollars ($3000) ; the house and lot No. 238 Westminster street, Jacksonville, Illinois, and the furniture in the house, after my sisters, Nellie Wing Hemenway and Lucy Wing Skiff, have taken what they want. I give and bequeath my piano to Daisy Emrich Charlesworth.”

On August 30, 1915, the testatrix executed her second codicil to her will, which she called codicil No. 3, and it reads thus: ■ “The property which I have given to my daughter, Daisy Emrich Charlesworth, three thousand dollars ($3000) ; the home and lot on 238 Westminster street, Jacksonville, Illinois; the piano; the household goods that my sisters, Lucy Wing Skiff and Nellie Wing Hemenway, do not want, to be used by the said Daisy for her lifetime. Should she leave the whole or part of this property, I want it given at her death, one-half to the Woman’s Board of Missions of the Interior as an endowment fund under the laws of the State of Illinois, the interest to be used for foreign missions; the last half to be given as an endowment fund to the American Missionary Association, office 287 Fourth avenue, New York, for the education of the whites in the- South. Give my piano to the free kindergarten in Jacksonville, Illinois.”

The paragraph of the will in behalf of Lucy Wing Skiff is in this language: “I give to my sisters, Lucy Wing Skiff and Nellie Wing Hemenway, my clothes, watch and jewelry, the rest of my estate to be equally divided between my ^isters, Lucy Wing Skiff, Nellie Wing Hemenway, and my brother Charles Lyman Wing’s children, Edith M. Wing, Jewett E. Wing, Harold D. Wing. The sum given to Jewett E. Wing, the use of the sum for his lifetime, the income to be his to use as he wishes, then at his death to be given to his nearest relatives. (The amount of money that my sister Lucy Wing Skiff receives shall be used in trust, at her death it will be given to my nearest relatives, my nephews and nieces.) ”

On August 16, 1915, the testatrix executed the first codicil to her will, which she called the second codicil, and it reads thus: “The part of my property or estate which I have given to my sister Lucy Wing Skiff I would like to be left by her after she has had the use of it her lifetime to an endowment fund for missions instead of being given to my nearest relatives, as written iii my will. The sum' of fifteen hundred dollars ($1500) to be given as an endowment fund to the Congregational Woman’s Board of Missions of the Interior, under the laws of the State of Illinois. The rest of the given sum, fifteen hundred dollars ($1500) more or less, to the Congregational Board of Ministerial Relief, to be used as an endowment fund, office 287 Fourth ave., New York, N. Y.”

Appellant answered the bill, practically admitting all its averments, except that it denied that the provisions of the will and the codicils were uncertain and indefinite; averred that the purpose thereof was to devise and bequeath to Daisy Emrich Charlesworth only a life estate in the $3000 and the house and lot in Jacksonville, with remainder over, one-half thereof to appellant; avers that it is the owner in fee of one-half of said property in trust for the uses and purposes declared in the will and codicils, subject to said life estate. By way of cross-bill appellant prays that the court will by its decree so find and establish the meaning of said will, and that the life tenant, Mrs. Charlesworth, may be required, as a condition to her receiving from the administrator the property in which she has a life interest, to give bond, with good and sufficient sureties, to appellant by way of assurance that the sum so bequeathed to her for life shall without loss be ready to be paid to appellant at the time it shall be entitled to receive the same, or that such other provision may be made by the decree of the court as will sufficiently give such assurance. Appellant answers, in substance, the same as to the legacies bequeathed to Lucy Wing Skiff, arid by way of cross-bill prays similar relief.

The court found that under the original will the bequests and the devise to Daisy Emrich Charlesworth were absolute and in fee simple; that by the provisions of codicil No. 3 the estate was reduced to a life estate, with full power to dispose of all of the property during her life, with remainder over in one-half thereof from her death to the Woman’s Board of Missions of the Interior, to be held as an endowment fund, the interest thereof to be used for foreign missions, and with remainder over in the other half to the American Missionary Society. The court decreed that the administrator pay to her sai'd bequest of $3000, to deliver her the remainder of the household goods which testatrix’s sisters do not want, and to deliver her the piano, to be used by her for life, with full power of disposition of said property during her life, with remainder over in one-half of what should remain, to appellant, etc. The court by its decree construed the will and codicil No.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.E. 534, 289 Ill. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-skiff-ill-1919.