Pritchard v. Walker

22 Ill. App. 286, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 340
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 22 Ill. App. 286 (Pritchard v. Walker) 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
Pritchard v. Walker, 22 Ill. App. 286, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 340 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Baker, P. J.

The bill of complaint herein was filed by Reuben M. Pritchard, Sarah E. Pritchard, widow of Ethan A. Pritchard, deceased, and Elliott and Elotia Pritchard, children of said Sarah E. and Ethan A. Pritchard, against John Walker, administrator of Elotia Pritchard, deceased, and the heirs at law of said Elotia Pritchard, deceased, and others. The objects of the bill were somewhat manifold. One object was to enjoin the prosecution of a certain bill in chancery by said administrator against Sarah E. Elliott and Elotia Pritchard to foreclose a mortgage given by Ethan A. Pritchard, deceased, to the intestate of said administrator, to secure the payment of two promissory notes made by him to her and to have the moneys mentioned in said notes decreed to he the property of said Reuben M., Sarah E., Elliott and Elotia, under and by virtue of the limitation contained in the second clause of the will of one Reuben Pritchard, deceased, who died testate in 1856, and was the father of said Reuben M., and grandfather of said Elliott and Elotia. Another object was to enjoin the prosecution of a suit at law by said administrator against Reuben M. Pritchard, upon certain promissory notes executed by the latter to administrator’s intestate, and to have the moneys secured thereby decreed to Reuben M., Sarah E., Elliott and Elotia Pritchard, on the ground of the limitation alluded to above.

The intestate, Elotia Pritchard the elder, died October 19, 1871, possessed of chattel property, notes and bonds of the value of some §5,229.98, and another of the objects of the bill was to have the bulk of this property decreed to and vested in said Beuben M., Sarah E., Elliott and Elotia Pritchard, under the said limitation in the will of Beuben Pritchard, deceased, and to have the residue of said chattel property-decreed to and vested in the above named SarahE. Pritchard as surviving joint tenant for life under the second clause of the will of Ethan A. Pritchard, who is spoken of above, and who died July 29, 1865. And still another object of the will was to quiet the title to a tract of land containing 154 acres, and recover an equitable freehold therein.

Upon a hearing in the Circuit Court, upon the pleadings and proofs, a decree was rendered in favor of the complainants below, appellants here, in respect to the 154 acres of land, and in favor of the defendants below, appellees here, in respect to all the other matters and things involved in the cause. Appeals were prayed by each party, respectively, and allowed. Appellees did not perfect their appeal. Appellants did appeal but only from those portions of the decree regarding matters other than the tract of land in controversy, and their assignments of error question only those parts of the decree that have reference to the personal property. Thereupon appellees assigned upon the transcript of the record in this court cross-errors, some of them upon that portion of the decree in respect to the real estate. Appellants then moved to strike out such latter cross-errors, and appellees entered a cross-motion to dismiss the appeal for the want of jurisdiction in this court to hear and determine the matters presented by the record, and the assignment of the cross-errors thereon, on the ground a freehold was involved ; and these two motions were reserved by the court to the hearing.

The right to assign cross-errors is given by statute. Practice Act, Sec. 79. The statute, however, must receive a reasonable construction. We do not regard Smith v. Wright, 71 Ill. 167, and Cable v. Ellis, 86 Ill. 525, 543, as by any means decisive of the matter now under consideration. The first mentioned case only decides that if an appellee assigns a certain matter as a cross-error, and the same is decided against him, he will be concluded by the decision from prosecuting a writ of error, assigning the same matter as error; and in the Ellis case it was held that where three suits in chancery, relating to the same property, are consolidated, and thereupon one of the complainants files an amended and supplemental bill, reciting specifically and in detail all the proceedings in the three suits, reiterating his prayer for relief as in his original bill, the latter may, on appeal by one of the other complainants, assign for cross-error any decree or refusal of decree to his prejudice. The doctrine announced in Cable v. Ellis is undoubtedly the general rule ; but this before us is an exceptional case. Appellees have failed and declined to either appeal or sue out a writ of error for the purpose of reversing the decree respecting the real estate. They got all the personal property in controversy, and presumably they are content with the decree. They claim to occupy a position where, declining to either appeal to or sue out a writ of error from the Supreme Court, they can blow either hot or cold. Had appellants gone into the Supreme Court, appellees could say : “We are not objecting to the decree in regard to the real estate; that is settled by the decree below, and you assign no errors involving a freehold; and we assign no cross-errors; you should have gone to the Appellate Court.” But, as the appeal was taken to this court, the converse of this position is taken, cross-errors are assigned, and it is moved to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction. The statute in question is remedial in its character and was intended to cure a defect in the law and conserve the rights of appellees and defendants in error; and it should not be so construed as that it may he used as a sword and not as a shield, and thereby occasion evils greater than those sought to be cured. It was not the legislative intention by this section to deprive one of the parties to a litigation of any opportunity whatever to have'the decree against him in the trial court reviewed by a court of errors. The writ of error is a writ of right, and the same question would arise were this record now here on error instead of by appeal.

We think the rule laid down in Cheney v. Teese, 113 Ill. 444, should apply here. This is the only court to which appellants could go for the purpose of raising the only questions they coul d raise upon the record. If they can not remain here, they are remediless. As a general rule, Appellate Courts will not review cases by piecemeal; but they will do so under particular circumstances of hardship, and where otherwise there would be a failure of justice. Besides this, the controversy about the 154 acres of land is a wholly different and distinct contention from those respecting the personal property, and the issues both of law and of fact involved in the two branches of the litigation are’ wholly unlike. This court obtained jurisdiction and rightfully, to determine the questions raised by appellants with reference to the personal property, and it can not be ousted of this rightful jurisdictipn by the assignment' of cross-errors.

The motion to dism'ss the appeal is overruled, and the motion to strike the cross-errors from the record so far as they seek to question the decree in regard to the 154 acres of land, is sustained.

A number of contentions arise upon that portion of the decree that is before us for examination.

The second clause of the will of Ethan A. Pritchard gave to his wife, Sarah E. Pritchard, and to his step-mother, Elotia Pritchard, during their joint lives, and to the survivor of them during her natural life, the possession, rents, use and income of his farm, containing 353 acres. A devise of the rents and profits or of the income of lands passes the land itself, both at.

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Related

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33 N.E.2d 887 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1941)
Fell v. McCready
236 A.D. 390 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1932)
Fleming v. Fleming
194 Iowa 71 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1919)
Walker v. Pritchard
34 Ill. App. 65 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1889)
In re Estate of Cashman
28 Ill. App. 346 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ill. App. 286, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchard-v-walker-illappct-1887.