Richardson v. Eveland

1 L.R.A. 203, 126 Ill. 37
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1 L.R.A. 203 (Richardson v. Eveland) 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
Richardson v. Eveland, 1 L.R.A. 203, 126 Ill. 37 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shore

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is contended hy appellant that the gift or advancement made by the testator, of $2500 to each of his daughters, on the occasion of the family reunion in celebration of his sixty-eighth birthday, was an ademption of the devise of $5000 to said daughters, jointly, made hy the will a charge upon the land devised to appellant, to be paid by him to said daughters within one year after the testator’s death.

At the date of the will (August 5,1875,) the testator owned between four and five hundred acres of land, and a considerable personal estate. The devise to his son (appellant) was of real estate only, and was described in the will as the “home farm, consisting of one hundred and ninety-eight acres,” and being “thirty-eight acres off of the south end of the east half of the S. E. Qr. of section 28; the east half of the N. E. Qr. of sec. 33; and the west half of the N. E. Qr. of see. 34, all in township 15 N., R. 11, W. of the third principal meridian.” The devise was subject to the following charge, viz: An annuity of $500 to be paid by the son to the widow of the testator during her life, and the payment of $5000 by the devisee (the son) to the daughters of the testator within one year after the testator’s decease. The $5000 so charged in the devise to the son, together with the residue of the testator’s estate, real and personal, was specifically devised to the seven daughters of the testator, and their descendants, in equal portions.

The devise of the testator’s estate was to his children, and because of the relation in which they stood, there being an imperfect natural obligation resting upon the father to provide for his offspring, the share of each child, as fixed by the will, is denominated a child’s portion. The portion of the son, as thus determined, was the one hundred and ninety-eighty acres of land described, subject to the payment of the charge thereon. And the one-seventh of all the residue of the testator’s estate, real and personal, augmented by the sum of $5000 charged on the devise to the son, constituted the portion of each daughter.

As will be observed, the tracts of land devised to the son are not contiguous, the eighty acres on section 34 being a half mile east of the tract on section 33, and separated therefrom by the north-west quarter of section 34, also owned by the testator. It is suggested that a mistake was made in the will, and that the west half of the north-west quarter of section 34 was intended, instead of the west half of the north-east quarter of section 34, and that the conveyance of that eighty acre tract, April 7,1879, was intended to correct such mistake. There is here no latent ambiguity. Either tract, with the' other lands devised, would make one hundred and ninety-eight acres, and was part of the home farm of the testator. This fact is therefore of no significance, except so far as it tends to illustrate the subsequent transactions. However, on the 7th of April, 1879, the testator, for the expressed consideration of $9920, conveyed to his son said west half of said northwest quarter of said section 34, and also forty-three rods and eleven links off of the west side of the east half of the same quarter section, and seventy-six rods off of the south end of the east half of the south-east quarter of said section 28, the last mentioned tract being one of the pieces of land devised to the son.

On the 8th of March, 1882, the testator, apparently having determined to administer upon his estate himself, so far as it consisted of real estate, conveyed all his land. To his son, for the expressed consideration of $12,400, he conveyed, by deed of general warranty, the east half of the north-east quarter of section 33, (being one of the tracts devised to the son,) and seventy-six rods off of the south end of the west-half of the south-east quarter of said section 28, (excepting family grave-yard,) which deed contains the following express stipulation : “All the foregoing described premises being subject to the condition and charges upon the premises, as specified in the last will and testament-of said William Richardson,—said will dated August 5, 1875.” There then follows other lands • conveyed, not, however, subject to such charge. On the same day the testator sold and conveyed the residue of his lands to one Lazenby, including the said west-half of the north-east quarter of section 34, appearing by the will to be devised to the son. It is apparent that all of said land conveyed to the son was a gift by his father, except, perhaps, the forty-three acres off of the west side of the east half of the north-west quarter of section 34, which the son is shown to have claimed that he paid for.

On the 13th of April, 1882, a month and five days after the several conveyances, on the occasion before referred to, the testator gave to each of his daughters $2500, and to his son $10, using in making such gift, in part, the proceeds of the land sold to Lazenby, among which, as we have seen, was eighty acres (the west half of the north-east quarter of section 34,) devised to appellant. These gifts were made by placing the amounts in an envelope, and handing the same to the several beneficiaries, and were unaccompanied by any statement, oral or written, expressive of the intent of the donor in making the same.

It is insisted that hy the sale to Lazenby, and the use of the proceeds of the eighty-acre tract last mentioned, real estate of the value of more than $5000 “was taken from the devise to Peter, (appellant,) and its identical proceeds were handed over to the daughters” by the testator, and that it must be presumed that the legacy of $5000 charged on the land of appellant was intended to be satisfied.

The deed to appellant of March 8, 1882, adopts and recognizes the will of the grantor as determining the charge and condition upon which the conveyance of the two tracts first named therein was made, and appellant, having acquired title thereunder, took the title subject to the charge. By reference to the will, it is seen that part of this charge and condition was the payment by appellant of the legacy of $5000 to the daughters, within one year after the testator’s death. No extended discussion of the contention of appellees’ counsel, that the sum charged upon the land must, in any event, be paid by appellant, and if adeemed, would go to swell the residuum of the estate, is required, as the cause must at last, on other grounds, be determined in their favor. But it may be said, the will remaining ambulatory, a subsequent gift or advancement by the testator to the legatees, with the intention that it should be in lieu and discharge of the legacy, would be an ademption thereof, and in such case the particular legacy adeemed would, as it is said, be removed or taken away by the act of the testator, (1 Pomeroy’s Eq. 554,) and the testamentary gift, having been anticipated and discharged, would stand in the will as a satisfied legacy, forming no part of the will to be carried into execution. Here, this particular provision for the daughters was, by the will, raised out of and made a charge upon the land, and it is manifest that upon ademption thereof the charge would be gone.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 L.R.A. 203, 126 Ill. 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-eveland-ill-1888.