Richman v. Hoppin

45 F.2d 737, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3730
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1930
DocketNo. 4349
StatusPublished

This text of 45 F.2d 737 (Richman v. Hoppin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richman v. Hoppin, 45 F.2d 737, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3730 (7th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit 'Judge.

Appellants brought this action for partition of real estate and to quiet title thereto. They claim title by virtue of a deed made on August 27, 1862, by Franklin Fassitt and his wife in consideration of $500 paid by Charles T. Hoppin, Sarah Louisa Hoppin, Mary Eliza - Hoppin, and Charles Hoppin, the three last named being the children of Eliza Hoppin, deceased, former wife of said Charles T. Hoppin. The granting clause is as follows: “Grant, bargain and sell unto the said Charles T. Hoppin for and during his natural life and at his death to the said Sarah Louisa Hoppin, Mary Eliza Hoppin, and Charles Hoppin, and in case of the death of either of the said last named three persons without issue then to the survivors or survivor of said three, their heirs or assigns.”

Mary Eliza Hoppin died in 1870' without having issue bom to her; Charles T. Hoppin died in 1907., After the deaths of - Mary Eliza Hoppin and Charles T. Hop-pin, Sarah Louisa Hoppin executed valid deeds conveying to certain of the appellees, or their predecessors in title, all her interest in the real estate involved in this appeal. Sarah Louisa Hoppin intermarried with one Riehman in 1865, and died December 30, 1920, leaving appellants as her only children. She left no other children or descendants of children, nor were other children ever bom to her; Charles Hoppin is still living, has never been married, and has never had any children, and is past’ seventy-five years of age.

Some of the appellees are immediate or remote grantees of Charles and Sarah Louisa, and others are - judgment creditors of Charles; some are mortgagees of Charles and Sarah Louisa, and of their immediate or remote grantees. On motion of appellees the action was dismissed for want of equity.

Appellants have assigned many errors, but they all present the same question: Did the court construe the deed of Franklin Fassitt correctly?

The trial court held that the deed gave to Charles T. Hoppin a 'life estate in the land, and to Sarah Louisa, Mary Eliza, and Charles Hoppin a vested remainder in fee, subject to the life estate of Charles T., and also subject to the conditional limitation of being divested in case of the- death of any one of the three named children without issue during the lifetime of Charles T. Hoppin, in which event the survivor or survivors of the one dying without issue would take the one-third interest of that one; that upon the death of Charles T. Hoppin any of the remaindermen named in the deed who survived him took a fee simple absolute, and the gift over became impossible of taking effect. As a result of this construction the court held that upon the death of Mary Eliza in 1870 without issue' her third in fee was divested, and shifted to and vested in Charles Hop-pin and Sarah Louisa Hoppin; that upon the death of Charles T. in 1907 a fee simple absolute to all the land vested in Sarah Louisa and Charles; that Charles and the immediate and remote grantees of Sarah Louisa and Charles now hold the fee-simple title thereto, and that appellants have no interest therein.

Appellants contend that the deed created an estate in fee tail, at common law, in Sarah Louisa, Mary Eliza, and Charles Hoppin, and that under paragraph 6, chapter 30, Illinois Statutes (Cahill’s Rev. St. 1929), they took life estates, subject to the life estate of Charles T., and that their children took the fee simple. *

Paragraph 6, chapter 30', Illinois Statutes (Cahill’s Rev; St.) is as follows: “In cases where, by the common law, any person or persons might hereafter become seized, in fee tail, of any lands, * • * * by virtue of any devise, gift, grant or other conveyance, hereafter to be made, or by any other means whatsoever, such person or persons, instead of being or becoming seized thereof in fee tail, shall be deemed and adjudged to be, and become seized thereof, for his or her natural life only, and the remainder shall pass in fee-simple absolute, to the person or persons to whom the estate tail would, on the death of the first grantee, devisee or donee in tail, first pass, according to the course of the common law, by virtue of such devise, gift, grant or conveyance.”

Unless the title conveyed to the three children of Charles T. Hoppin be a fee tail, the statute just quoted can have no application. An estate tail at common law is an estate of inheritance, which, instead of descending to heirs generally, descends to the heirs of the donee’s body, or some class of [739]*739smell heirs, and through them to like heirs in a direct line in a regular order and course of descent so long as such heirs exist, and upon the extinction of the specific issue the estate is determined or ended. Kolmer v. Miles, 270 Ill. 20, 110 N. E. 407.

In a grant to A with a limitation over to» Iris heirs, the word “heirs” in its legal sense is interpreted to mean heirs generally, and when it is so interpreted the estate conveyed cannot be a fee tail. In oi’der to create a fee tail words of procreation sufficient to restrain the general import of the word “heirs” are necessary, and to accomplish this result the most used phrase has been “heirs of his, or her, body.” Thus a deed to A with limitation over to the heir's of his body would create a fee tall, because the limitation is to a certain class of A’s heirs and not to his general heirs; hut a grant to A with limitation over to his heirs would, in its legal sense, not be a fee tail, because the limitation is to his general heirs and not to a certain class.

It is not necessary, however, for these specific words to he used in order to create a fee tail. Any words may be used for that purpose which manifest such intention on the part of the grantor. Stearns v. Curry, 306 Ill. 94, 137 N. E. 471. In fact, the word “heirs” standing alone has been construed to mean “heirs of the body,” or to mean “children,” if the context of the instrument manifested a clear intention on the part of the parties to use it in that sense; but in no other instance have the courts construed the word “heirs” to mean other than general heirs. In the construction of deeds the pole star which guides the court is the intention of the parties, if that intention can be discovered and is legal. And so after determining the intention of the parties the court, in order to carry it out, will sometimes give a word or a phrase a restricted rather than its strict legal meaning. This principle is well illustrated in the ease of Winchell v. Winchell, 259 Ill. 471, 102 N. E. 823, 825. The bequest in that case is “to Fannie Standard to have and to hold during her lifetime and at her death to go to her heirs; but in ease she shall die withe out issue, then the property above devised to her shall go to my other heirs, share and share alike.” The court in construing this devise said: “The word ‘heirs,’ in its legal sense, means those persons whom the law appoints to take intestate estate, and unless the word is qualified by the context it has always been given that meaning. In ordinary use, however, it is frequently given a different or limited meaning, and as the purpose of construing a will is to find the intention of the testator, whenever it is apparent from reading a. will that the testator did not use the word in its strict legal meaning, it will he given such meaning as will carry out his intention. Gannon v. Peterson, 193 Ill. 372, 62 N. E. 210, 55 L. R. A. 701.

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Bluebook (online)
45 F.2d 737, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richman-v-hoppin-ca7-1930.