Schaefer v. Schaefer

31 N.E. 136, 141 Ill. 337
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 136 (Schaefer v. Schaefer) 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
Schaefer v. Schaefer, 31 N.E. 136, 141 Ill. 337 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the .Court:

The provision of the will of Ann Welsh, deceased, that is involved in this chancery suit, is in substance as follows:

“I do bequeath to my beloved daughter, Bridget Fitzgerald, (confirmed as Libby Fitzgerald,) and now the wife of John Shaffer, the following property: The house and lot known as 609 Fulton street, Chicago, etc., also the house and lot known as 229 Johnson street, etc., in trust for her sole use and benefit, and of her children, and there children thereafter. But in the event that my daughter, Bridget Shaffer, should die and leave no children as heirs to the within mentioned property, then it is my will and desire that all of said property shall go to my brother, Jeremiah Coughly, in the parish of Kilkenmore, county of Cork, Ireland, and to his heirs and assigns forever.”

It appears from the record that the testatrix died on August 4, 1885, and left surviving her, as her sole and only heir-at-law, her daughter, Libby Schaefer, the appellee herein. At the time of the death of the testatrix the appellee was the mother of three children-, and subsequently she gave birth to another child, and all four of said children are still living.

We have frequently announced that the fundamental rule in the construction of wills is, to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the testator, provided such intention is not inconsistent with the rules of law, and that in the ascertainment of such intention the whole scope and plan of the will should be considered, «and its various provisions compared one with another. The will evidently was drawn by a person somewhat illiterate, and also unskilled in the use of technical language. The devise of the houses and lots to appellee is expressly stated to be “in trust.” No trust, however, is created by the will. A trusteeship can not be predicated of one who holds for life, only, and for his or her own sole use and benefit, and the instrument which gives the life estate also gives the remainder to others in their own right, and no duty, other than those that grow out of their legal relation, is imposed upon the life tenant. Said words were probably used under an erroneous idea that when an estate is given to the ancestor for life, with a vested remainder in fee to his or her children, such ancestor will have power to alienate the fee, unless it is stated that the devise is in trust. The words, then, may be rejected as surplusage. Utile per inutile ’nop, vitiatur.

The deyise to appellee is “for her sole use and benefit, and of her children, and there children thereafter.” It goes without saying that the adverb there was by mere mistake or ignorance in the scrivener used for the pronoun their, and that the latter should be substituted for the former. Said word is immediately followed by the word “children.” The word “children,” in both its technical and its general sense, is used as a description of persons, and in its technical sense is a word of purchase and not a word of limitation. If that word, as found in the phrase, “and their children thereafter,” is given that meaning it would render the devise void. The rule, prohibiting perpetuities requires that the absolute ownership of property must vest in some one within the period of a life or lives in being and twenty-one years and nine months thereafter. (Waldo v. Cummings, 45 Ill. 421.) A limitation of the fee to the children of appellee’s children would be too remote. It would be possible that the fee would not vest within the limit fixed by the rule, and where such possibility exists, the devise is void for remoteness. 2 Redfield on Wills, (2d ed.) p. 521. But does it clearly appear that in the phrase, “and their children thereafter,” the testatrix used the word “children” in the sense of “heirs ?” If so, it should be given that signification.

The law favors vested rather than contingent remainders. The principal and primary objects of the regard and bounty of the testatrix were her daughter and the children of that daughter then in being, and it is improbable that she intended to postpone the vesting of the remainder until the termination of a life estate in the children for the benefit of unborn and unknown heirs, and to the prejudice of her grandchildren then living. (Bowers v. Porter, 4 Pick. 198.) But that it was not the intention of the testatrix that the remainder should remain in abeyance until the birth of great-grandchildren, is perfectly clear upon the face of the will. The last sentence of the devise provides: “In the event that my daughter, Bridget Shaffer, should die and leave no children, * * * then it is my will and desire that all of said property shall go to my brother, Jeremiah CougMy, * * * and to his heirs and assigns forever.” It is manifest from this language that it was the intention of the testatrix that immediately upon the death of her daughter the fee simple title to the property should be executed in possession, and such intention is wholly inconsistent with any theory that the plan of the will was a life estate in the daughter, remainder for life to the children of such daughter, and remainder over, in fee, to the children of such children. It must therefore be presumed, in order to give effect to the intention expressed in the last sentence of the devise, that the word “children,” found in the phrase “and their children thereafter,” should be read in the sense of “heirs."

The whole clause is, “for her sole use and benefit, and of her children, and their children thereafter.” The word “children” occurs twice in said clause. Where one and the same word is used twice or more in the same clause or sentence, the same signification is ordinarily to be placed upon it in each instance. Here, however, we find it otherwise. As we have already said, where it last occurs it is to be interpreted as meaning “heirs.” And this brings us to the claim made by appellee that the will devises a freehold to her, and that by the same instrument an estate is limited by way of remainder to her heirs in fee, and that therefore, under the rule in Shelly’s case, she takes the whole estate in fee simple.

The rule in Shelly’s case applies only to limitations in which the word “heirs” is used. In this State and under our statute it does not apply to an estate tail. (Baker v. Scott, 62 Ill. 86 ; Butler v. Huestis, 68 id. 594.) When the limitation is to the heirs, it is, in legal intendment, the designation of a class or denomination of persons who are to take in succession from generation to generation, and said words operate as words of limitation of the estate, and not as words of purchase, and the remainder is executed in possession by giving the ancestor the fee. But when the words “issue,” “lawful issue,” “sons,” “daughters” or “children” are used instead of the word “heirs,” then such words are words of purchase and not of limitation, and the ancestor takes only a life estate, and the sons, daughters or children take the remainder by purchase, and for the reason that such words are the designation of persons to take originally in their own right. See Baker v. Scott, supra, and authorities there cited.

The word here used is “children,”—i. e., the children of the daughter of the testatrix. Necessarily there is no place for the rule invoked, unless it can be clearly ascertained that by the word “children,” where it first appears in the devise, the testatrix meant “heirs.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 136, 141 Ill. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaefer-v-schaefer-ill-1892.