Sheridan v. Blume

125 N.E. 353, 290 Ill. 508
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketNo. 13044
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 N.E. 353 (Sheridan v. Blume) 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
Sheridan v. Blume, 125 N.E. 353, 290 Ill. 508 (Ill. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, Jessie Sheridan, filed a bill in the circuit court of Cook county for the partition of certain real estate devised by the will of her mother. The decision required the construction of said will. After the pleadings were settled the circuit court construed the will and ordered partition of the real estate in a certain manner, whereupon the appellants appealed to this court.

The principal if not the sole question to be decided is the proper construction of the will of Mrs. Anna Pochmann. Mrs. Pochmann died testate April 7, 1916. Her will was. duly probated, disposing of all her estate, including the real estate here sought to be partitioned. The third paragraph of the will is the only portion that requires construction. The will first provides for the payment of debts and a money legacy, which is not involved here, and for the appointment of an executrix and trustee. The clause in question reads:

“Third — Subject to the foregoing two paragraphs, I direct that all of the residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, of which I may .die seized, possessed or entitled, be divided into five equal parts, share and share alike; and I give, devise and bequeath one of such parts to my daughter Jessie Sheridan, one of such parts to my daughter Emily T. Blume, one of such parts to my daughter Laura Hedemarlc and one of such parts to my daughter Meta Pochmann, each to have and to hold the same to them and their respective heirs and assigns forever; and the remaining one of such parts I give, devise and bequeath in equal parts, share and share alike, unto the children of my daughter Annie Bell that are living, when the youngest living thereof shall have attained his or her majority, each to have and to hold the same to them and their respective heirs and assigns forever, — the part mentioned in this sentence to be held in trust by my hereinafter named executrix until the youngest living child of said Annie Bell shall have reached his or her majority, it being my intention that the part of my estate which would otherwise go to my daughter Annie Bell shall go to such of her children as attain their majority.”

Mrs. Pochmann left her surviving her five daughters, Jessie Sheridan, Emily T. Blume, Laura Hedemark, Meta Pochmann and Annie Bell, and also Russell Davy, only child of a deceased daughter. Mrs. Pochmann at her death was sixty-nine years of age. Her will was executed November 9, 1913. At the date the will was executed and at the death of testatrix there were born and surviving the following children of her daughter Annie Bell: Roy S. Bell, twenty-five years old at the time of hearing in the trial court; Allen C. Bell, then twenty-three years of age; Grace M. Bell, thirteen years, and Prank P. Bell, eleven years. The cause was referred to a master in chancery, who construed the third paragraph with reference to the interests of Mrs. Bell’s' children that they were not vested with any interest until the youngest reached majority. On a hearing in the circuit court a decree was entered, which found, among other things, that it was the intention of the testatrix by said will “to devise a one-fifth interest of the residue of her estate in trust for such of the children of said defendant, Annie Bell, as were living when all the living children should have attained their majority; that therefore the interests of the children of Annie Bell in and to such one-fifth interest cannot be determined until such time after the death of said defendant, Annie Bell, as all her living children shall have attained legal age.”

The portion of the will relating to the share going to the children of Mrs. Bell contains two statements that may not be considered in entire harmony as to the disposition of the property. In the first part of the-third clause it is stated that the share in question shall go to the children of Annie Bell “that are living, when the youngest living thereof shall have attained his or her majority,” and at the end of the third clause it is stated, “it being my intention that the part of my estate which would otherwise go to my daughter Annie Bell shall go to such of her children as attain their majority.” It is argued that the last clause of the will, if there is any inconsistency, should have the greater weight in construing the will. The rule that where there are inconsistent clauses in a will the last prevails is only applicable when the real intention of the testator cannot be discovered and where the two provisions are so utterly inconsistent that it is impossible for both to coincide with the general intentiomof the testator. (Hunt v. Hawes, 181 Ill. 343.) The usuaT rule, however, is that the intention of the testator is to be gathered, not from one clause of the will alone but from a view of the whole will and all its parts, or that such construction shall be adopted, if it can be reasonably found, as to give force and effect to every word and clause in the will. (Morrison v. Schorr, 197 Ill. 554.) We think the intention of the testatrix, as shown by the entire will, clearly indicates that the one-fifth portion of the estate which, if the general scheme had been followed out, would have gone to the mother, Annie Bell, will, under the will as drawn, go to such of her children as reach their majority.

The law favors the vesting of estates, and in cases where the instrument is susceptible of two constructions the law is inclined to favor the construction most favorable to the devisee rather than the construction that would be against his interest. (Mettler v. Warner, 243 Ill. 600; see, also, Armstrong v. Barber, 239 Ill. 389.) Subject to certain other provisions which will be referrcclj to later, each of the children of Annie Bell will take a vested interest in his or her share upon reaching the age of majority, — that is, eighteen years if a daughter and twenty-one years if a son. After reaching that age, as their share is then vested, it would pass upon the death of such devisee, the same as other I property. Up to the time of reaching the age of majority the interest of each of Annie Bell’s children is contingent upon their reaching that age, and if they die before reaching majority their share is to be divided among their surviving brothers and sisters, this added portion being subject to the same rules, as to vesting or contingency, as the original portion. There being a possibility of more children being born to Annie Bell, it cannot be told until her death who will be entitled, finally, to a possible share, hence the share of each of her children already born, so long as contingent, is subject to the further contingency of being decreased pro tanto £o raise, the portion for such after-born child, and the shares of those that have vested are thereafter subject to be opened up to that extent to contribute their part of such share for an after-born child.

The third clause of the will further provides that “the part mentioned in this sentence to be held in trust by my hereinafter named executrix until the youngest living child of said Annie Bell shall have reached his or her majority,” hence the shares above mentioned, whether contingent or vested, are not to pass at once into the possession of the various devisees. Until after the death of the mother, Annie Bell, and until the youngest living child has reached majority, each devisee, on becoming of age, becomes vested only with an equitable interest. Until the time mentioned, such interests are to be held by the person named as executrix, as a trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.E. 353, 290 Ill. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheridan-v-blume-ill-1919.