Slocum v. Hagaman

52 N.E. 332, 176 Ill. 533
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 52 N.E. 332 (Slocum v. Hagaman) 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
Slocum v. Hagaman, 52 N.E. 332, 176 Ill. 533 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a bill, filed in the superior court of Cook county on June 23, 1897, by the defendant in error, Almira Ann Hagaman, widow of Benjamin Hagaman, deceased, who died at Chicago on December 9, 1894, testate, leaving no children or descendants of a child, but leaving, him surviving, his said widow, and two sisters, and certain nephews and nieces, children of his deceased brothers. The defendants to the bill were said nephews and nieces and sisters, and certain devisees and legatees under the will, and certain persons holding incumbrances upon portions of the property. The bill was filed for partition, and for a construction of the will. The decree, entered in the court below, appears to have been entered by consent, and in pursuance of a stipulation entered into by all the parties, except the plaintiff in error herein, James E. Slocum, executor and trustee under the will. The present writ of error has been sued out by Slocum alone, as such executor and trustee, for the purpose of reviewing the decree entered below.

The will was dated October 6,1888, and a codicil thereto was dated April 19, 1892. The will and codicil were admitted to probate in the probate court of Cook county on December 27, 1894. Eobert C. Givens and the plaintiff in error, James E. Slocum, were appointed executors by the will, but Givens failed to qualify, and letters testamentary were issued to Slocum alone.

By the terms of the will the testator, Benjamin Haga-' man, gives and devises to his wife, Almira Ann Hagaman, in fee, certain stores and lots of land, known as 104 and 106 South Water street in Chicago, and also §4000.00 per annum, payable quarterly from and after the date of the testator’s decease, so long as she may live. The testator also wills and bequeaths to his wife all of the household goods and furniture, and everything in the house in which they lived; and he recites that his bequests and devises to his wife “are in lieu of any and all dower, widow’s award, and of all other claim or claims.” The will provides for the payment of §500.00 per annum to each of the two sisters of the deceased, as long as they respectively live; and also the sum of §800.00 per annum after the death of his wife to a certain adopted daughter, named Katie D. Hagaman, afterwards married to Herbert M. Ashley, and called in the record Catharine H. Ashley.

On January 5, 1895, the widow filed in the probate court her written renunciation of any devise or provision made for her by the will, thereby renouncing all claim to the benefit of any jointure, given or assured to her in lieu.of dower, or of any devise or other provision made to her by said will; and elected to take, in lieu thereof, her dower and legal share in the estate of her husband. On June 10, 1896, she filed in the probate court her written election, as surviving wife of Benjamin Hagaman, to have, (in lieu of dower in said estate, and of any share of personal estate therein, which she might be entitled to take with dower, and in lieu of all the provisions made for her in the will), absolutely and in her own right, one-half of all the real and personal estate belonging to the estate, which should remain after the payment of all just debts and claims against the estate. The widow averred in her bill that, by virtue of said election and renunciation, she was entitled to one-half of all the real and personal estate belonging to her husband’s estate, and, in addition thereto, to her widow’s award. The bill also avers, that the title to the other undivided one-half of the real estate was devised by implication to the executors therein, and was held by the said James E. Slocum, executor and trustee, who was made party defendant to the bill.

Besides the lands left by the testator in the State of Illinois, he owned lands in several other States of the Union. The will provided that, after the demise of the testator’s wife, and as soon as it could be done at fair prices, his property should be sold, and the proceeds thereof divided pro rata among his nephews and nieces and his said adopted daughter, share and share alike; and that, should any of his nephews and nieces die before such division leaving children, such child or children should be entitled to the share of its parent.

The bill alleged, that the renunciation by the widow of the provisions of the will accelerated the residuary estate. The decree, entered by the court below, directed a partition and distribution of the estate, notwithstanding the fact that the widow was still living, upon the ground that the estate of the nephews and nieces had been accelerated by the renunciation by the widow of the provisions made for her in the will. The decree also ordered, that the widow should receive one-half of the proceeds of sale of the real estate, owned by the testator outside of the State of Illinois.

After the present writ of error was sued out from this court, and on December 14, 1897, the death of the widow, Almira Ann Hagaman, was suggested, she having died on November 17, 1897, at Chicago. Upon motion of the solicitor of record, who had appeared for her in this court, Charles FitzSimons, executor and trustee under her last will and testament, was substituted as defendant in error for the said Almira Ann Hagaman, and entered his appearance herein.

Charles FitzSimons, the executor and trustee under the will of Mrs. Hagaman, deceased, has entered a motion to dismiss the present writ of error, alleging, in support of said motion, that the death of Mrs. Hagaman, prior to the death of any of the nephews and nieces who are beneficiaries under the will of Benjamin Hagaman, has removed the question of acceleration from the consideration of this court, and that there is now no question before this court for adjudication.

The motion to dismiss the writ of error is not opposed by the plaintiff in error, Slocum, the executor under the will of Benjamin Hagaman, deceased. The only opposition to the dismissal of the writ of error seems to be made by counsel representing some of the nephews and nieces who were defendants below. These nephews and nieces consented to the entry-of the decree entered by the trial court. They have assigned no cross-errors in this court. They are, therefore, estopped from alleging any objections to the decree. A dismissal of the writ of error would leave the decree standing in the court below as it was there entered, so that such dismissal would operate to secure the same result as would follow from an affirmance of the decree.

A decision by this court, that acceleration was produced by the renunciation of the widow necessarily leads to an affirmance of the decree below, without considering any of the other findings of the decree.

Upon the face of the will, the distribution of the estate was to be made at the death of the widow, but the court below held that the division and distribution of the estate could take place at once as though the widow had died, upon the ground that the right and power of the trustee to sell and convey the estate, and to divide and distribute the proceeds thereof, had been accelerated. Inasmuch as it appears that the widow has died, the period for the distribution of the estate under the terms of the will has arrived, whether there was any such acceleration as is claimed, or not.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 332, 176 Ill. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slocum-v-hagaman-ill-1898.