Spindle v. Shreve

111 U.S. 542, 4 S. Ct. 522, 28 L. Ed. 512, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1813
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 111 U.S. 542 (Spindle v. Shreve) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spindle v. Shreve, 111 U.S. 542, 4 S. Ct. 522, 28 L. Ed. 512, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1813 (1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in equity, filed by the appellant as assignee in bankruptcy of Charles U. Shreve, to subject an equitable-interest in certain real estate, situated in Chicago, and its rents, issues, and profits, alleged to be the property of the bankrupt, and assets belonging to his estate. The appeal was from a decree dismissing the bill for want of equity.

The question to be determined arises upon these facts:

Thomas T. Shreve died at Louisville, Kentucky, his domicil, November 5th, 1869, leaving a last will, duly admitted to probate and record in that State.

By that will, after providing for certain special devises, he directed his estate to be divided into five equal parts, of which *543 he willed, that one-fifth part be allotted to his son, Charles IJ. Shreve, “ subject to such conditions and restrictions as hereinafter named.”

The 12th clause of the will was as follows:

“ 12. As soon after my death as it can be conveniently done I wish my executor hereinafter named, after first setting apart a fund sufficient to pay the above named special devises, and incidental expenses, to make out a full and complete list and schedule of all my estate of every character and description, real, personal, and mixed, in the State of Kentucky and elsewhere, and hand the same to the following named persons, to wit, James W. Henning, A. C. Badger, and A. Harris, who, or any two of whom, I desire to proceed to value it, and divide it into five equal shares upon the principles hereinbefore indicated ; one-half of each share .(which half I wish to be income paying real estate), I desire to be set apart and conveyed to a trustee, to be held for the use and benefit of each child during his or her life, and then descend to his or'her heirs, without any power or right on the part of said child to encumber said estate, or anticipate the rents thereof, but said trustee shall collect said rents, and after paying taxes, insurances, and keeping the property in repair, pay. the rent to the child in per^m quarterly, or as the same may he collected according to the i, rms of the lease ; the other half of each share I wish conveyed to each child in fee, to do with as he or she may please.
“ In placing these restrictions upon one-half of the estate I give my children, I do not wish it understood that I distrust their capacity to manage their own affairs, for I do not, but believe one-half of a share that each will receive will afford ample means to commence and conduct a respectable business, and as the other half will give them a comfortable living in the event they should be unfortunate in business or otherwise, and now having it in my power, it is my pleasure, as I believe it to be my duty, to shield and protect them against casualties and accidents as far as possible.”

The trustee for each child was to be appointed by the Louisville Chancery Court, and after the division of the estate had been made and the report thereof by the commissionérs re *544 corded, the executor of the will was directed to make deliveries, transfers, and conveyances according to the report and the directions of the will.

In pursuance of these directions a division of the estate was made and the share allotted to Charles U. Shreve, embracing the premises described in the bill, was conveyed by the executor by deed executed on June 25th, 1810, to John M. Shreve, appointed to be trustee for Charles U. Shreve, to be held by him “ for the use and benefit of said Charles IT. Shreve during his life, and then to descend to his heirs, without any power or authority of said Charles IT. Shreve to encumber said estate or anticipate the rents thereof; but said trustee shall collect said rents, and after paying taxes, insurance, and keeping the property in repair, pay the rent to the said Charles U. Shreve in person quarterly, or as the same may be collected, according to the leasing thereof, and with all other rights, duties, powers, and restrictions as are conferred and imposed by the Avill of said Thomas T. Shreve, deceased.”

The. trustee accepted the trust, and entered into possession of the property in execution of it.

. On June 20th, 1816, at Louisville, Charles IT. Shreve conveyed to J. M. Shreve “all the real, personal, and mixed property owned by said party of the first part not exempt from execution, and which is as follows,” being certain specifically described lots and tracts of land, some in Cook county, Illinois, and some in Kentucky, and certain personal property, to have and to hold on certain trusts, viz.: that the party of the second part shall “ immediately proceed, in such manner as to him shall seem best, either by public or private sale, or by instituting suit in the Louisville Chancery Court, to sell and have sold all the foregoing property, and any and all other property belonging to said first party not exempt from' execution, which by any oversight may have been omitted in the foregoingdist,” &c., for the payment of the debts of the grantor — first, all such as AVére specifically secured by liens on the property conveyed ; second, all unsecured debts equally, and any surplus to return to the grantor, “it being the object and intent of this conveyance to transfer to said second party all the property belonging to said *545 first party not exempt from execution for the benefit of all the creditors of said first party.”

This deed did not describe any property held in trust for the grantor under his father’s will, of which that named in the bill is a part; but the Court of Appeals of Kentucky in Knefler v. Shreve, 78 Kentucky, 297, had before it the very question, as to the construction of this deed, and decided that all the estate and interests in property, which at its date the grantor held, which he could alien, and which was liable at law or in equity for the payment of his debts, passed by its terms ; and in that decision we concur. Such was the manifest intent of the grantor, and the language of the deed to which we have referred is broad enough to effect it. Subsequently, by appropriate judicial proceedings in Kentucky, James Buchanan was substituted for John M. Shreve, as trustee under this assignment. Buchanan, on August 16th, 1878, filed a bill in equity in the Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois, to enforce the trusts of this conveyance for the benefit of creditors, claiming under it the right to subject, for that purpose, the estate and interest of Chas. U. Shreve, under the trusts of his father’s will described in the bill in this case. That suit was pending when the present was commenced. A decree was afterwards rendered dismissing the bill of Buchanan for want of equity, on the general demurrer.

In the mean time, on August 31st, 1878, Charles IJ. Shreve filed his petition in bankruptcy in the District Court for Kentucky, and was adjudicated a bankrupt, the appellant being appointed his assignee, to whom all the estate and effects of the bankrupt were duly assigned according to the act of Congress.

The bill in this case was filed February 27th, 1879, but, although it asserts a contradictory title to that set up and insisted upon by feuchanan, as trustee, under the conveyance to John M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 U.S. 542, 4 S. Ct. 522, 28 L. Ed. 512, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spindle-v-shreve-scotus-1884.