Truax v. Gregory

63 N.E. 674, 196 Ill. 83
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 674 (Truax v. Gregory) 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
Truax v. Gregory, 63 N.E. 674, 196 Ill. 83 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered, the opinion of the court:

This was a bill in chancery filed by the plaintiff in error for a decree establishing and declaring the boundary lines of a certain, “right of way” created by the will of Stephen O. Gregory, deceased, over certain lands devised to her by said testator, and to restrain the defendant in error, who is her brother, from breaking down, removing or leaving open the gate at the easterly terminus of such right of way.

Stephen O. Gregory died January 7, 1892, leaving him surviving three children,—the plaintiff in error, the defendant in error and Mrs. Cordelia Stevens. He left a last will, which bore date June 20, 1889. Only the third, fourth and fifth clauses of the will are important to be considered here. They are as follows:

“Third—I give and bequeath to my son, William Henry Gregory, the following described real estate, to-wit: The north-east quarter of the south-east quarter of section 21; also the undivided one-half of the south-west quarter of the south-west quarter of section 22, with the right of way from the highway near my house in section 22 to the said north-east quarter of the south-east quarter of section 21; also one rod of land off the south-west corner of the north-west quarter of the south-west quarter of section 22 to connect the said two tracts of land, all in town 44, McHenry county, Illinois, to be his absolutely at and after my death.

“Fourth—1 give and bequeath to my daughter Cordelia Stevens the following described real estate, to-wit: The south-west quarter of the north-west quarter of section 22; also the undivided one-half of the south-west quarter of the south-west quarter of section 22, with the right of way from the highway near my house in section 22 to the above described lands, all in township 44, McHenry county, State of Illinois, to be hers absolutely at and after my death.

“Fifth—It is my will and desire that my daughter Mary Esther Truax have the use and benefit of all the balance of my real estate that I may die seized of, (except that hereinbefore named and described,) to be subject to her use, control and benefit during her lifetime, upon the express condition and with the understanding that should my beloved wife (her mother) survive me, that all her wants and expenses during her life and at her death be fully and well provided for by my said daughter Mary Esther Truax.”

On a hearing it was shown by testimony that was not controverted that a public highway known as the Woodstock and Crystal Lake road passed through the lands owned by the testator, from the northerly point of its entrance in a south-easterly direction, leaving a part of two tracts of his land, perhaps in the aggregate forty acres of land, on the north-easterly side of the highway, and the remainder, consisting of about two hundred and eighty acres, on the south-westerly side of the highway; that the residence of the testator and his barn and other outbuildings were located on the lands lying north and east of the highway; that the lands to be enjoyed by the plaintiff in error under the will abutted upon the highway upon either side thereof, and the lands given to the defendant in error and Mrs. Stevens were situate wholly west of the highway, and could only be reached from the highway by passing over the lands given by the will into the possession of the plaintiff in error; that the testator, at the time of his death and for many years prior thereto, and prior to the execution of the will, maintained a passageway leading from the south-westerly side of the highway, nearly opposite his dwelling house, south-westerly through his fields and pasture lands to the more distant tracts; that he maintained fences on either side of this passageway for a portion of its length; that he had constructed a bridge to carry it across a ditch or waterway and had graded and graveled a portion of such passageway; that the testator erected and maintained a gate at the easterly .terminus of this passageway, which was at the public highway; that the passageway so maintained by him beyond the line of the fences was well established and known to the litigants, and that it was this right of way which was intended to be granted by the will of the deceased father of these litigants.

The court entered a decree defining the boundaries of this right of way, and with that finding of the court both parties are content. The right of way is located entirely over and upon lands devised to the plaintiff in error by the fifth clause of the will of her father. It, however, appeared that the defendant in error claimed the will invested him with the "absolute title in fee simple to the land upon which the right of way was located, and that under this claim he had broken down and removed the gate which the plaintiff in error maintained at the easterly end of the right of way, being the point at which the right of way entered into the highway. The decree rendered by the chancellor made no finding as to this claim of absolute title in fee to the land on which is located the right of way, but found and decreed that the defendant in error was entitled, by virtue of the last will and testament of said Stephen O. Gregory, deceased, to an open, unobstructed and unrestricted right of way, and was not required to open and shut any gate at the easterly terminus thereof, and that the plaintiff in error had no right to maintain a gate there, and denied the prayer of the bill for a decree restraining the defendant in error from breaking or removing the gate at the said easterly terminus of said right of way. This writ of error brings into review the correctness of the decree with reference to the right of the plaintiff in error to maintain a gate at the easterly terminus of the right of way.

If, under the true construction of the will, absolute title in fee to the right of way was devised to the defendant in error, the decree is unquestionably correct. But we do not so construe the will. The argument in favor of this construction is based wholly upon the meaning which it is urged must be given to the word “absolutely,” used in the concluding portion of the third clause of the will. The word “absolute,” when used in connection with a gift or grant of personal or real property, has been frequently interpreted to carry a fee. But it is not to be given that as its fixed and unvaried meaning. The context of the instrument in which the word appears may determine the effect to be given it. It may be used in connection with an interest in property and yet not be regarded as the equivalent of “unqualified.” (Williams v. Van Cleve, 7 T. B. Mon. 393; Washington Fire Ins. Co. v. Kelly, 32 Md. 421.) In Smith v. Bell, 6 Pet. 72, the -yord “absolutely,” used with reference to an estate in personalty, was held to be qualified by other words of the bequest, and thereby explained to mean only such absolute rights as a tenant for life could enjoy. In Bradley v. Wescott, 13 Ves. 450, the word was given a similarly restricted meaning and operation. In Boyd v. Strahan, 36 Ill. 355, the cases of Smith v. Bell, supra, and Bradley v. Wescott, supra, were cited with approval and the doctrine of those cases applied to the controversy then under consideration. In Kratz v. Kratz, 189 Ill. 276, the words “absolutely and unqualifiedly,” used in a will in connection with an estate in lands, were so qualified in meaning as to confer only the right to hold and enjoy an estate as a tenant for life or during the widowhood of the devisee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 674, 196 Ill. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truax-v-gregory-ill-1902.