Turner v. Hause

65 N.E. 445, 199 Ill. 464
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 65 N.E. 445 (Turner v. Hause) 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
Turner v. Hause, 65 N.E. 445, 199 Ill. 464 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—The first question presented by the record is, what interest did Horace S. Hause, the father of the appellees, take in the land in question under the will of his father, Peter Hause?

The sixth section of the will is in the following words: “My son, Horace Stone Hause, to have the following tract of land, * * * on the same principles as that of his brother, George Willis Hause, not being subject to sale, transfer or liability for debts, but to descend to his bodily heirs, and, in case of none, to his brother and sisters.” As to the tract of land here in controversy, given to Horace Stone Hause, he alone is to have it, without any statement that he and his heirs are to have it. No words of inheritance are used in connection with the devise to Horace Stone Hause. Section 13 of the Illinois act in regard to conveyances provides as follows: “Every estate in lands, which shall be granted, conveyed or devised, although other words heretofore necessary to transfer an estate of inheritance be. not added, shall be deemed a fee simple estate of inheritance, if a less estate be not limited by express words, or do not appear to have been granted, conveyed or devised by construction or operation of law.” The court can only inquire, whether an estate less than a fee is limited by express words or granted, conveyed or devised by construction or operation of law, where words theretofore necessary to transfer an estate of inheritance are not used. Where an estate is devised to A without the use of the words, “heirs and assigns,” A will take a fee simple estate of inheritance, unless the will or instrument of conveyance reduces the estate to an estate less than a fee by express words, or by construction or operation of law. (Wolfer v. Hemmer, 144 Ill. 554; Saeger v. Bode, 181 id. 514; Smith v. Kimbell, 153 id. 368.) The fee devised to Horace S. Hause may be limited by construction, or by express words in a subsequent part of the will, because words, necessary to transfer an estate of inheritance, are not used in the devise of such fee. Hence, the fee, devised to Horace S. Hause, may be reduced to a less estate by the words used subsequently in the sixth clause, to-wit: “but to descend to his bodily heirs, and, in case of none, to his brother and sisters.” The words, “on the same principles as that of his brother, George Willis Hause," as used in section 6, do not refer to the words, “and to his heirs,” as used in section 5; but they refer to the following words in section 5: “The above tracts not subject to sale or in anywise liable to the debts of said George Willis, but to descend to his bodily heirs at his death, and, in case of no heirs, to his brother and sisters.”

It being settled, then, that there is nothing in the character of the devise of the fee to Horace S. Hause, which prevents a limitation of that fee by subsequent words used in the sixth clause, the question arises, what estate less than a fee was devised to Horace S. Hause by the sixth clause. There can be no other answer to this question, under the decisions of this court, than that Horace S. Hause took a life estate only, with remainder in fee to the heirs of his body. In Blair v. Vanblarcum, 71 Ill. 290, where a testator gave, bequeathed and devised unto his only daug'hter “and to the heirs of her body, and to their heirs and assigns,” all of his real estate, it was held that she took under such devise a simple life estate, with remainder over to the heirs of her body in fee simple absolute, and that the limitation to her heirs was valid and binding. At common law a devise to a devisee and the heirs of his body created an estate tail general, leaving in the heirs-at-law of the devisor the reversion in case of an entire failure of issue; but, under the provisions of the sixth section of our statute in relation to conveyances, such devise would vest in the devisee only a life estate with remainder in fee to the heirs of his body, and leaving the reversion, in case of an entire failure of issue, in the heirs-at-law of the devisor. (Lewis v. Pleasants, 143 Ill. 271; Frazer v. Supervisors, 74 id. 282; Cooper v. Cooper, 76 id. 57; Lehndorf v. Cope, 122 id. 317).

In construing provisions of this kind, the words “his bodily heirs,” have no other or different meaning than .the words “heirs of his body.” In Dinwiddle v. Self, 145 Ill. 290, it was held that a conveyance of land to a woman “and her bodily heirs,” under section 6 of the Conveyance act, would convey to her only a life estate, with a contingent remainder in fee to her children, if any such should be born, and, in default of heirs of her body, the estate in remainder would lapse, and on her death the land would revert to her grantor.

In Kyner v. Boll, 182 Ill. 171, it was held that a conveyance to a grantee and her “bodily heirs” and assigns creates an estate in fee tail general at common law, but, since the abolition of estates tail, passes, under section 6 of the Conveyance act, an estate for the grantee’s natural life only, with the remainder in fee simple absolute to the persons to whom the estate tail would, on the death of the grantee, first pass at common law. So, in the case at bar, the devise being to Horace Stone Hause, “not being subject to sale, transfer or liability for debts, but to descend to his bodily heirs, and, in case of none, to his brother and sisters,” he took an estate for his natural life only with the remainder in fee simple absolute to his children, the appellees herein. When the first child, appellee Sarah Jane Shaw, (then Sarah Jane Hause,) was born, she took an estate in fee simple subject to the life estate of her father, Horace S. Hause, and subject also to be opened to let in after-born children of her father, who would become tenants in common of the fee with her. (Kyner v. Boll, supra). Her five brothers, who were born after she was born, took each a fee simple title to an undivided portion of the premises in question, subject to the life estate of their father.

It follows that the appellees here, as they respectively came into being, were remainder-men or reversioners, holding the fee subject to the life estate of their father; and the only interest of Horace S. Hause in the premises was that of a life tenant.

Second—When, therefore, Horace S. Hause executed a deed in 1860 to William L. Stilley, Stilley took no greater estate than that of Horace S. Hause, to-wit, an estate for the life of Horace S. Hause. So, also, in October, 1864, when Stilley executed a deed of the premises to the appellant, Elijah Turner, Turner took only an estate in the premises for the life of Horace S. Hause.

In Mettler v. Miller, 129 Ill. 630, we said (p. 642): “The settled doctrine, both upon authority and upon principle, is, that the possession of land by á tenant for life cannot be adverse to the remainder-man or reversioner; and if he conveys to a third person by words purporting to pass the absolute property, the possession of the purchaser is not and cannot be, during the continuance of the life estate, adverse to the remainder-man or reversioner, so as to set the Statute of Limitations running against such remainder-man or reversioner, but after a life estate falls in, the possession will be adverse as to a remainder-man or reversioner.

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.E. 445, 199 Ill. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-hause-ill-1902.