Wahl v. Schmidt

237 Ill. App. 372, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 184
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 9, 1925
DocketGen. No. 29,360
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 237 Ill. App. 372 (Wahl v. Schmidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wahl v. Schmidt, 237 Ill. App. 372, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 184 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Fitch

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal brings up for review the action of the circuit court on appeal from the probate court of Cook county in disposing of certain items in the final account of appellant as surviving executor of the last will and testament of Kaspar G. Schmidt, deceased.

Kaspar G. Schmidt died on December 10,1898, leaving him surviving three married daughters and one son. The son is the appellant, George K. Schmidt. The daughters were Mrs. Barbara E. Kellner, wife of George W. Kellner (both now deceased), Mrs. Katherine Herbert and Mrs. Edna P. Wahl. By his last will and testament, Kaspar G. Schmidt appointed his son, George K. Schmidt, his son-in-law, George W. Kellner, and his nephew, Charles J. Schmidt, executors of his will and trustees of his estate, and devised and bequeathed to them all his property (subject to the payment of certain specified legacies and to a specific devise of certain real estate to such of his grandchildren as might be living in 1915) in trust, to be held by them for a period of fifteen years after his death, during which period the net income of his estate was to be paid to his said four children, and at the end of that time to divide the residue of the estate among his children “one-fourth to each, after the irregularities now existing by reason of advancements shall have been adjusted.”

The will is dated June 2,1890. At that time the testator was a successful brewer in Chicago. Eight years before, in 1882, he had formed an Illinois corporation, called the K. G. Schmidt Brewing Company, having a capital stock of $350,000, divided into 3500 shares of the par value of $100 each. He subscribed for 3,395 shares, his son-in-law, Kellner (who entered his employ about that time), subscribed for 100 shares and another employee subscribed for the remaining five shares. Kellner never paid for his 100 shares, although a certificate therefor was at once issued to him. The testator paid for all the stock by transferring to the corporation the real estate, buildings and personal property then constituting his brewery plant and business. About a year later, the testator gave his second daughter, Mrs. Herbert, a certificate for 100 shares of his stock.

Less than a year after the will was executed, the testator effected a sale of all the stock of the brewing company to the Milwaukee & Chicago Breweries, Ltd., at the agreed price of $313.60 per share in cash, bonds and stock. The testator received in this manner over a million dollars for his shares, and Kellner and Mrs. Herbert each received $31,630 for the shares they held. The testator invested his share of the cash proceeds in real estate and mortgages on real estate, and as the average income therefrom received by his executors during the fifteen years following his death was approximately $50,000 a year, it is a fair inference that no material part of such proceeds was lost during his lifetime.

About a year before he died, the testator caused one of his buildings, at the comer of two business streets in Chicago, to be fitted up with safety deposit vaults and equipped as a real estate office, and placed his son George in charge of the same, operating the vaults and conducting a general real estate, insurance and loan business under the name of “K. G. Schmidt & Son.” After that, the testator spent much of his time on a farm he owned in Wisconsin.

The will was proved in the probate court in January, 1899, and the three executors and trustees entered upon the discharge of their duties. The testator had kept a set of personal account books for some years before his death and these books of account were used and continued by the executors and trustees as their books of account, in which all transactions pertaining to the large estate were entered. They kept but one bank account, in which all receipts, whether from personal property or from real estate, were deposited, and upon which all checks for expenditures were drawn.

It seems to have been assumed or understood by the executors and trastees that because of the provision of the will postponing the distribution of the estate for fifteen years there could be no final settlement of the estate in the probate court until the end of that time. Acting upon this assumption or understanding, the executors filed annual accounts in the probate court during all that time, and they also rendered and delivered annual itemized accounts as trustees to each of the heirs and made periodical payments to them out of the net income of the estate. In these accounts they endeavored to separate the items received and expended by them as trustees from those properly belonging to their accounts as executors. But the acsounts show that the distinction was not always clearly recognized or observed, and this fact gave rise later to bitter contention among the heirs. However, as we understand the evidence, the only objections filed to the executors’ annual accounts were filed to the first and third of such accounts, all of which were approved by the probate court, and the annual accounts of the trustees were received by the heirs and the income payments accepted by them during all this period apparently -without .objection. In 1906, George W. Kellner died and the annual accounts were thereafter rendered and filed in the same manner by the two remaining executors and trustees until 1914.

On November 10, 1914, the two surviving executors filed their final account in the probate court. Objections thereto were filed by Mrs. Kellner and Mrs. Herbert. The account was amended several times and extended hearings were had in the probate court upon the objections filed. Finally, in December, 1915, the final account, as amended and corrected to meet the views of that court, was approved. It contained over 1,200 items of receipts and disbursements, aggregating $1,744,628, which had been received and paid out in the course of over sixteen years of administration. From the order approving the final account and directing distribution to be made of the remaining personal property of the estate, seven separate appeals to the circuit court were perfected. These appeals covered more than half of the items of the account.

Meantime, Mrs. Wahl had filed a bill for partition in the circuit court and the two then surviving trustees filed a cross-bill to settle their accounts as trustees. About the same time, Mrs. Kellner filed a bill against such trustees for an accounting. After these suits were at issue, an order was entered in March, 1916, consolidating these bills and cross-bills and the seven appeals from the probate court, under the general title of Edna P. Wahl v. George K. Schmidt et al., and the consolidated cause was referred to a master in chancery to take proofs and report his conclusions. Proofs were not finally closed before the master until October, 1918, when over 7,000 typewritten pages of testimony had been taken. Arguments were heard before the master extending until May, 1919, when the cause was taken under advisement by him. His term expired in December, 1920, but by agreement an order was entered continuing him as special commissioner, and his completed report, filed in June, 1922, is now shown in a printed volume of 225 pages. For the most part, the special commissioner’s conclusions and recommendations were adopted by the circuit court in the decree which was entered in December, 1923. Meantime, Charles J. Schmidt, one of the executors and trustees, died in April, 1918, and Mrs. Kellner died in 1919.

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Related

Penn v. Brammer
275 Ill. App. 366 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1934)
Heckler v. Young
264 Ill. App. 34 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1931)
Boyle v. John M. Smyth Co.
248 Ill. App. 57 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1928)
Kellner v. Schmidt
159 N.E. 821 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1927)
Kellner v. Schmidt
242 Ill. App. 602 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
237 Ill. App. 372, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wahl-v-schmidt-illappct-1925.