Wall v. Pfanschmidt

265 Ill. 180
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 265 Ill. 180 (Wall v. Pfanschmidt) 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
Wall v. Pfanschmidt, 265 Ill. 180 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs in error filed a bill for the partition of certain real estate, in the circuit court of Adams county, to the June term, 1913. A demurrer thereto was sustained, and the bill, which had been amended, was dismissed for want of equity. Plaintiffs in error elected to abide by their bill as amended and the cause was dismissed at their costs. A writ of error was sued out to review that decree.

The amended bill averred that certain real estate was devised under the will of Christian Abel to his daughter, Matilda, for her natural life and at her death to her children ;■ that said Matilda intermarried with one Charles A. Pfanschmidt and to them were born two children, Ray and Blanche; that said Charles A. owned certain real estate adjoining that devised to his wife, Matilda, all of which the family occupied as a farm, residing on that portion devised to the wife; that on or about September 27, 1912, Ray Pfanschmidt, one of said children, murdered his father, mother and sister and Emma Kaempen, a school teacher boarding with them, setting fire to the residence and partly burning the remains of said „four persons so killed, and that the order of their respective deaths could not be determined; that said Ray Pfanschmidt had been indicted in the circuit court of Adams county for the murder of said four persons and pleaded not guilty; that under the indictment for the murder of his sister said Ray Pfanschmidt was tried and found guilty and his punishment fixed by verdict of the jury at death, and that said criminal cause, at the time of this hearing in the court below, was pending in the trial court on motion in arrest of judgment. The motion in arrest of judgment has since been overruled and the criminal cause brought to this court by writ of error, the judgment of the trial court being reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. (People v. Pfanschmidt, 262 Ill. 411.) The amended bill in 4his cause further alleged that Ray Pfanschmidt could not acquire any estate, right or title, in and to said real estate through his act of murder; that Charles A. Pfanschmidt died intestate, leaving him surviving his son, Ray Pfanschmidt, the bill naming as other heirs decedent’s father, brother, sisters, and children of a deceased brother and sister, and also enumerating the heirs of Matilda Pfanschmidt. It is further alleged that Ray Pfanschmidt executed his promissory note to Fred Pfanschmidt, his uncle, for $4000, secured by mortgage on the real estate described in the bill, and another promissory note for $4000 to George W. Govert and W. Emery Lancaster, secured by a second mortgage on said real estate; that Charles C. Pfanschmidt, the father of Charles A., quit-claimed to John E. Wall all his interest in said real estate, and said Wall and his wife quit-claimed to E. W. C. Kaempen an undivided two-thirds of said real estate. It is further alleged that said mortgages are null and void except as to the real estate devised to said Ray Pfanschmidt by the will of his grandfather, Christian Abel. The prayer of the bill is for partition, and that the court declare that said Ray Pfanschmidt did not take or acquire any interest in the real estate of Charles A. Pfanschmidt, his father, Matilda Pfanschmidt, his mother, or Blanche Pfanschmidt, his sister, upon their death, because he caused their death for the purpose of inheriting; that he took no other interest than that devised to him in his grandfather's will. The bill further prayed that he be enjoined from conveying, mortgaging or otherwise encumbering said real estate, and if it should be deemed that he took the naked legal title, by descent, to any part of said real estate, that it be deemed that he was holding said legal title not for his own use and benefit but only as trustee for such parties equitably entitled thereto, and that partition of the equitable interests be made accordingly.

Both parties agree that the law is that when two or more persons perish in a common disaster there is no presumption, under the common law, of survivorship,; that if survivorship is claimed it must be proved; (Middeke v. Balder, 198 Ill. 590; Young Women's Christian Home v. French, 187 U. S. 401; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence,—16th ed.—secs. 29, 3O;) and that this rule would apply whether the common disaster was a wreck or accident on land or sea or the murder of several persons at practically the same time, as alleged in this case.

Plaintiffs in error concede that defendant in error Ray Pfanschmidt retained and did not forfeit his estate in the remainder devised to him under the will of his grandfather, Christian Abel. The sole question in dispute is whether he could acquire an interest, by inheritance, in the real estate owned by his father, mother and sister, who under the pleadings in this cause met their death by his acts intentionally committed.

Our statute on descent provides “that estates, both real and personal, of residents and non-resident proprietors in this State dying intestate, * * * shall descend to and be distributed in manner following, to-wit: First, to his or her children and their descendants, in equal parts; * * * second, when there is no child of the intestate, nor descendant of such child, and no widow or surviving husband, * * * and if there is no parent living, then to the brothers and sisters of the intestate, and their descendants.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1913, p. 907.)

This statute has never been construed by the courts of this State as to the question here involved. Counsel for plaintiffs in error admit that under the literal wording of the statute Ray Pfanschmidt would inherit, but their argument is to the effect that in construing this as well as all other statutes the maxims of the common law must be applied, and that according to those maxims no one can be permitted to take advantage of his own fraud or wrong or acquire property by his own crime; that it must be assumed that the legislature, in passing the Statute of Descent, had these maxims in mind and that the statute should be construed according to such legislative intent; that so construed Ray Pfanschmidt acquired no interest in the estate of his father, mother or sister.

The authorities on this question in other jurisdiction^ are not in harmony. The courts of Great Britain do not seem to have been called upon to pass upon it until in very recent years, doubtless because of the ancient common law doctrine of attainder and corruption of blood. Under the civil law one could not take property by inheritance or will from an ancestor or testator whom he had murdered, but such deprivation plainly was intended in. the nature of a punishment, as the property, in such case, escheated to the exchequer. (Domat’s Civil Law, part 2, book 1, title 1, sec. 3; Riggs v. Palmer, 115 N. Y. 506.) In most States the statutes of. descent are based upon the rules of the civil law, (14 Cyc. 23,) but each State has its own rules. (3-5 Greenleaf’s Cruise on Real Prop.—2d Am. ed.—146, note.) The English common law of descents had its foundation' in principles of feudal policy. (Reeve on Descents, i.)- Forfeiture of lands for felony was a doctrine of the old Saxon law, as a part of the punishment for the offense. The law of feudal escheat was brought into England at the conquest and superadded to the ancient law of forfeiture. (Sharswood’s Blackstone’s Com. vol. 1, book 2, p. 251.) Corruption of blood and forfeiture of lands in ordinary felonies were abolished by 54 Geo. III, chap. 45.

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265 Ill. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-pfanschmidt-ill-1914.