Wardwell v. McDowell

31 Ill. 364
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 31 Ill. 364 (Wardwell v. McDowell) 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
Wardwell v. McDowell, 31 Ill. 364 (Ill. 1863).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Beeese

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of ejectment brought in the Circuit Court of La Salle county, to recover the possession of a certain tract of land there situate. A verdict and judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs, and the case brought here by writ of error.

The following facts were agreed: Both parties claim title from Samuel Lapsley, ‘deceased, who died in La Salle on the 21st of June, 1839, seized in fee of the premises in question. The plaintiffs are the heirs at law of Lapsley, and, as such, had Lapsley died intestate, would have been entitled to T\\ párt of the premises described in the declaration. The defendant was in possession of the premises, claiming title thereto, at the time of the commencement of the suit.

Lapsley, prior to his death, and while of sound mind and memory, executed, published and declared his last will and testament, by which he directed that all his debts and funeral effects should be paid so soon after his decease as possible, out of the first moneys that should come into the hands of his executors from any portion of his estate, real or personal. He then bequeathed to certain persons named, one thousand dollars each, to be paid to them respectively, when they became of age, or married; the same to be kept out to interest at the discretion of his executors, and the interest accruing thereon, to be applied to their education and maintenance respectively, until their said respective ages or marriages, etc. He also bequeathed to Julius C. Coe, one thousand dollars, as well for the respect he bore toward him, as for his kindness and attention to the testator during his sickness. He also bequeathed to the children of his sister, one thousand dollars each, to be paid as they became of age or married, and to be put out to interest at the discretion of his executors, and the interest to be applied to their education and maintenance. Then follows this clause: <c I direct my executors to sell and dispose of, as soon as may be, after my decease, all my personal property for good current money; and that all the real estate of which I die seized or possessed, shall be sold by my executors at any time when they may think proper, for its reasonable value, for like current money, or on such credit as they may think proper; and the amount thereof secured in such manner as is usual in like cases to insure the full and punctual payment thereof; and to effectuate this my intention, I hereby vest in my executors full power and authority to dispose of my real estate in fee simple or for a term of years', or otherwise, in as full and as large a manner in every respect, as I could myself do if living. And I do hereby make and ordain my friends, Burton Ayres, John Faughender and William Waddingham, executors of this my last will and testament.”

The will was duly proved and recorded according- to law on the 28th of June, 1839.

Ayres and Waddingham, two of the persons named in the will as executors, never took out letters testamentary; they were issued to John Faughender alone, who alone qualified. Ayers and Waddingham were both living at the time the letters testamentary were issued to Faughender, and at the time of the conveyance of the land to defendant’s grantor, and were in no wise disqualified from acting as executors of the will.

On the second of October, 1841, after Faughender had qualified, and while he held the office of executor, he executed, acknowledged and delivered to John Swinson and Mary Swinson a deed for the premises in controversy.

The defendant showed, by regular deeds, that he was possessed of all the title the Swinsons obtained by their deed. The deed to the Swinsons is a warranty deed, and purports to have been made by Faughender, as executor of the last-will and testament of Samuel Lapsley, deceased.

It was proved on the trial, that Ayres and Waddingham, with Faughender, took the will to the probate court, and it was there opened, proved and read, whereupon the justice inquired of them, if they would act as executors. Faughen-der agreed to act, but Ayres and Waddingham absolutely refused. Neither of them ever withdrew their refusal, and never qualified as executors. "Waddingham lived in St. Louis, and left for that place soon after the will was proved, and was never afterwards in La Salle county.

The only questions presented for our consideration, are, 1, can the refusal to act, of a person appointed executor, be proved in any other way than by matter of record ? 2, had the executor, under this will, to whom was -granted letters testamentary, and who qualified as such, power to convey the real estate of his testator ?

The first question has been fully considered and decided by this court, in the case of Ayres v. Clinefelter, 20 Ill. 465, on a case arising under this will. All the proceedings by the probate court, in reference to the proof of the execution of this will, refusal of the executors named, to accept and qualify, and granting letters testamentary to one who did accept, were all proceedings before a court not a court of record. See act of March 4, 1837, to provide for the election of probate justices of the peace. Session Laws, 1837, page 176. These acts and proceedings are declared by this statute, to be ministerial acts, and being ministerial, can be proved by other than record evidence. In fact, there could be no record made in that court, for it was not a court of record. Its acts and proceedings, like those of an ordinary j ustice of the peace, were, as we said in that case, open to the country — in pais — and all the facts and circumstances attending the granting of the letters testamentary to one of the executors named, should have been admitted in evidence. That included, of course, the fact of the refusal, of the others named as executors, to accept and qualify, and that was the only point made and argued before us, at that time. The question was, as to the kind of evidence necessary to prove a refusal. The court, when the case was before it, at a previous term (16 Ill. 332), had decided, that the entry, by the probate justice on his docket, that Ayres and Waddingham had failed to qualify, did not come up to the demand of the statute, 21 Henry VIII, ch. 4, which they were then discussing, which required a refused to be shown — that some unequivocal manifestation by the executors named, must be given, in order to divest themselves of the rights, duties and powers conferred, not by the law, bnt by the act and will of the testator. ' The court cite English and American authorities, going to show, that record evidence of refusal or renunciation was alone competent to establish the fact, but do not so decide, nor did the court refer to the peculiar character of the court in which the proceedings under this will were had; that it was not a court of record, consequently, a refusal, or renunciation, could not be entered and recorded in court, in conformity with the decision in Herron v. Hoffner et al., 3 Rawle (Penn.) 396; Stebbins v. Lathrop, 4 Pick. 43, and the case cited from 5 English Ecclesiastical R. 266, Long et al. v. Symes et al.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ill. 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wardwell-v-mcdowell-ill-1863.