Woman's Union Missionary Society of America v. Mead

23 N.E. 603, 131 Ill. 338
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 603 (Woman's Union Missionary Society of America v. Mead) 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
Woman's Union Missionary Society of America v. Mead, 23 N.E. 603, 131 Ill. 338 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It would be impossible to consider all the questions raised on this record, much less to notice all the points made in the various arguments filed, within the reasonable limit of an opinion. Many of them, in the view we take of the case, are of no importance. We shall give attention only to those which we regard as controlling questions in the case. The first of these is, does the will of Miss Smith dispose of all of the property, real and personal, owned by her at the time of her death, or did she, as to a part of that property, die intestate.

By the death of Mrs. Turner after the execution of the will, testatrix inherited from her real estate amounting in value to about $17,000. By the pre-decease of Mrs. Turner, the $15,000 legacy bequeathed to her lapsed. Between the date of the execution of the will and the decease of Miss Smith certain shares of stock in the Chicago City Railway Company, owned by her, advanced in value about $30,000. As to this after-acquired real estate, the lapsed legacy, and increased value of railway stock, the heirs contend Miss Smith died intestate, and on the theory that the condition named in the .devise to the Hahnemann Hospital is a limitation upon the amount which it and each of the other residuary legatees can take, they insist that in no event could either of said six residuary devisees take more than $2500, and that whatever should remain after the payment of such sums must be treated as intestate estate, and descend to them, as heirs.

The rule for determining when after-acquired real estate passes by will, under our statute., is well enough defined by our own decisions, and therefore reference to those of other. States is unnecessary. In every case where that question arises the intention of the testator must be sought after, and when ascertained will control. (Willis et al. v. Watson et al. 4 Scam. 64; Peters et al. v. Spellman, 18 Ill. 370; Williams v. Johnson et al. 112 id. 61.) If no intention to dispose of such estate appears from the will, it will not pass. But such intention is sufficiently shown by the language, “I bequeath all my property, real and personal, wheresoever the same may be, to my beloved wife, Hannah P. Peters,” (Peters et al. v. Spellman, supra,) or, “I give and bequeath the care, profits and benefit of my whole estate, real and personal, so long as she remains my widow,” etc. (Willis et al. v. Watson, supra. See, also, Decker v. Decker et al. 121 Ill. 358.) It was not intended by this last decision to change or modify the rule announced in the former decisions which are there cited with approval.

That Phebe L. Smith intended to dispose of all the property owned by her at the time of her death, by this will, is most clearly shown by its various provisions. In every clause of that instrument in which a manifestation of her intention in that regard would be sought for, there is a studied purpose to leave nothing undisposed of. In no single instance does she speak of property as it then existed, but always with reference to its condition at the time of her death. By the fifteenth clause she expressly says: “I give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, to my executors.” By the sixteenth clause she gives her executors power to manage her estate, to sell all or any part of' it, and "to demise and let all and any portion or portions of the realty belonging to my estate, to improve all or any part of my estate,” intending, as she expressly says, “to confer upon my executors all such powers as may be needful for the full ancl convenient execution of my will and for the easy management of my estate.” This is not the language of a scrivener or an attorney employed to draft her will, but written with her own hand. The presumption is that she intended her will to be a final disposition of her entire estate. (Higgins v. Dwen, 100 Ill. 554; Taubenhan et al. v. Dunz, 125 id. 530.) This rule, says Bedfield, “is founded upon the presumption that every man who sits down deliberately to make his will does not intend to leave any portion of his property in such a condition as not to pass by the will. The idea of any one deliberately purposing to die testate as to a portion of his estate, and intestate as to another portion, is so unusual in the history of testamentary disposition as to justify almost' any construction to escape from it.” (2 Bedfield on Wills, 235.) To the same effect is 2 Jarman on Wills, and Higgins v. Dwen, 100 Ill. 554. But here there is no occasion to indulge in or resort to presumption. The intention is expressed in unmistakable language.

But it is insisted, that notwithstanding the manifestation of such intention by the will itself, the fact that the after-acquired real estate came to testatrix from her deceased sister, Mrs. Turner, by inheritance, who, by the said fifteenth clause, is given the income of all the residue of the estate during her life, disproves such intention. The argument in support of this theory is based on the proposition that before Miss Smith could have intended to dispose of such real estate by will, she^ must have foreseen the death of her sister, and known that she would inherit it from her, “and then deliberately express her last wish, in writing, that Mrs. Turner, though dead, should enjoy the income of this real estate for life.” This, it is said, would be absurd, and no one, we presume, will question the correctness of the conclusion, if the premise is correct. The fallacy of the proposition lies in the'assumption that after-acquired real estate can only be disposed of by will when the testator has manifested an intention to that effect as to the particular real estate in question,—that to pass after-acquired real estate by will, the will must be made in anticipation of obtaining such real estate. The question is not, what did testatrix intend as to real estate which she might inherit from her sister, or purchase from a stranger, or obtain by will, but what did she intend as to her entire estate at death, from whatever source obtained. If it appears from the will that she intended all to pass by the will, then after-acquired real estate is conveyed. It might with equal propriety be said that it is absurd to suppose a person ever intends to dispose of property by will which he neither owns nor expects to own; and yet the manifestation of such an intention is perfectly rational, as expressive of a desire that no part of the estate shall be left intestate. It is clear enough that Miss Smith did not, at the time she made her will, have a specific intention to dispose of property which she might thereafter inherit from her sister, because it was impossible at that time for her to know that she would obtain property in that way; but she manifestly did intend that “all the rest, residue and remainder” of her estate, “both real and personal,” owned by her at the time of her death, no matter how or from what source obtained, should pass to" her executors, because she so expressly says, and that is all that is necessary, under our statute, to pass .after-acquired real estate.

The case of Harrison et al. v. Allen, 3 Call, 289, cited by •counsel as sustaining their contention, is clearly distinguishable from this case, and even if we were disposed to accept its reasoning as correct, it could have no controlling influence here. There the will gave all the estate of the testator to his two sons. One of the sons died before the father, leaving certain real estate, which the father inherited.

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