Yeaton v. Yeaton

4 Ill. App. 579, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 246
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 8, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ill. App. 579 (Yeaton v. Yeaton) 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
Yeaton v. Yeaton, 4 Ill. App. 579, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 246 (Ill. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

McAllister, J.

The marriage between William O. Yeaton and Mary Frances DuVal contemplated by the deed of settlement of date October 27, 1849, took place soon thereafter; and November 15, 1851, in an amicable suit in the Circuit Court of Alexandria County, Virginia, where the partiSS all resided, by bill in chancery, in which William C. Yeaton and wife were complainants, and Southgate and Gowdery, the trustees, were defendants, one child only having then been born of said marriage, but not made a party; a decree was entered changing the terms of said settlement, by authorizing a sale of the trust property on the written request of Yeaton and wife, and the reinvestment of the proceeds in other property, to be held by the trustees under the same trust as provided in the deed of settlement. After this decree, the trustees, ou the written request of Yeaton and wife, sold the original trust property, and paid over $9,000 of the proceeds to Yeaton, who, in consideration thereof, by deed of date Nov. 16, 1864, reciting the facts, conveyed the land in question in this suit to Cowdery, as surviving trustee. This deed contained the express trust: “In trust, however, for the use and benefit of said Mary Frances Yeaton, in accordance with said marriage settlement, and with all powers of sale and substitution under said decree.”

After having obtained $9,000 of the proceeds of said trust property, covered by the deed of settlement, Yeaton, Nov. 6, 1868, without any consideration, procured his wife and Cowdery to re-convey to him, by quit-claim deed, the same land, so that in the end, he manipulated these proceeds into his own pockets, without any valuable thing whatever remaining substituted in their place; and the last mentioned deed was without any attestation of witnesses. The original deed of settlement vested the legal title to the bank stocks in Southgate and Cowdery, as trustees, but expressly gave the interest and dividends therefrom to Yeaton during the joint lives of himself and wife, the latter having during that time only a simple power of appointment; for it was provided that if she should die first, then they were to go to such person or persons as said Mary Frances should, by any writing or writings, under her hand and seal, attested by three or more credible witnesses, or by her last will and testament in writing, to be by her signed, sealed, published and declared in the presence of the like number of witnesses, direct, limit, or appoint, “ In default of such appointment or will,” then the trustees were to pay the dividends from the stocks to the guardian of the children that were the issue of said marriage, and on their coming of age, or being married, to transfer the stocks to them in equal proportions.

The wife died July, 1871, leaving her husband and the appellants and another child, a minor, surviving, without having made a will, or any appointment under the deed of settlement, unless said quit-claim deed to her husband, unattested by any witnesses, shall amount to such appointment.

We are satisfied, from the authorities cited by appellants’ counsel, that after the marriage it was not competent for the husband and wife and trustees, either by the aid of the Alexandria Circuit Court, or by any act or arrangement between themselves, to revoke, alter or change the deed of settlement so as to affect the rights of the children under it; and that, as to them, the said decree of the court, and all that was done under it in respect to the trust property, and altering the terms of the settlement, was nugatory and unavailing. These deductions are drawn from the nature and character of such deeds of settlement, the children being regarded as purchasers, and the doctrine of equity in respect to its jurisdiction over such settlements, and the effect of its decrees upon the rights of children thereunder who are not parties. 1 Richards v. Chambers, 10 Vesey, 580; Parks v. White, 11 Ves. 209; Richards v. Fitzgerald, 9 Irish Eq. R. 496; Hildreth v. Eliot. 8 Pick. 293; Kinnard v. Daniel, 13 B. Mon. 497; Gorin v. Gordon, 38 Miss. 205; Tabb v. Archer, 3 Hen. & Munf. 397.

The real case, as presented by the record, is between appellants, the children, and William C. Yeaton, appellee, their father. If, therefore, as we have seen, the decree purporting to alter the terms of the original settlement, and the acts of Yea-ton and wife and the trustees thereunder, are nugatory, so far as the children are concerned, then it follows that their rights, whatever they are, must be determined solely with reference to the provisions of the settlement, and the contingencies happening thereunder, and not by or under the decree of the Virginia Court, by which they are in no respect bound or affected.

In this view, the sale of the stocks by the trustees on the written request of Yeaton and wife, being wholly unauthorized by the deed of settlement, must, as to the children, be regarded as a wrongful perversion of the trust property. That being so, and there can be no doubt of it, then, if Mrs. Yeaton died without having made any appointment, under the power, a court of equity would, at the suit of the children, treat such sale of the stocks as a wrongful perversion of the trust property, and hold the trustees personally responsible therefor; or, a portion of the proceeds having gone to William C., who was a participator in the act, it would hold him personally responsible therefor; or, such proceeds having been the consideration for the conveyance of the land to Cowdery as surviving trustee, equity, without regard to the form of trust expressed in the deed by which the conveyance was made, would attach to the estate in the hands of Cowdery the same trust as under the original settlement; and Yeaton having obtained a re-conveyance to himself by his wife and Cowdery, of the same land, without consideration, and with full knowledge of the facts, equity might attach the same trust to the estate in his hands; or, if necessary to the ends of justice, could reach the property by raising a constructive trust; for it is an established doctrine of equity that whenever the circumstances of a transaction are such that the person who tikes the legal estate in property cannot also enjoy the beneficial interest, without necessarily violating some established principle of equity, the court will immediately raise a constructive trust, and fasten it upon the conscience of the legal owner, so as to convert him into a trustee for the parties, who in equity, are entitled to the beneficial enjoyment. Alwood v. Mansfield, 59 Ill. 507.

From these views of the case, it seems to us that the principal questions remaining are: (1), whether the quit-claim deed, without consideration, from Mrs. Yeaton and Cowdery to William C. Yeaton, was a good execution of the power of appointment, so as to cutoff the children; (2), if not, whether Mrs. Yeaton had any such absolute ownership of the stocks under the deed of settlement as that, by the general incidents of ownership, she could transfer, by any means sufficient for the purpose and independent of the power; (3), whether, if she could transfer it only by the mode prescribed by the power, and the execution of it was defective, it will be aided and held good by equity; (4), laches of appellants.

As the rights of appellants are to be determined by the original deed of settlement, we must regard the real estate in question, under the circumstances, as being the trust property covered by that deed. To that deed we must look, therefore, for the rules as to the rights of appellants and appellee.

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4 Ill. App. 579, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeaton-v-yeaton-illappct-1879.