Court Opinion

ID: 6973146
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 02:06:13.825746+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:52.608557
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Cartwright delivered the opinion of the court: On August 12, 1902, Roberta Ethel Mary Chittenden had a husband, Roy Truman Chittenden, and a child, Roberta Elizabeth Edith Chittenden, then seven months old, and was possessed of a mortgage, shares of stock, cash, and a contract for the purchase of a master’s certificate of sale. On that day she executed the following trust deed: “This indenture, made this 12th day of August, A. D; 1902, witnesseth: That I, Roberta Ethel Mary Chittenden, of Chicago, Illinois, hereby transfer, convey, assign and quit-claim unto The Northern Trust Company of Chicago, Illinois, as trustee, the following securities and property, to-wit: (1) A- mortgage for ten thousand ($10,000.) dollars (less interest due thereon August 24, 1902, which is to be paid to me) ; (2) twenty-five (25) shares United States Steel preferred stock, for which I paid $2265.63; (3) the sum of five thousand ($5000) dollars in cash from the money now on deposit to my credit in said The Northern Trust Company, my balance for July, as shown by July statement, being $5576.27; (4) all interest I may have in a certain contract for the purchase of the premises 7412 Princeton avenue, on which I have paid two hundred dollars ($200.) To have and to hold said securities and property subject to the following trusts and conditions: “During the period of the trusteeship herein created said trustee shall manage, control and care for said property in accordance with its best judgment and discretion, and is fully authorized to sell and convey any of said property and re-invest the proceeds thereof, and also to carry out and complete the contract for purchase of 7412 Princeton avenue, above referred to. During my life said trustee shall pay me from the income and principal, if necessary, of said property, the sum of two hundred and fifty ($250) dollars per month, should I choose to draw that much; also my expenses to England, whenever I may go there. Immediately upon my .death said trustee shall pay such debts and funeral expenses as are not paid, out of my remaining estate, and any balance of said trust funds that may be in the hands of my said trustee at the time of my death shall be paid as follows: One thousand ($1000) dollars shall be paid to my husband, Roy T. Chittenden, provided and whenever he legally transfers the custody of my child, Roberta Elizabeth Edith Chittenden, to a guardian for said child, selected under the terms of this instrument. I hereby name and appoint Mrs. Gerald Richardson, 23 Kelvinside Terrace, Glasgow, Scotland, and Mrs. S. J. Walford, Barnesley Park, Hill Moseley, near Birmingham, England, as guardians of the person of said child, and direct my said trustee to pay to them, or either of them, such sums out of the income and principal, if necessary, as they or either of them may notify said trustee are necessary for the comfortable support and maintenance and education of said child. In case of the death or refusal to act of one of said guardians, then the other one shall be sole guardian; and in case of the death or refusal to act of both of my said guardians after my death, they shall have the power to and are hereby directed to appoint- a guardian for my child, and in case they should die or refuse or-fail to act before my death, then the guardian of my child shall be whatever person or persons I may appoint, such appointment to be evidenced by a written notice to said trustee. In case at any time a guardian should not be appointed under the terms aforesaid, said trustee is authorized to appoint and select such guardian, provided that such guardian shall not be my husband or any relation of his, and in case the guardian be any person other than the said Mrs. Walford and Mrs. Richardson, said trustee shall make payments to said or such guardian in the same manner that is above provided for payment to the said Mrs. Walford and Mrs. Richardson. “In case my husband refuses to part with the custody of my said child, I direct that the income be allowed to accumulate and be added to the principal, inasmuch as my husband will necessarily support the child in such case, but even if the child remains in the custody of my husband, said The Northern Trust Company shall in its discretion use such portion of the income and principal as it may deem best for the support and education of said child; provided such use is necessary, payments to be made to such child personally, if thought advisable. “As soon as said child reaches the age of twenty-one (21) years, to-wit, on January ix, 1923, said trustee shall transfer and convey the remaining estate to said child, and this trust shall terminate. In case said child shall die before reaching the age of twenty-one years, leaving a child or children surviving or leaving a valid last will and testament, said trustee shall distribute said trust estate in accordance with the terms of said will or in equal portions to such surviving child or children; and in case of the death of my said child leaving no valid will and no child, then said trustee shall distribute said trust estate in accordance with the directions of the above mentioned Mrs. Richardson and Mrs. Walford, or the survivor of them, they to select as beneficiaries thereof such of my relatives or friends as they may deem most in need, except that neither my husband or his relatives shall be among such beneficiaries. “Said trustee-shall receive reasonable compensation for its services hereunder, and shall be allowed to employ such attorneys and agents as may be necessary to protect this trust and trust estate, and their compensation shall be paid out of said trust estate. “In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the day and year first above written. Roberta Ethel Mary Chittenden. (Seal.)” The grantee, the Northern Trust Company, took possession of the property and executed the. trust until the death of the grantor, which occurred on December 29, 1902, when she died intestate, leaving said husband and child surviving her. The appellant, Thomas Bassett Keyes, was appointed administrator of her estate. The surviving husband was appointed guardian of the child. The appellant then filed his bill of complaint in the superior court of Cook county against the Northern Trust Company, Roy Truman Chittenden and Roberta Elizabeth Edith Chittenden, asking the court to set aside the deed of trust, to take an account of the transactions between the grantor in her lifetime and the grantee, and to adjust the rights in the property still in the possession of the Northern Trust Company. Roy Truman Chittenden by his answer admitted the case made by the bill, and claimed that as surviving husband he was entitled to a share of the estate under the Statute of Descent ; and the infant, Roberta Elizabeth Edith Chittenden, answered by her guardian ad litem. The, Northern Trust Company answered asserting the validity of the trust deed, and upon a hearing of the issues the superior court dismissed the bill, and the Appellate Court for the Eirst District has affirmed the decree. The position of appellant is stated by his counsel as follows : “That upon its face the said deed of trust was and is void, (i) because of uncertainty as to the objects of the trust; (2) because the scheme of the trust includes, as an essential and inseparable part, provisions which are void; (3) because the vesting of the equitable estate may come to rest upon powers of appointment which, if valid, may never be exercised, thus leaving the legal estate in the trustee in perpetuity, in violation of the rule against perpetuities.” The conveyance was in trust for certain specified purposes during the life of the grantor, and to that extent it was executed. The validity of the trust thus far is not questioned and it was undoubtedly valid. (Williams v. Evans, 154 Ill. 98.) After her death the child became the beneficiary of the trust. If the husband should transfer the legal custody of the child to a guardian selected under the terms of the trust deed, she is to be provided with comfortable support, maintenance and education. If the husband should refuse to part with the custody of the child the trust is to be for accumulation, except that the trustee, in its discretion, may devote such sum as may be necessary to the support and- education of the child. The trust will come to an end when the daughter reaches the age of twenty-one years, or before that time in certain contingencies. In no event can it last longer, and at that time she is to receive the balance of the trust estate absolutely. There is no uncertainty as to the objects of the trust, which are definitely stated in the deed of trust, and the first reason alleged is without force. . Neither is the second reason, that the scheme of the trust includes, as an essential and inseparable part, provisions which are void, of any avail. There is no such con-, nection between the trust for the benefit of the daughter and the contingency upon which the estate is to go elsewhere that they must stand or fall together. .If she lives to be twenty-one years of age the contingency will not arise, and if the further provision were void it would not divest the equitable estate or destroy the valid trust for the daughter. (Butler v. Huestis, 68 Ill. 594; Post v. Rohrbach, 142 id. 600; Howe v. Hodge, 152 id. 252; Nevitt v. Woodburn, 190 id. 283; Chapman v. Cheney, 191 id. 574; Kales’ Future Interests, sec. 183.) There is no present uncertainty as to the beneficiaries, and the only uncertainty alleged by counsel relates to the vesting of the estate at the end of the trust in case the daughter dies under twenty-one years of age, intestate and without a child, and a court will not declare a trust void because of some future contingency which will render the object of the trust uncertain. Orr v. Yates, 209 Ill. 222. The argument against the validity of the trust is based on the claim that the deed of trust contains powers of appointment which are void under the rule against perpetuities, and which render the beneficiaries of the trust indefinite and uncertain. Those powers of appointment are not powers to designate the objects or beneficiaries of the trust, but are powers of appointment of the legal estate at the termination of the trust. If the daughter lives to be twenty-one years of age she takes the absolute legal estate. If she dies before reaching that age, leaving a will, the trustee is to deliver up the estate according to the terms of the will, or in case no disposition is made by will, to deliver it to any surviving child or children. In case of the death of the daughter leaving no valid will and no child, the legal estate is to vest in such relatives or friends as Mrs. Richardson and Mrs. Walford, or the survivor of them, may select as being most in need, excluding the husband and his relatives. It is argued that the daughter may outlive the donees of the power and yet not reach the age of twenty-one years nor leave a valid will or surviving child or children, and the powers of appointment in the persons named may never be exercised, leaving the legal estate in the trustee in perpetuity. The existence of that power of appointment has no present effect whatever on the estate, and no estate is limited under the power unless it shall be exercised and the appointment made. (Harvard College v. Balch, 171 Ill. 275.) Unless the contingency of the death of the daughter under twenty-one years of age, leaving no valid will and no child or children, occurs, the power of appointment will not arise and the trust is in no way affected by it. Clearly, the power of appointment is not void as violating the rule against perpetuities, since the power must be exercised within the limits of the rule by persons in being when the deed of trust was executed. The daughter has an unlimited power of appointment of the estate by will, and in a certain contingency the other persons may have a limited power of appointment, but if neither of the powers is exercised the trustee will hold under a resulting trust for the heirs-at-law of the grantor. Counsel says that it cannot be supposed that the grantor would have signed the deed in view of a possible reversion to her heirs, including her husband. Whether that is so or not we cannot say, but she did execute the instrument and it must be given its legal effect. The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed. Judgment affirmed.