Keating v. Keating

Illinois Supreme Court
Keating v. Keating, 48 Ill. 241 (Ill. 1868)
Lawrence

Keating v. Keating

Opinion of the Court

Mr. Justice Lawrence

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is assigned as error in this case, that the court gave to the complainant, as alimony, the fee of the premises known as 205 Third avenue, instead of a life estate, besides a sum of money, said premises constituting more than one-half of tlio defendants property. The counsel for defendant in error seek to justify this on the ground that these premises were bought with her money. The only proof of this is a recital in the decree, that the material allegations of the bill had been proved, which may have been intended, by the court, to apply to the grounds upon which the divorce was claimed, that being the main question in issue. The evidence heard by the court, and preserved in the record, on a motion to modify the decree in regard to alimony, indicates a contrary state of facts. If the property was not bought with her money, there was nothing in the case calling for a divestiture of the husband’s fee. As we said in Von Glahn v. Von Glahn, 46 Ill. 134, unless there are special reasons-to the contrary, an annual allowance, to be held under the control of the court, is the better mode of decreeing alimony. So much of the decree as gives the complainant the fee in said premises, is reversed, and the court will either give complainant a life estate in the premises, or an annuity, payable quarterly, in money, and secured upon the property.

Decree modified.

Reference

Full Case Name
James Keating v. Bridget Keating
Cited By
6 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
1. Divorce—mode of decreeing alimony. In cases of divorce, the better mode of decreeing alimony is, unless special reason to the contrary exist, by an annual allowance, to be held under the control of the court. 2. Same—giving the fee in land. In this case the wife was given as alimony, the fee in a portion of the husband’s real estate, and the decree was sought to be sustained on the ground the property was bought with her money, which was not the fact; it was directed that she have a life estate, or an annuity, but not the fee.