Anderson v. Anderson

46 P.2d 98, 150 Or. 476, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 121
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 P.2d 98 (Anderson v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Anderson, 46 P.2d 98, 150 Or. 476, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 121 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

Invoking the aid afforded under the declaratory judgment act, §§ 2-1401 to 2-1416, inclusive, Oregon Code 1930, the plaintiff, Hilma Marie Anderson, seeks a determination of her rights and powers under the will of her late husband, Frank Anderson. Named as defendants are her two minor children, Frank Anderson, Jr., and Louise Carolina Anderson, who on March 7, 1935, the date of the institution of this proceeding, were of the ages of 17 and 16 years, respectively. They are represented in the proceeding by their duly appointed guardian ad litem.

On September 2,1919, Frank Anderson executed his last will and testament. After stating therein his age and residence and that it was his wish that all his just debts and funeral expenses be duly paid, the testator made the following disposition of his property:

“Second — I give, devise and bequeath unto my beloved wife, Hilma Marie Anderson, all the property, real, personal and mixed, of which I die possessed, so long as she shall remain my widow, relying upon her to properly rear, nurture, and educate our two children, Frank Andersen, Jr., and Louise Carolina Anderson. In case my said wife, Hilma Anderson, should again marry, it is my will that she then take for her sole use and benefit one-half of all the property then remaining from my estate and that my two children above named each receive one-fourth of the property then remaining from my estate.
*478 “Third — It is my will, and I hereby direct, that my executrix shall have the right and power to sell, transfer and convey any and all of the property belonging to my estate, as in her judgment shall seem best, and to reinvest the proceeds, if she shall deem it advisable, in other property or securities, and to use such of the said proceeds as she may deem necessary in support of herself and our two children above named. And it is my will that she make such sales without the order of any court, making such return thereof as may be required by law.”

After making the foregoing provisions the testator nominated his wife executrix and directed that she act as such without bonds. This will was made a few days before, and in contemplation of, a surgical operation to be performed upon Frank Anderson, from which he did not recover. He died sometime in the latter part of the year 1919. His will was duly admitted to probate and his widow, plaintiff herein, was appointed executrix. The estate was closed in the year 1920, and the executrix thereupon discharged.

At the time of executing this will Frank Anderson was 49 years of age. He was a farmer in Morrow county, with large holdings of land and in comfortable financial circumstances. He had made it a practice in business transactions to consult his wife and had complete confidence in her business ability. The testimony shows that she was thrifty and displayed sound judgment in such expenditures as she made, of which fact her husband was well aware.

The plaintiff appears to have managed well the property received by her, until the general business crisis, when she became unable to pay the taxes on the farm property. Taxes for the year 1930 and subsequent years, amounting to a sum in excess of $3,272.50, are unpaid, and the plaintiff personally is indebted to *479 various persons, firms and corporations, in a sum in excess of $8,200. In order to pay the taxes and her individual indebtedness she applied to the Federal Land Bank of Spokane for a loan and offered as security a mortgage on part of the real property belonging to the estate of her late husband. The loan was approved as to amount, but was refused solely on the ground that the right of plaintiff to mortgage the property was questioned.

The record reveals that the real property can not be sold at this time, except at a great sacrifice. Almost as much can be realized on a secured loan as on a sale. Unless some of the property can be sold or mortgaged to raise the money necessary to pay the taxes and plaintiff’s indebtedness, all of the realty will be sold for delinquent taxes by the sheriff and by plaintiff’s creditors.

It is the plaintiff’s contention that under the terms ■ of the will she was given the absolute fee simple title in and to all the real property of which her husband died seized, subject only to defeasance of an undivided one-half thereof upon her possible remarriage. She further urges that until such time as she may remarry she is granted the power to sell and convey an absolute fee simple title to said property or to give a valid mortgage on all or any part of it, unaffected by such possible defeasance.

The defendants through their guardian ad litem argue that the plaintiff has neither the power to convey nor to encumber the fee simple title to the real property ; that the third paragraph of the will granting the power to sell or convey the property was limited to the plaintiff in her capacity as executrix of the will; and that since the estate has been fully administered and she has been discharged as such executrix the power *480 to sell has been withdrawn. It is further contended by the defendants that even if it be assumed that the power granted by the third paragraph of the will, to sell the property, was intended to be conferred upon the plaintiff in her individual capacity, rather than as executrix, the terms of the grant did not in any event include the power to mortgage.

The first question presented is whether the plaintiff was by the will given merely a life interest in the real property of her late husband, or the absolute fee simple title, subject to be divested of an undivided one-half of such property upon her remarriage. According to the second paragraph of the will the testator gave, devised and bequeathed to his wife, Hilma Marie Anderson, all the property, real, personal and mixed, of which he died seized, so long as she should remain the widow of testator, and in reliance upon her to “rear, nurture and educate” properly their two minor children. He then provided that in the event she “should again marry, it is my will that she then take for her sole use and benefit one-half of the property then remaining from my estate, and that my two children above named each receive one-fourth of the property then remaining from my estate”. [Italics supplied.] No provision is made for any disposition of the property upon the death of testator’s widow.

In construing provisions of a will similar to those contained in the second paragraph of the instrument here involved, the supreme court of Wisconsin in Be Baird’s Will, 171 Wis. 215 (177 N. W. 23), stated:

“It can be logically argued that the words ‘so long as she remain my widow’ are words of duration; that she could not remain a widow longer than during the term of her natural life; and therefore that she at most took a life estate. Treating the words ‘I give and *481

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 P.2d 98, 150 Or. 476, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-or-1935.