Ashelford v. Chapman

105 P. 534, 81 Kan. 312, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 363
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 11, 1909
DocketNo. 16,182
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 105 P. 534 (Ashelford v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashelford v. Chapman, 105 P. 534, 81 Kan. 312, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 363 (kan 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

Abram Ashelford, a resident of Illinois, died at his domicile, leaving a will. He was survived by a widow and ten children, all of whom were given portions of his estate by the will. At the time of his death he owned real estate and personal property in Illinois and real estate in Osage county, Kansas. His will was duly probated in Illinois and an executor of his estate was appointed there. A copy of the will was admitted to record in Osage county. The real estate in Kansas was devised to the children. One tract was held under a bond for a deed and another under a contract of purchase, and upon the two the testator • owed, at the time of his death, $18,100, as a part of the purchase price. -Subsequent to the testator’s demise the widow advanced $1000 and the ten children advanced $100 each toward the discharge of this indebtedness. The ninth clause of the will provides as follows: •

“It is my further will that in the event at my deceasé I am indebted to any person or persons for the purchase price of all or any part of the real estate owned by me, or for any lien created upon any of said real estate, for the payment of the purchase price of said real estate or any part thereof, that all my children shall equally contribute out of their share or shares of my estate given and bequeathed, granted and devised to them under this, my will, an amount sufficient to pay off all of said indebtedness.” ’

The widow renounced the provisions for her benefit contained in the will and elected to take under the law. The personal estate is sufficient to pay all the testator’s debts.

With affairs in this situation the widow commenced an action to partition the Osage county land, setting forth in the petition substantially the foregoing facts. [314]*314A part of the relief demanded was that the purchase-money liens be charged upon the share belonging to the children, according to the ninth clause of the will, that the widow’s one-half be set apart to her free of such liens, and that she be given a lien upon the children’s portion for the $1000 which she had advanced. The executor was made a party, but he was served by publication only and made no appearance. The vendors merely exhibited their liens and asked that they be protected. The children admitted the facts stated in the petition, but submitted to the court whether their interests' ought to be charged with the purchase price of the land as the plaintiff contended. The court awarded partition, but refused to relieve the widow’s share of the land or to give her a lien for her advancement, and she appeals.

On behalf of the widow it is said that a testator may annex any condition he may choose to a devise of real estate and that the devisee must take subject to the condition or not at all. He can not accept the benefits and escape the burdens. Such indeed is the law, as the children concede, but they insist that the widow has no standing to demand an application of the principles stated, because in doing so she necessarily claims the benefit of a specific provision in a will which she repudiated altogether when she elected to take what the law gives.

The statute of wills provides in substance that no man shall will away from his wife more than one-half his property, but she may consent in writing to a will disposing of a larger share. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 7972.) If provision be made for the widow in her husband’s will, she shall be cited to appear and make her election whether she will accept such provision or take what she is entitled to under the law of descents and distributions, but she shall not be entitled to both. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 7979.) If she fail to make such election she shall retain, the share of her husband’s real and personal [315]*315estate to which she would have been entitled had he died intestate. If she elect to take under the will she shall not be entitled to the provisions of the law for her benefit, but shall take under the will alone. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 7980.) The statute of descents and distributions provides in substance that after the homestead and personal-property exemptions are allowed the remainder •of an intestate’s real and personal effects not necessary for the payment of debts shall be distributed as follows (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 2503) : One-half in value of the husband’s real estate not necessary for the payment of debts shall be set apart to the widow. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 2510.) The widow’s portion can not be affected by any will of her husband if she object thereto and relinquish all right conferred upon her by the will. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 2519.) Personal property not necessary for the payment of debts shall be distributed as though it were real estate. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 2532.)

From these statutes it is plain that a widow provided for by her husband’s will, to which she has -not previously consented, has the choice of two rights — one under the statute of descents and distributions and one under the will; but she can not have both, except of course in cases where such is the purpose of the will. She may take either, but the election of one is a relinquishment of the other. Her choice is between will and no will. If she take under the law, there is no will so far as her rights are concerned. Her share is carved out of the estate according to the law of descents and distributions, precisely as if no will had been made. Then the will operates upon the residue. The will of what remains after she has been satisfied may create rights and may impose obligations, but she is a stranger to them. Her election in effect partitions the estate into two separate and independent domains, one governed exclusively by the statute of descents and distributions and one governed exclusively by the will. She occupies one, the beneficiaries of the will occupy the other, and [316]*316there are no reciprocal relations between them. The beneficiaries of the will owe her no duty under the will, because she renounced all rights under the will, became an alien to it, and betook herself to her own peculiar demesne. She can not invade their territory and demand of them anything secured or enjoined by the will, because she satisfied every claim she possessed when she elected to take according to law.

What has just been said appears to follow so clearly and indisputably from the language of the statutes referred to and from the settled principles of law relating to election that the citation of authority seems superfluous. However, the following quotations are pertinent:

“The widow can take only what the law gives her, or what her husband gives her, unless it plainly appears by the will that he intended the provision in his will for her to be in addition to what the law gives' her. The statute provides that if she fails to take under the will she shall retain her dower and distributive share, and if she elects to take under the will she shall be barred of dower and her distributive share, and take under the will alone. The provision for her in this will is not in addition to her dower and distributive share, and she failed to elect to take under the will. There is no right in her to require the executor to convert the real estate into personal property, and no ‘ought’ upon him as to her. Her yight to dower and a distributive share is paramount to the right of her husband to dispose of his estate by will, and he can dispose of it only subject to her right, and in the present case he has expressly made it subject to her right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 P. 534, 81 Kan. 312, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashelford-v-chapman-kan-1909.