Blankenbeck v. Foster
This text of 89 So. 171 (Blankenbeck v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Section 4203 of the Code provides that—
“Before grant of administration, and before the exempt property is set apart, the right of the widow and minor child or children, or either, to the use and benefit of such property, shall be the same as if it had been set apart as exempt.”
“A selection before a grant of administration, made by the widow, or by the guardian of the minor children, like a selection made subsequent to the grant, depends for validity, and for its sufficiency to pass title, upon the value of the property selected.”
The exemption allowed by the statute cannot be duplicated in whole or in part; and if, in anticipation of its formal claim or allotment, the claimant has by informal selection or appropriation had the benefit of the exemption allowed by law, the appraisers must take notice of that fact and include in their allotment, as a part thereof, or as the whole, as the case may be, the items of property already appropriated in that behalf by the claimant. Such a procedure is not the interposition of a set-off against the claim of exemption, but is merely .the recognition of a selection already made. This practice is certainly equitable, and is in harmony with the spirit as well as the letter of the statute. We find no precedent from a court of last resort, but the practice was held proper, at nisi prius, in the case of In re Rierdon, 5 Ohio N. P. 516, cited in 18 Cyc. 398, note 32.
The probate court has full power under section 4213 of the Code to make all necessary corrections and adjustments with respect to excessive or insufficient allotments, and, reversing the decree appealed from, we will remand the cause for further proceedings in accordance with the principles above announced.
If, as now seems necessary, the allotment must be corrected by striking off some of its items, after adding to it the items to be charged as for previous selection and appropriation, the court will allow the widow, so far as practicable, to select and renounce the items to-be stricken as excessive, as provided by section 4206 of the Code.
Reversed and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
89 So. 171, 206 Ala. 85, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenbeck-v-foster-ala-1921.