Bose v. Bose

503 P.2d 1259, 11 Or. App. 466, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 713
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 8, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 503 P.2d 1259 (Bose v. Bose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bose v. Bose, 503 P.2d 1259, 11 Or. App. 466, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 713 (Or. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

FORT, J.

This probate matter comes before the court on appeal from an order overruling objections of appellant to the final account of respondent, its designation of heirship and ordering distribution of the estate in accordance therewith.

The Howard Topness family consisted of Howard Topness, his wife Clara Bose Topness, and their minor daughter Tina Topness, age nine. The family resided in Corvallis, Oregon, where Mr. Topness was employed as a company accountant. Mrs. Topness had been employed at Oregon State University but had left her employment there several years prior to devote her time to being a housewife. The family left Corvallis on a vacation trip in July 1970, and on August 1, 1970, while traveling in Nevada, were all killed in a head-on automobile collision. Clara Topness, the driver, was killed instantly, Howard Topness survived a short time and expired at the scene, and Tina Topness expired last while en route to a hospital in an ambulance. Both Mr. and Mrs. Topness died intestate, and all of the property of the family was owned in survivorship titles. These included real property, bank accounts and stock certificates.

*469 The trial court concluded that title to all the jointly owned property, being based upon survivorship contracts as distinguished from passing by intestacy, became vested in Mr. Topness at the moment of the death of his wife Clara. Mrs. Topness thus owned nothing at her death to pass by intestacy. Thus the court held that at the time of Mr. Topness’s death he was the sole owner of all the jointly owned property. The child, Tina, owned no property or interest therein.

ORS 112.085 provides:

“Any person who fails to survive the decedent by five days is considered to have predeceased the decedent for all purposes of intestate succession, and the heirs of the decedent are determined accordingly.”

In commenting on that statute in Administering Oregon Estates Handbook, Rules Governing Heirs §§ 7.29, 7.30 (2d ed 1972), the author states:

“Formerly there was no requirement that an heir survive decedent for a period of time in order to inherit. The Uniform Simultaneous Death Act was effective only if there was no proof that the parties died otherwise than simultaneously.
“ORS 112.085 requires that an heir survive decedent by five days in order to succeed to decedent’s intestate property. If he fails to so survive, he is considered to have predeceased the decedent for all purposes of intestate succession.
a* * # # # 33

Appellant urges that if ORS 112.085 is valid, jointly held property would come within its purview. We disagree. The statute by its express terms applies only “for all purposes of intestate succession.” Since the property did not pass by intestate succession to Mr. *470 Topness but by contract, tbe statute does not apply here.

In 48 CJS 910-11, Joint Tenancy § 1 b, the text states:

“Survivorship is the distinctive characteristic of an estate in joint tenancy. * * *
“The joint tenant who survives does not take the moiety of the other tenant from him or as his successor, but takes it by right under the conveyance or instrument by which the joint tenancy was created.”

Appellant contends Oregon’s five-day survival statute, ORS 112.085, is unconstitutional because, inter alia, it retroactively divested Tina’s vested rights as an heir without due process of law. The rights of an heir apparent do not vest until the death of the ancestor. In re McLeod’s Estate, 159 Or 687, 696-97, 82 P2d 884 (1938) (Lusk, J.); Root v. Arnold, 133 Or 417, 419-20, 290 P 1095 (1930); In re Witherill’s Estate, 178 Or 253, 260, 166 P2d 129 (1946); Wright v. Kroeger, 219 Or 102, 106-08, 345 P2d 809 (1959), and cases cited therein; Ostrander v. Preece, 129 Ohio St 625, 3 Ohio Op 24, 196 NE 670, 103 ALR 218 (1935).

As stated in Ostrander v. Preece, supra, 129 Ohio St at 632:

“There are no heirs, but only heirs apparent, to the living, persons with mere expectancies or possibilities of inheritance which may be fulfilled or defeated, depending upon various contingencies and situations. An heir apparent, therefore, has no vested right in the estate of his ancestor prior to the latter’s death, and consequently no vested property rights therein. Legislation dealing with estates of persons who die after its effective date does not deal Avith vested rights. * * *”

Howard Topness did not die until a month after *471 ORS 112.085 became effective on July 1, 1970. Therefore, Tina Topness, having had no present vested rights in her father’s estate at the time ORS 112.085 became effective, could not have been deprived thereof.

There is no merit in appellant’s next contention that the definition of “heirs” in ORS 111.005 (18) is unconstitutionally vague or that ORS 112.085 is an unconstitutional infringement on the right to inherit. In re Estate of Heck, 120 Or 80, 250 P 785 (1926).

Next, appellant contends that if the five-day survival statute is valid, then Howard Topness is not an heir of his wife Clara Topness for purposes of determining the survivorship rights in the property held jointly by them. Appellant apparently proposes that the property here should pass in the same way as in eases of simultaneous death (ORS 112.575-112.635)— “* * * one-half as if one had survived and one-half as if the other had survived. * ® ®” ORS 112.595 (1). By the agreed facts, the Uniform Simultaneous Death Act does not apply here, for it is conceded that the three deaths here Avere not simultaneous Avithin ORS 112.575.

Although the record is not entirely clear, there Avere apparently three types of joint interests here involved; the home was OAvned in tenancy by the entirety. Klorfine v. Cole,

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Bluebook (online)
503 P.2d 1259, 11 Or. App. 466, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bose-v-bose-orctapp-1972.