Brack v. Coburn

196 S.W.2d 230, 210 Ark. 334, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 1, 1946
Docket4-7941
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 230 (Brack v. Coburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brack v. Coburn, 196 S.W.2d 230, 210 Ark. 334, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 356 (Ark. 1946).

Opinion

•RobiNs, J.

The- controversy presented by this appeal arose from an application made to the lower court by appellant, as widow of Milton G. Brack, deceased, for allotment of her dower. Appellant makes no objection to any part of the order made on her petition except that part by which the court, treating as real estate the one-third interest of Milton G-. Brack in two long-term leases, in the one instance made by Brack’s father as lessor, and inherited by appellant’s husband, and in the other made by Brack himself as lessor of inherited land, by which two different parcels of real estate in Little Book were demised to two different corporations as lessees, one of these leases being for a term of 99 years and the other for a term of 30 years, allotted to appellant as dower an undivided one-half interest for her life only in the interest of her deceased husband in these leases and in the reversion retained therein. Appellant, insisting that these leases should be treated as personal property and that she should be awarded an absolute undivided one-half interest as her dower in the rents payable thereunder on the share of her husband, has appealed from the lower court’s order.

There is no controversy whatever as to the essential facts in this case, which are as follows: Milton G. Brack died'intestate on July 29, 1945, leaving his widow, the appellant, and no child or other descendant surviving him. His collateral heirs are the appellees, who are the children of a deceased brother of said Milton G. Brack. Milton G. Brack had inherited from his father an undivided one-third interest in lot 12 and the north 10 feet of lot 11, of block 74, original city of Little Rock, subject to a lease of said property for 99 years to the State Bank Building Company, which was later assigned to the Boyle Realty Company, executed effective as of January 1, 1909, by Milton G. Brack’s father and other owners thereof, and of which lease Milton G. Brack inherited an undivided one-third interest. Said Milton G. Brack was the owner by inheritance of an undivided one-third interest in the south 40 feet of lot 11, block 74, original city of Little Rock, which said Milton G. Brack had, along with the other owners, leased to the Capital Realty Company effective as of June 1,1938, which lease was later assigned to the M. M. Cohn Company, for a term of 30 years. Milton G. Brack also owned (in addition to the one-third interest inherited-), by purchase made by him, an undivided one-sixth interest in this last-mentioned tract, but there is no controversy as to the rights of the parties as to this interest. All debts owed by Milton G. Brack have been paid. It is agreed that the estate of Milton G. Brack in both properties, extent of dower in which is involved herein, was an ancestral one.

The statutes applicable here are §§ 4420 and 4421, Pope’s Digest, as follows:

“Section 4420. A widow shall be entitled, as part of her dower, absolutely and in her own right, to one-third part of the personal estate, including cash on hand, bonds, bills, notes, book accounts and evidences of debt, whereof the husband died seized or possessed.

“Section 4421. If a husband die, leaving a widow and no children, such widow shall be endowed in fee simple of one-half of the real estate of which such husband died seized, where said estate is a new acquisition and not an ancestral estate; and one-half of the personal estate, absolutely and in her own right, as against collateral heirs; but, as against creditors, she shall be endowed with one-third of the real estate in fee simple if a new acquisition and not ancestral, and of one-third of the personal property absolutely, Provided, if the real estate of the husband be an ancestral estate she shall be endowed in a life estate of one-half of said estate as against collateral heirs, and one-third as against creditors. ’ ’

Appellant insists that the leases were evidences of debts, because they both contained the promise of the lessee to pay a stipulated annual rental — $12,000 payable in quarterly installments under one lease, and, under the other, $14,334 for the first year, $17,200 per year for the next nine years, $18,000 per year for the next ten years, and $19,000 per year for the last ten years, payable in equal monthly installments. Appellant argues that, since these leases were evidences of debt, and therefore personal property, she was entitled, under the provisions of § 4421, Pope’s Digest, to one-half thereof “absolutely and in her own right, as against collateral heirs. ’ ’

To support her contention that the interest of appellant’s deceased husband in the leases was personal property, and not real estate as the lower court held, appellant cites certain language used by this court in its opinion in the case of Stull v. Graham, 60 Ark. 461, 31 S. W. 46, and the reference to this language in the case of Mayo v. Arkansas Valley Trust Company, 132 Ark. 64, 200 S. W. 505.

In the Stull case, supra, it appeared that Stull, the decedent, had rented to Swepston the farm land appurtenant to his (Stull’s) home for the year 1892 for a rental of $3,274, evidenced by a promissory note. Stull died February 29', 1892, and, the widow’s dower not having been assigned to her by the heir during the year in which her husband died, Mrs. Stull claimed that under § 2537 of Sandels & Hill’s Digest (§ 4416, Pope’s Digest) she was entitled to the use of the “chief dwelling house of her late husband, together with the farm thereto attached,” and that therefore she was entitled to all of the note executed by Swepston to Stull and representing the rental for the year 1892. This court decided against her contention that the entire note should he awarded to her, but held that she was entitled to dower therein “as in the other personalty.” The question as to whether the rent note was chattel or real property was not an issue at all in that case. She had lived beyond the end of the year for which the property had been rented, and until long after the note matured. Hence the extent of her dower interest therein would have been the same, whether the rent was treated as a chattel or as incidental to the real estate. Therefore this language in the Stull case was in reality mere obiter dicta, and, though it was referred to in the case of Mayo v. Arkansas Valley Trust Company, 132 Ark. 64, 200 S. W. 505, a determination of the character of rentals on land of a decedent accruing after his death was not necessary to the decision in that case. In fact the court in the Mayo case indicated an unwillingness to make any declaration on the question now under consideration, saying in the opinion: “In view of the fact that the widow’s rights are not affected by the determination of that question, she being given the same proportion under our statute whether the rent be treated • as personalty or as a part of the realty, it is immaterial to decide that question.” In the reference made in the opinion in the Mayo case to the Stull case it is somewhat inaccurately stated that it had been held in the Stull case that rents accruing after the death of the owner from a lease for a term of years (italics ours) is personal property which goes to the representative of the decedent. A careful examination of. the opinion in the Stull case discloses that there was no lease of lands for a term of years, the lease there involved being for only one year. ,

There is a very material difference between the property rights involved in the Stull case and those under consideration here.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W.2d 230, 210 Ark. 334, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brack-v-coburn-ark-1946.