Brown v. Routzahn

58 F.2d 329, 11 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 182, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2046, 1931 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9546
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 9, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 58 F.2d 329 (Brown v. Routzahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Routzahn, 58 F.2d 329, 11 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 182, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2046, 1931 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9546 (N.D. Ohio 1931).

Opinion

WEST, District Judge.

Action by the executor of Harvey H. Brown to recover estate taxes, in which a jury was waived. Elizabeth Brown died in 1912, and by item 2 of her will left the decedent, her husband, one-third of all her property in fee, and a life estate in a valuable residence. Subject to this bequest, item 3 gave the residue of the estate in trust to the decedent, his son, Payette Brown, and a trust company, as testamentary trustees. It required the net income of the trust estate to be paid over to Harvey H. Brown during his life and thereafter to his five children until they reached the age of 30, when they were to have the principal. Harvey H. Brown and his son, Payette, were made executors of Mrs. Brown’s will. On December 28, 1912, the decedent duly elected in writing to take under the will. The estate was not settled until in 1920. ■ The executors then made application to the probate court for authority to distribute the assets in kind to the three testamentary trustees to be by them held and administered under the terms of the will. The application stated that Harvey H. Brown had renounced his rights under the will, except his life estate in the above and another residence, and to have the income paid to him by the testamentary trustees, and that the property renounced had become a part of the residue. And a written statement from Mr. Brown to the effect that he had so renounced accompanied the application. Upon the court’s order Mrs. Brown’s executors turned over the personal estate, consisting of securities and cash, to the three testamentary trustees, took their receipts, and on June 7, 1920, were discharged from their trust.

The plaintiff’s contention is that the gift, having been renounced by the decedent, never became a part of his estate, while defendant claims that Mr. Brown’s election to take under the will constituted a definite acceptance of its benefits. The court’s view is that the effect of the election was merely to bar the widow from thereafter claiming except under the will. Notwithstanding the election, he still had the right to say what, if any, of its separate gifts he would accept and what decline. See Gen. Code, § 10572, and Carder v. Comm’rs, 16 Ohio St. 354.

The general rule is that a beneficiary may refuse to accept property given him by will, but he cannot accept such parts of an entire gift as he wishes- and reject the rest. See Page on Wills, § 1233.

“A gift of property by will is supposed prima facie to be beneficial to the devisee or legatee, and consequently it is also supposed, until the contrary is proved, that the gift is accepted by him. But he is at liberty to refuse or disclaim it, for the law will not compel a man to take property against his will.’ Disclaimer may be express or implied, but there can be no effectual disclaimer after a party has once elected to accept the gift. An election, like disclaimer, may be inferred from the conduct of the party. Thus, if a devisee retains possession for some years of property subject to charges which exceed its .value, he may be deemed to have elected to accept the devise.

“Where by the same will two properties are given to the same person, one beneficial and the other burdensome, he is generally at liberty to accept the former and reject the latter, although by so doing he throws a burden on the testator’s general estate, which, if he had accepted both, must be borne by himself. * * *

“The eases are not easy to reconcile, but the test seems to be whether or not the gifts are separate and distinct. If onerous property and beneficial property are included in the same gift as an aggregate, then, unless a contrary intention appears by the will, the donee can not disclaim the onerous property and accept that which is beneficial; he must take the whole gift or nothing. But if twoQ distinct gifts are made by the same will, one of them being onerous and the other beneficial, the donee may reject the former and take the latter.” Jarman on Wills (7th Ed.) p. 530.

The author cites, among other eases, Guthrie v. Walrond, 22 Ch. Div. 573, where [332]*332it is held: “When by a will two distinct legacies are bequeathed to the same person, one of them being onerous and the other beneficial, prima facie the legatee is entitled to disclaim the onerous legacy and to take the other. If, however, onerous property and beneficial property are included in the same gift, prima facie the legatee can not disclaim the onerous and accept the beneficial; he must take the whole gift or none of it. But this prima facie rule may be rebutted if the will manifests a sufficient intention of the testator to the contrary.”

Also Parnell v. Boyd, 2 Ir. Rep. 571. In this ease a testator in 1890 devised all his property to the defendant, who entered into possession of all but a certain house, and in 1895 made a deed disclaiming this house. It was held not competent to disclaim one portion of the property while accepting the rest. Of the contention that the disclaimer was good, Lord Ashbourn, in deciding the appeal, said: “I do not think it necessary to discuss the second question arising in the will, which I regard' as entirely untenable. It was clearly not competent for the devisee here to pick and choose. He can not reject one part and accept the rest. The matter is really closed by authority.”

See, also, Green v. Britten, 42 L. J. Ch. 187; In re Baron Kensington, [1902] 1 Ch. 203, 213.

In the case at bar, the evidence shows that during the seven or eight years from the probate of the will to the settlement of the estate Mr. Brown collected from the executors and enjoyed the income from his wife’s estate, including that produced by the one-third part bequeathed by item 2. He had no right to this save as legatee under such item. A specific legacy, or a general legacy of all or a fraction, or the residue of an estate, carries with it the profits or income arising after testator’s death, as an incident to the legacy, in the absence of other disposition. Page on Wills, § 1398; Whitehead’s Estate, 268 Pa. 407, 112 A. 16; Buchanan’s Case, 166 Iowa, 663, 148 N. W. 881. Consequently acceptance of this income was acceptance of a part of the legacy, and thereafter there could be no renunciation.

Coneededly the decedent accepted the life estate in the Euelid avenue residence given by item 2; and in the Mentor property given by the 'second item of the codicil. The will gave the use of these properties as homes for himself and children, and the testator evidently intended the one-third of her estate to pass and be enjoyed in connection with the residence. The gift was entire, and acceptance of the use of the residences, certainly of the one mentioned in item 2 of the will, bound the decedent to accept the rest of the gift.

Prima facie, the acceptance of part of the entire gift bound decedent to take it all, and, as stated by the authorities supra, this prima facie rule can only be rebutted if the will -manifests a sufficient intention of the testator to the contrary. If the legatee disputes the entirety of the gift, he must support his contention by language found in the will. There is no language in that document indicating any intent that the gift under item 2 could be split into parts or accepted piecemeal.

It is no answer to say that, when the one-third of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 329, 11 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 182, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2046, 1931 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-routzahn-ohnd-1931.