Carpenter v. Severin

204 N.W. 448, 201 Iowa 969
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 25, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 204 N.W. 448 (Carpenter v. Severin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. Severin, 204 N.W. 448, 201 Iowa 969 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

De Graff, J.

Thaddeus B. Carpenter and his wife Celia A. died January 23, 1923, in a common disaster, while riding in an automobile which was struck by a locomotive. When found, both were dead, and there is no evidence that either predeceased the other.

Thaddeus, in 1904, executed a will, subsequently probated, in which he devised all his property, after the payment of debts and expenses of administration, to his “wife, Celia Car-penter, absolutely, by her to be received, held, enjoyed, and disposed of as she may think proper.” Celia, in 1914, executed a will, subsequently probated, in which she devised all her property, after the payment of debts and expenses of administration, to her “husband, Thaddeus B. Carpenter, absolutely, by him to be received, held, enjoyed, and disposed of as he may think proper. ’ ’

Thaddeus owned the property in question, lie died without issue or parents, and the plaintiff, his brother, is his only heir at law. Celia died without issue or parents, and the defendants, two brothers, a sister, and children born to or adopted by other deceased brothers, are her heirs at law. The estate of Thaddeus Avas approximately $200,000 in value; the estate of Celia was approximately $20,000, at the time of their common death.

The question for decision stated: Did the death of Thaddeus and Celia Carpenter in a common disaster, without evidence of survivorship, have the effect of substituting, under the terms of the statute (Section 11861, Code of 1924), the defendants, as beneficiaries in his will?

Plaintiff in his petition alleges that he is the OA\uier in fee simple of certain described real estatethat he is the brother and sole heir at laAV of Thaddeus B. Carpenter, who died seized of the said real estate; that he is informed and believes that the defendants “make some claim adverse to the estate of the plaintiff in said property, because of the fact that the defendants are the only heirs at law of Celia Carpenter; but *971 tbe plaintiff avers that neither the said Celia Carpenter nor the defendants inherited or became otherwise entitled to any part of the property, or the estate of the said Thaddeus B. Carpenter. Wherefore, plaintiff prays that his title and estate be established against the adverse claims of the defendants and each of them. ’ ’

The defendants, by answer and cross-bill, admit the death of Thaddeus and Celia Carpenter as alleged, and that the plaintiff is the brother and sole heir at law of Thaddeus B. Carpenter. Further answering, defendants allege that Celia A. Carpenter was the sole devisee and legatee in the will of Thaddeus B. Carpenter, now deceased, and that the said Celia A. Carpenter “did not survive the said testator, Thaddeus B. Carpenter;” that she died without issue, but was survived by the defendants named in the petition. By way of cross-bill, the defendants allege that they, are the owners in fee simple of the real estate in question, of which Thaddeus B. Carpenter died seized, but leaving a last will and testament making the said Celia A. Carpenter the sole devisee and legatee therein; that the said Celia A. Carpenter did not survive the testator; and that the defendants are her surviving heirs at law; and that said defendants are informed and believe that the plaintiff makes some claim adverse to their title and ownership in said real estate, and pray that their title and estate be established against the adverse claim of plaintiff and against all persons claiming by, through, or under him. These are the allegations contained in the pleadings material and necessary for the determination of the issues involved.

The multiplicity of casualties attending our modern life has frequently called for the application of the legal principle which is the very heart of the instant controversy. The principle, however, antedates the present era by many generations. The difficulty is, and always has been, that, in most cases of this character, involving the death of two or more persons in a common disaster arising from shipwreck, explosion, conflagration, or vehicle accident, there is no evidence whatsoever as to survivorship. It being recognized, as it must be, that survivorship as a matter of fact is unascertainable and un *972 provable by evidence in many instances, there has ever been a quest for a rule more satisfactory and logical than Lord Mansfield’s advising litigants out of court.

The civil law of Rome indulged in various presumptions as to the survivorship between persons who perish in a common disaster, based upon age, sex, and physical strength of the individuals.. These find expression in the law of Justinian, in the Code Napoleon, and in the judicial systems of the Latin countries of Europe. In other words, the canons of the civil law attempt to solve the question by certain fixed rules, obviously framed upon a presumption of fact as to who would actually survive. For example: A father was presumed to survive his son of tender years; but, if the son had reached adolescence at the time of the calamity, he was presumed to have survived his father. So a man was presumed to have survived a woman, for the same reason. The presumptions of the Roman law have received neither judicial nor legislative sanction in the states of the American union, with the exception of California and Louisiana, in which states the rule of the civil law has been adopted by statute. See Grand Lodge A. O. U. W. v. Miller, 8 Cal. App. 25 (96 Pac. 22); Succession of Langles, 105 La. 39 (29 So. 739).

At common law, and in all other states of this union, there is no presumption of survivorship. This results in a rule that a claimant must establish the fact of survivorship, as a condition precedent to his right to recover the x ° property; and only that party can succeed whose right is not dependent upon such a condition. The English law, refusing to follow the presumptions of the civil law, deems the relative order of dissolution, in the absence of proof, as unascertainable in law as it is in fact. Wing v. Angrave, 8 H. L. Cas. 182; Underwood v. Wing, 24 L. J. (N. S.) Ch. 293 (19 Beav. 459). Likewise, it is a rule quite universally adopted by our courts that sur-vivorship is a fact to be proved by the party asserting it. Fuller v. Linzee, 135 Mass. 468; Johnson v. Merithew, 80 Maine 111; Supreme Council of Royal Arcanum v. Kacer, 96 Mo. App. 93 (69 S. W. 671); Newell v. Nichols, 12 Hun (N. Y.) 604; *973 Graybill v. Brown, 194 Iowa 290. Tbe majority rule also holds that there is no presumption as to simultaneous or co-instantaneous death. Cowman v. Rogers, 73 Md. 403; Dunn v. New Amsterdam Cas. Co., 141 App. Div. 478 (126 N. Y. Supp. 229); Johnson v. Merithew, supra; Smith v. Croom, 7 Fla. 81; Hildenbrandt v. Ames, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 377 (66 S. W. 128); United States Cas. Co. v. Kacer, 169 Mo. 301 (69 S. W. 370). See, also, Lawson’s Law of Presumptive Evidence 298; 8 Ruling Case Law 716, Section 12 et seq. Apparently there are but few cases to the contrary. Kansas Pac. R. Co. v. Miller, 2 Colo. 442; Balder v. Middeke, 92 Ill. App. 227; Walton & Co. v. Burchel, 121 Tenn.

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Bluebook (online)
204 N.W. 448, 201 Iowa 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-severin-iowa-1925.