Case v. Hall

52 Ohio St. (N.S.) 24
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 52 Ohio St. (N.S.) 24 (Case v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case v. Hall, 52 Ohio St. (N.S.) 24 (Ohio 1894).

Opinion

Minshall, J.

The suit below was an action for the recovery of a legacy, brought by the legatee against the administrator of a devisee, who, as is claimed, was personally bound to pay it. ■ Judgment was rendered for the defendant, which, on error, was affirmed by the circuit court and the plaintiff excepted. Error is prosecuted here to reverse both these judgments. The facts are as follows : On October 30,1874, Major Bartholomew died, leaving a will which was shortly afterward admitted to probate and record. By his will he devised to his wife all his personal estate, and an estate for life in one-third of all his real estate, ‘ ‘ save that this day deeded by myself and wife to Benjamin F. Bartholomew, ” and at her death to go to my son, Benjamin F. Bartholomew. Then follows the items on which the question arises in this case, and which are as follows:

“Fourth — I give, bequeath and devise to my son all the remainder of my real estate, being two-thirds of the same, after he shall pay to the heirs of my daughter, Emily Jane Case, the several amounts hereinafter bequeathed to each of said heirs.
Fifth — I give and bequeath to the heirs of my deceased daughter, Emily Jane Case, one thousand dollars each, to be paid to each of them by my son, B. F. Bartholomew, as they become twenty-one years of age.” ■ •

[30]*30On the probate of the will, November 3, 1874, Benjamin took possession of the land devised to him, used and occupied it as his own to the time of his death, receiving all the rents and. profits, amounting to some $13,500. He died April 27,1888, leaving a widow and an only son, Leslie Bartholomew, who died December 1, 1888, intestate and without issue. The heirs of Emily J. Case were her children, eight in number, all of whom became of age and were paid their legacies during the lifetime of Benjamin, except the plaintiff, who became of age March 7, 1890, and W. P. Case, who, though he became of age February 29, 1888, had received but one-half of his legacy.' Hall was duly appointed administrator of Benjamin, accepted the trust and qualified as such; and the plaintiff, on arriving- at age, presented his claim for the payment of his legacy with interest from the time he became of age which was rejected.

Whereupon the plaintiff brought his suit, and the widow of Benjamin having been made a party at the instance of the administrator, both answered. There is, however, no controversy as to the facts, On the death of Leslie, the son of Benjamin, intestate and without issue, the land inherited from his father, passed by descent to his cousins, the heirs of Emily Jane Case, deceased, and of whom the plaintiff is one. His mother took the personalty, and, as widow, was entitled to her portion of that of his father’s estate. The question presented is, whether in view of the facts and the languag-e of the will, the leg-acy bequeathed the plaintiff by the will of his grandfather, became a personal obligation of Benjamin Bartholomew on his accepting the devise of the land made to him. The plaintiff claims -that it did; the defendants [31]*31claim that it did not; that no personal obligation attached until the time appointed for the payment of the legacy; and this not having arrived until after the death of Benjamin, no personal obligation can be asserted against his estate; and that the plaintiff must look to the land on -which his legacy is simply a charge and no more. This view seems to have prevailed in both the lower courts, but we are unable to adopt it. Whilst many cases may be found in which a question was made as to whether a certain legacy had, by a fair construction ' of the will, been charged on land devised, none has been cited, where, in a case like this, the entire fee simple is devised to one with direction to pay certain legacies, an acceptance of the devise does not, without question, impose a personal obligation on the devisee to pay the legacies. Thus, in Glen v. Fisher, 6 John.,Ch. 33, it is held that, where land is devised charged with the payment of a legacy, and the devisee accepts the devise, he is personally and absolutely liable for the legacy; and he has no right to require of the legatee, before payment, a security to refund, .in case of a deficiency of assets, to pay debts. And in Fuller v. McEwen, 17 Ohio St., 288, this court stated the rule in substantially the same language, and held* that in an action to enforce such personal obligation the fact that the devisee or legatee is or is not also the executor of the will, makes no difference in the case. The rule is also recognized and stated in Yearly v. Long, 40 Ohio St., 27. The rule is thus stated in Porter v. Jackson, 95 Ind., 210: Where lands are devised to one who, by the will, is directed to pay a legacy, the legacy is charged upon the land devised, and when payment of the legacy is made a condition of the devise, its acceptance [32]*32creates also a personal liability to the legatee which may be enforced without resorting- to the land, the lien still remaining as a security. Many other cases might be cited to the same effect, and are sustained by text writers of standard authority. Woerner Am. Law of Administration, 1099. Williams on Executors, 1704, 1272.

The rule rests upon the reasonable principle, that he who takes a benefit under a will, must take it subject to its provisions; any other construction would necessarily defeat the intention of the testator. So that where a devisee is required to pay legacies to others, an acceptance of the devise imports a promise to pay the legacies; - and the legatees have the right to maintain an action thereon for its non-performance, as though the promise had been made to themselves.

There is, we think, no ground for the contention that the estate in the land, devised to Benjamin, did not vest until the payment of the legacies had been made. Payment is not made a condition precedent to the vesting- of the estate; the effect of the language employed is simply to charge the land as a security for the payment of the legacies. Thompson v. Hoop, 6 Ohio St., 480, 489; Woerner on Administration, 592. Therefore, Benjamin took an estate in fee simple in the land, devised to him, on the death of the testator.

It is claimed, however, that while such is the general rule, the facts bring this case within the principle on which Decker v. Decker, 3 Ohio, 157, was decided, That was regarded by the court as a novel ease. The land was devised by his fathex to Jacob Decker with direction to pay certain legacies at different times in the future to the other children of the testator, with a limitation that if [33]*33Jacob should die without issue, the estate should go to these other children. By this provision the court held that the devisee took simply a life estate in the land, and that this negatived any intention to make the legacies, before they became due, a personal liability of the devisee. The apparent injustice of charging the devisee personally with the legacies, though the estate might terminate by his death before he received any benefit therefrom, influenced the .court in making the holding that it did.

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Related

Porter v. Jackson
95 Ind. 210 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ohio St. (N.S.) 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-v-hall-ohio-1894.