Clark v. Worrall

68 N.E. 699, 33 Ind. App. 49, 1903 Ind. App. LEXIS 255
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1903
DocketNo. 4,735
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 N.E. 699 (Clark v. Worrall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Worrall, 68 N.E. 699, 33 Ind. App. 49, 1903 Ind. App. LEXIS 255 (Ind. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Wiley, J.

Upon the determination of questions involved in this ease depends the settlement of an estate and the distribution of a large sum of money, and on petition, it was advanced. The matters in issue involve the construction of a will.

[50]*50Appellees were plaintiffs below, and in their complaint aver that Rozella Wright died, leaving an estate of the value of $16,000, of which $9,229.65 Was in money, $509 in a good note, and other personal property of the value of $300, and real estate of the value of $6,000; that said decedent left, as her sole heirs at law, certain persons, naming them, and the relation they bore to her; that on January 9, 1902, being five days after the death of Rozella Wright, a paper purporting to be her will was admitted to probate, in which John J. Potter was named as executor; that thereupon said Potter qualified as such executor, took possession of the estate, and entered upon the duties of his trust. It is averred that there were no debts against the estate; that the legacies, funeral expenses, and expenses of administration would not exceed $4,500; that there is now' in the hands of the executor $12,000, and he threatens to, and will, make disposition, of the same upon a construction of the will different from the construction put upon it by appellees, and against their interests, unless the court will construe it; and that said sum should be distributed among the heirs and legatees. It is further averred that some doubt exists as to whether the legacies should be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of real estate, or out of the personal property, and that appellants demand and claim that such legacies be paid out of the personal property, while appellees contend that they be paid out of the proceeds arising from the sale of real estate, and that the executor is about to pay them out of the personal property.

The complaint sets out the special legacies, amounting in the aggregate to $4,011, and designates the parties to whom the bequests are made, and avers that by the terms of the will the executor was directed to sell the real estate of which the testatrix died seized, and after the payment of the special legacies and expenses of administration out of such proceeds, the residue was to be divided equally among [51]*51certain persons, naming them, and that the value of the real estate was ample for such purpose. It is also alleged that the will failed to bequeath or otherwise ‘dispose of the personal estate of the testatrix, except as to some household goods, and that -her heirs at law are entitled to share therein “in the following • proportions:” Then follows a list of the heirs, and the' proportion of the estate it is alleged each is entitled to inherit. The complaint further avers that when the will was executed the testatrix was eighty years old, and that she and the girl she raised then, and for many years previous, had lived alone upon her farm; that she concealed from the person who drafted the will the greater portion of her personal estate and left the same unbequeathed, and that at the time of her death she did not owe any debts; and that appellees are each entitled to share as heirs at laAV in her personal estate. A copy of the will is filed as an exhibit.

As the sole question is to arrive at a proper construction of the will it is important that its leading terms and provisions be stated. Item one directs the payment of the just debts and funeral expenses of the testatrix and the erection of a suitable monument at her grave. Item two makes specific bequests as follows: “I give and devise, to be paid in cash to such legatees, as follows: To Thomas J. Clark, $500; to Catherine Snider, $500; to Eliza J. Ash-ton, $500; to Rosella Holman, $500; to Hattie Grant, $500; to Eliza Worrall, $200; to Curtis Worrall, $100; to Thomas J. Worrall, $5; to John R. Shadburn, $5; to David Walkup, $1; to Sadie J. Williams, $1,000; to Lucinda Walkup and her daughters, or such as may be living at my death, $200.” By item three the executor Avas directed to sell all the real estate, and execute deeds, etc., without order of court. As the decision of the case hinges largely on item four, we set it out in haec verba: “It is my will and I so direct that the proceeds of such sale, after the payment of such legacies as mentioned in [52]*52item second., and expense of administrátion, shall be divided equally between the following named parties, living at time of my death, to wit: George S. Clark, liosella C. Clark, Martha J. Walkup, Susan M. Cox, Mary E. Bergdoll, Sallie E. Brice, Luella Groub, Lizzie Toms, Thomas J. Clark, Catherine Snider, Eliza J. Ashton, Bosella Holman, Hattie Y. Grant.” By item five the executor was to deliver “such articles of household nature as I may leave undisposed of at my death to the following different parties as set out in the memoranda hereto attached.” In the memoranda attached the testatrix expressed her desire that Katie Snider divide her “household goods and effects among the parties and in the way I have expressed to her, and as she understands my wishes.”

The cause was submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, and a finding made and judgment rendered in favor of appellees, by which the court construed the will in harmony with the theory of the complaint. Motions to modify the judgment and for a new trial were overruled, and such, rulings are assigned as errors. The motions to modify were in harmony with the theory set up in the second paragraph of answer. Both the motions for a new trial and to modify the judgment may be considered together, for they involve substantially the same questions.

By the agreed statement of facts it is made to appear that the will in controversy was executed September 14, 1895; that the testatrix died January 4, 1902, and the will was duly probated January 9, 1902 (copy of the, will is set out in full) ; that on January 11, 1902, John T. Potter, qualified as executor, entered upon his duties as such, and that he is still so acting; that when the will was executed the testatrix owned a farm in Clark county, Indiana, of 103 acres, of the value of $4,700, and possessed money on deposit and other personal property of the value [53]*53of $5,000; that at the time of her death she was eighty-five years old; that she did not owe any debts; that she had personal property of the aggregate value of $10,029.65, consisting of $9,229.65 in money, one solvent note of $509, and farming implements and other personal property of the value of $300; that, by a mistake of the scrivener in drafting the will, the name of one of the legatees was written as Sallie E. Brice, when her correct name was Sallie E. Grice; that the monument mentioned in item one of the will was erected and paid for by the testatrix during her life; that the testatrix at the time of her death left as her sole heirs at law the following named persons, who are parties to this action: Lucinda Walkup, a half-sister; John B. Shadburn and Hattie V. Grant, only children of John R. Shadburn, a deceased brother; David Walkup, the only child of Mary Walkup, a deceased half-sister; Curtis Worrall, Thomas J. Worrall, Catherine Snider, Eliza J. Ashton, and Rosella Holman, the only children of Eliza J. Worrall, a deceased sister; Thomas J. Clark, George S. Clark, Rosella O. Clark, Martha J. Walkup, Susan M. Cox, Mary E. Burgdoll, Sallie E. Grice, Luella Groub and Lizzie Toms, the only children of Catherine Clark, a deceased sister.

The appellants and appellees agree that - as to her personal estate the testatrix died intestate, except as to her household goods.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.E. 699, 33 Ind. App. 49, 1903 Ind. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-worrall-indctapp-1903.