Clarken v. Brown

137 N.W.2d 376, 258 Iowa 18, 1965 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 697
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 19, 1965
Docket51747
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 137 N.W.2d 376 (Clarken v. Brown) 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
Clarken v. Brown, 137 N.W.2d 376, 258 Iowa 18, 1965 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 697 (iowa 1965).

Opinion

Mason, J.

This is a partition action to determine the shares in which a 160-acre tract of land in Webster County is owned. The case was submitted to the trial court upon facts admitted by the pleadings, the will of T. W. Clarken and a stipulation of record.

T. W, Clarken died testate in 1939 owning the land in question, leaving no spouse nor issue. Both parents were dead. In item three of testator’s will, probated in 1939, he gave a life estate to his brother, G. "V. Clarken, who died in 1964. Item eight of the will provided: “At the death of my brother, G. Y. Clarken, I devise and bequeath said above described farm and land to my lawful heirs, as fixed by the statutes of the State of Iowa.”

Interpretation of item eight gives rise to the lawsuit.

Testator had eight brothers and sisters. G. Y. Clarken, F. M. Clarken, Dora McCardle, Mary L. Walters, John Clarken *21 and William Clarken survived him; two others had predeceased him, a sister whose only child was Hazel Brown, and a brother, Henry. Before the death of the life tenant, the remaining brothers and sisters and Hazel Brown died. These deaths create the dispute over how the will devised the fee.

The contending parties all claim under the will, partition was not contested, ownership of the shares is the dispute.

Appellants contend the remainders created by item eight of the will were contingent until the death of life tenant. Appellees claim the remainder vested at testator’s death in his heirs and, therefore, their later deaths did not affect the shares.

The trial court entered a decree of partition by sale, later a determination of points of law concluding there were two legal questions involved, 1) Was the remainder a vested or contingent one? 2) Was the distribution to be per capita or per stirpes?

The trial court held it was testator’s intention to vest the remainder at his death and the devise should be per stirpes and not per capita.

F. M. Clarken and Dora McCardle left no spouse nor issue. After testator’s death Dora McCardle and her then husband conveyed an undivided one-eighth interest in the land involved to Mary L. Walters and her then husband. F. M. Clarken conveyed all his right, title and interest in said land to Mary L. Walters. Mary L. Walters and her spouse conveyed all their right, title and interest in the land to their children, G-uy A. Walters, Lee H. Walters, Melvin R. Walters, Harriett Weiss, Evelyn Bracken and Margaret Weiss, defendants who are appellees herein. All deeds were recorded before 1964.

After reciting its conclusions as to testator’s intention, the court in a supplemental decree directed proceeds from the sale, which had been previously ordered, after certain deductions, be divided into eight parts, one part to each of the six brothers and sisters who survived testator, including the life tenant, one each to the predeceased sister and brother. The court awarded Mabel Clarken, surviving widow of life tenant, one third of the share awarded to him; Myrtle Clarken, surviving widow of John Clarken, one third of John’s share; Bertha Clarken, surviving widow of William Clarken, one third of William’s share.

*22 Under tbe division tbe children of William Clarken, John Clarken and G. Y. Clarken took the remaining two thirds of their father’s one-eighth share per stirpes. The court confirmed and established the three-eighths shares of F. M. Clarken, Dora McCardle and Mary L. Walters in the children of Mary L. Walters, who were also grantees in the quitclaim deed herein-before referred to; one-eighth share in Henry’s children and the remaining one-eighth share in the grandchildren of the predeceased sister.

From the supplemental decree thus determining the shares and ownership in said proceeds, two appeals are taken.

Neither plaintiff, Margaret Pontius, nor the intervenors, Mabel Clarken, Bertha Clarken and Myrtle Clarken, appeal.

Plaintiffs, T. W. Clarken and Marie Hanks, children of life tenant, rely on two propositions for reversal, arguing item eight created a contingent remainder and -the court erred in allowing Mabel Clarken, their father’s surviving spouse, a one twenty-fourth share. Plaintiffs assert they are each entitled to a one-twelfth interest, taking his share equally, their stepmother taking nothing as she is not an heir under the laws of intestate succession. They contend a proper interpretation of item eight creates a dubious and uncertain situation as to what persons will take testator’s property. If this theory be correct, the children of Henry Clarken, John Clarken, William -Clarken, Mary L. Walters and Hazel Brown would each take a one-sixth share per stirpes.

Those defendants who have appealed assign two propositions for reversal. 1) The court erred in holding the remainder interest vested at the time of testator’s death and decreeing distribution accordingly. 2) The court erred in holding the testator’s lawful heirs took per stirpes and in decreeing distribution accordingly. These defendants claim each was entitled to a one twenty-eighth share of the proceeds on the theory the will created contingent remainder interests, subject to G. Y. Clark-en’s life estate. In support of their position appellees contend by using the phrase “At the death of my brother, G. Y. Clarken, I devise and bequeath said * * '* farm to my lawful heirs * * *” testator clearly indicated his intention that the devise of the *23 remainder interest in his farm vested at life tenant’s death rather than at his death. They further urge that any other interpretation would result in G. V. darken taking not only a life estate in all of the farm but also a remainder interest in one eighth of it.

Defendant Francis H. Brown claimed a one-twelfth interest as a contingent beneficiary under testator’s will, alleging F. M. darken and Dora McCardle, testator’s,brother and sister, who predeceased life tenant and died without issue, were also merely contingent beneficiaries and acquired no interest in the land nor did anyone claiming by, through or under them as they had no vested interest in the property to convey.

Those defendants who are appellees allege in their counterclaim they were owners of three eighths of the land by virtue of the conveyances from F. M. darken, Dora McCardle and their mother, Mary L. Walters. They maintain the will gave a life estate, with a vested remainder in those comprising .testator’s heirs at. his death, and in the shares specified by the Iowa statutes, further contending that the phrase, “at the death of” the life tenant, refers to the time for enjoyment of the remainder, not to its vesting, and his death does not affect the share.

The cardinal and governing rule in the construction or interpretation of. a testamentary disposition is to arrive at the intention of the testator. The complete will and all terms thereof must be considered.

The intention of the testator must be gathered from the words of the will itself, if their meaning as a whole is clear, unambiguous and unequivocal.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.W.2d 376, 258 Iowa 18, 1965 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarken-v-brown-iowa-1965.