Cobb v. Macfarland

127 N.W. 377, 87 Neb. 408, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 241
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1910
DocketNo. 15,904
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 127 N.W. 377 (Cobb v. Macfarland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobb v. Macfarland, 127 N.W. 377, 87 Neb. 408, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 241 (Neb. 1910).

Opinions

Sedgwick, J.

On the 5th day of July, 1905, Judge Amasa Oobb died in Los Angeles, California. At the time of his death he held the legal title to 1,040 acres of land in the township of Denton, Lancaster county, Nebraska, and other property. The only heirs to survive him were his daughter, the defendant Mrs. Nannie O. Maefarland, and two grandsons, Prank S. Cobb and Gilbert A. Cobb, children of his deceased son, Moffitt McKinney Cobb, and his son’s widow, Mrs. Carrie B. Cobb, the plaintiff herein. He left a will by which he devised to his daughter, Mrs. Macfarland, an undivided one-half of the above mentioned land, and to each .of his said grandsons an undivided one-fourth, subject to life estate to their mother, the plaintiff herein. The estate devised to the plaintiff was one-third of tlie one-half devised to her two boys to be held by her during her life. The defendant Nannie C. Maefarland is the executrix of her father’s will. In 1896 Moffit McKinney Cobb was county treasurer of Lancaster county. It was discovered that there was a shortage in his accounts, and he and his sureties were notified of .this shortage and required to make settlement. Amasa Cobb was one of the sureties on his official bond. The plaintiff in her petition alleged that the deficit was $48,088.61, and that the said Amasa Cobb as one of said sureties upon said bond was personally liable for the payment of said deficit, and that about this time Moffitt McKinney Cobb died and left poli[410]*410cies of life insurance payable to this plaintiff, and that she collected thereon, together with the proceeds of certain personal property belonging to the plaintiff, an amount aggregating about the sum of $16,000, and that Amasa Cobb, to induce the plaintiff to give to him the said money to meet his liability on the bond of Moffitt McKinney Cobb, “promised the plaintiff lie would bequeath and devise unto the said plaintiff, absolutely,” the farm which she then occupied, being 800 aci'es of the land above .mentioned; that she let Amasa Cobb have the $16,000 and the same was used by him in. settling his liability upon the said bond, and she asked for a judgment “that it be. decreed that the said Amasa Cobb was bound to leave by his last will and testament to the plaintiff above named, absolutely,” the said 800 acres of land, and that the contract between the plaintiff and the said Amasa Cobb be specifically enforced, and plaintiff vested with the title to said land and the same be quieted in the plaintiff. The trial court found for the plaintiff and entered a decree accordingly, and the defendant appeals.

The principal question presented in the case is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the contract relied upon. The defendant presented several questions of estoppel and election which she insists ought to defeat the plaintiff’s claim.

1. The said 1,040 acres of land , consist of two tracts, one of 800 and the other of 240 acres. Both of these tracts for several years prior to the death of Moffitt McKinney Cobb were occupied and farmed by him and his wife, this plaintiff. They cannot be said to be adjoining, but they are contiguous, the southeast corner of the smaller tract touching the northwest corner of the larger one. Soon after the death of Amasa Cobb negotiations were begun for the sale of the smaller tract of land, and it appears from the evidence that the plaintiff participated in those negotiations and was anxious that the sale be made. She wrote several letters to the defendant, apparently seeking to promote this sale, and finally, when it was ac[411]*411complished, she and her two sons participated in the proceeds, in accordance with the provisions of the will. It is insisted by the defendant that this action on the part of the plaintiff estops her now to claim adversely to the provisions of the will. It is a fundamental principle of law that one who accepts a beneficial interest under a will thereby adopts the whole will, and renounces every right or claim that is inconsistent with the will. This is a principle of universal application, and it extends so far that, when a testator in his will disposes of property which belongs to a third party and at the same time makes provision for that third party in his will, the party whose property is so wrongfully disposed of cannot accept the provision made for him in the will, without allowing his property to be disposed of as the will provides. Jennings v. Jennings, 21 Ohio St. 56. The plaintiff is asking to enforce an alleged contract by which she is to have the 800-acre tract, absolutely, contrary to the provisions of the will. At the same time she has claimed and received under the provisions of the will her portion of the proceeds of the remaining tract of land. There is no doubt that the plaintiff must elect which course she will pursue. She now insists that this action on her part does not amount to an election. She alleges that she was not fully informed of her rights at the time she received the proceeds of the sale of this land, and that before the land was sold she had taken decisive action to enforce this contract upon which she now sues, and has never desisted from her determination to insist upon this contract. She offers to return the money which she received as a part of the proceeds of the sale of the land, and asks that she be allowed to do so, if the court shall find that her action in that regard interferes with her right to elect to enforce the contract she now sues upon. The trial court found in her favor upon this issue, and required her to return the money which she received from the proceeds of the sale of the land. In this finding we think the trial court is right.

It appears that after the death of Amasa Cobb the [412]*412plaintiff consulted with Mr. A. E. Harvey, a former partner of Judge Cobb, and a prominent member of the bar of this state, and then a member of the firm of Harvey & Harvey, engaged in the practice of law at Lincoln, Nebraska. In March, 1906, a petition was prepared for plaintiff to begin an action in the district court for Lancaster county to enforce the contract herein sued upon. This petition the plaintiff left with her attorneys, Harvey & Harvey, and she testifies that she supposed that that began the proceedings, and that she did not know that there was anything further necessary for her to do until she was further notified by her counsel, and that she was told by her attorneys that the sale of the 240-acre tract and participating in the proceeds by her would in no way interfere with her enforcement of the contract herein sued upon, and that she never elected nor intended to elect to take what was given her by the terms of the will in lieu of her right to enforce this contract. We think the evidence fully justifies this contention. The deed of 240 acres was signed by some of the parties on the 8th day of June, 1906, and was acknowledged by this plaintiff and others on the 6th day of July, 1906, several months after she supposed she had begun proceedings upon this contract. In the nature of things, no general rule can be formulated defining what acts of acceptance or acquiescence shall be sufficient to constitute an election. In each case presented the question arises whether it was intended to make an election and whether all parties can be restored to the same situation as if the act which it is claimed constitutes an election had never been performed, and these considerations generally control unless such inquiries are precluded by lapse of time or other special circumstances in the case. Medill v. Snyder, 61 Kan. 15; Bierer’s Appeal, 92 Pa. St. 265; Goodrum v. Goodrum, 56 Ark. 532.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 N.W. 377, 87 Neb. 408, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-macfarland-neb-1910.