Collins v. Ahrens
This text of 189 Iowa 178 (Collins v. Ahrens) 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.
Opinion
At the outset, appellee urges upon us that the appellant has no right to maintain an action to construe said will. Assuming, for the purposes of present discussion, that appellees have not waived the right to make this objection, we think that the objection is valid. It was squarely held, in Higgins v. Downs, 101 App. Div. 119 (91 N. Y. Supp. 937), that adjudgment creditor of a beneficiary cannot sue to determine the estate of the beneficiary. Speaking to the giving construction to a doubtful or disputed clause in a will, Mr. Pomeroy, in the third volume of his work on .Equity Jurisprudence (3d Ed.), says (page 2301) :
“In accordance with this doctrine, which regards a trust, express or implied, as essential to the jurisdiction, it necessarily follows that the suit can only be maintained by some party directly interested in the trust under the will; that is, by an executor or a trustee, or bjr a cestui que trust, or a legatee; it cannot be maintained by an heir at law, or a devisee of a mere legal title, and much less by a creditor.”
For this text, a very large number of cases are cited by the author. It was ruled, in Clark v. Carter, 200 Mo. 515 (98 S. W. 594), that a purchaser of land from an executrix cannot proceed to have a will construed. We held, in De [180]*180Rousse v. Williams, 181 Iowa 379, at 387, that a debtor who has no more than a right to assert an interest in property under a will is not obliged to assert such right to benefit his creditors, and that he is at liberty to make an election not to acquire property. An heir might, by successfully contesting a will, obtain means out of which payment of his debts could be made. The same result might follow from his succeeding in having the testament given a certain construction. But no one will claim that his creditor can contest the will and thus ultimately obtain satisfaction of his debt. We can see -no reason why one who would have no standing to contest a will has standing to have it construed.
[181]*181Iu view of what has been said, it may, perhaps, be unnecessary to add that this objection is one we should have raised on our own motion. The fair effect of the law on the subject is that equity has no jurisdiction to construe a will at the insistence of a mere creditor of one who might inherit if the'will be construed a given way. If that is so, we could not reverse at the instance of such creditor, and would have to raise for ourselves the point that he had no standing to maintain his appeal. — Affirmed.
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189 Iowa 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-ahrens-iowa-1920.