Coon v. DeMoore

15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 776, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 444
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 776 (Coon v. DeMoore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coon v. DeMoore, 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 776, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 444 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

The ease of John Coon, executor, against William B. DeMoore and others is here on appeal, and the purpose of the suit is to determine the rights of the several defendants in the property of which Ruth DeMoore was seized at the time of her death.

William B. DeMoore, since the suit was brought, has died, and one Snyder has been appointed as executor of his will, and he is made a party in the ease, the case being revived in his name in place of that of William B. DeMoore.

Ruth DeMoore was the wife of William B. DeMoore. She died in this county and left a will, a codicil of which is the matter to be considered here, for it is under this codicil that the rights of the parties are to be determined in connection with the will. It reads as follows:

“I hereby give and bequeath to Mrs. Verona Coon one-half interest in fee simple in all my realty wheresoever located of which I may die possessed, and the other half of said realty I give, devise and bequeath to Mrs. Julia Stevens, wife of A. J. Stevens, of Cleveland. I also give all my personalty, including, jewelry,, diamonds, clothing and furniture of which I may die possessed of to said Julia Stevens.”

In the will of Ruth DeMoore she nowhere mentions her husband.” She made no provision for him.

Section 4176 Rev. Stat provides for the distribution of personal property where one dies intestate, and it provides thatjme dying intestate, leaving a widow or widower, that said widow or widower shall be entitled to have distributed to him one-half of the first $400 of the personalty which shall be left after the payment of debts, and one-third of all the balance.

Section 5963 Rev. Slat, provides that where one shall die testate, owning personal property, and leaving a will in which provision is made [778]*778for the widow or widower, such widow or widower, the relict of the testator, may elect whether to take the provisions of the will or the distributive portion to which said relict would be entitled in case the testator had died intestate.

It, of course, is conceded that mider the exact language of these statutes, this widower would be- entitled to no distributive portion, because the distributive portion is provided for only when one dies intestate or when a will is left in which some provision is made for the relict widow or widower. In this case neither of these two facts existed. The widow did not die intestate, and she did not die leaving any provision in her will for her surviving hüsband.

The Supreme Court of our state, in Doyle v. Doyle, 50 Ohio St. 330 [34 N. E. Rep. 166], have construed those statutes, and have said that the estate, when one dies leaving a will in which no provision is made for the surviving widow or widower, the estate in such case is to be treated as though the party had died intestate. Each of the sections which provides for a widow, provides, in the same connection, for the widower, and reads that when one shall die leaving a widow or widower, as in the case of Doyle v. Doyle, supra, it is provided that in whatever personal estate the testator (I say testator because I think it is the right word for either sex) leaves, the husband is entitled to a distributive portion as though the wife-had died intestate.

What was that personal property of which she was seized at the time of her death ?

She had certain moneys, certain chattels, and she had whatever came to her by the third item 6f the will of Robert M. Walduck, deceased. She, at the time of his death, was left his widow, and subsequently married William DeMoore.

The third item of the will of Robert M. Walduck provides: [779]*779and after October 1, 1875, at an annual rent of thirty-nine hundred dollars, payable monthly. Also all the rest, residue and remainder of any other real and personal estate of what kind of nature soever, or wheresoever situated, other than that hereinbefore bequeathed in and by the second clause of this, my will, of which I may die seized ór possessed, unto David M. Walduck, as my executor and trustee as hereinafter named, to have and to hold the same upon trust, to take charge of, ■manage, collect and receive the rents and profits thereof, and out of the same to pay taxes, assessments, interest and insurance or other charges in relation thereto, and also pay all or any just debts — funeral and testamentary expenses, appertaining' or connected with the management of said estate, for,' during and until my said executor and trustee in his judgment shall deem it safe and for the interest of the cestui que trusts hereinafter named, to have a sale of said trust estate without sacrifice, and during such period until such disposition and sale of said trust property, my said trustee, or his successor after he shall have made said collections and payments as herein last above stated, he shall pay out of the net balance, if any remaining in his possession, the sum of seventy dollars per month to my dear wife, Ruth Walduck, for and during the present, period until the said property shall be sold as hereinbefore mentioned; and for and during the like period after the payment of the said seventy dollars per month out of said fund, the net balance of said revenue shall be equally divided and paid over by my said trustee to” certain parties named in this item of the will.

[778]*778“I give, devise and bequeath-all that certain house and lot situate, lying and being at the northeasterly corner of Sixth avenue and Eighth street in the city of New York, being the same property as mentioned and bounded in a certain deed made and executed by Philo T. Ruggles, master in chancery, to me, the said Robert M. Walduck, bearing date March 24, 1847, and recorded in the office of the register of the city and county of New York in liber 48 of conveyances, page 161, March 24, 1847; the dimensions whereof being twenty-four feet three inches in width by seventy-seven feet seven inches in length, more or less, and which premises is now subject to two separate mortgages amounting together to the sum of fifteen thousand five hundred dollars as subsisting liens therein, said property being also subject to a certain lease to James W. Scott and John W. Earle for the unexpired term of eight years from

[779]*779This property had not been sold by that trustee when Mrs. (Wal-duck) DeMoore died.

It is conceded by counsel representing all the parties here, and would be so if it were not conceded, that whatever interest Mrs. DeMoore had in this real estate described in the will "of Robert M. Walduck, was personal as to her. She had no title to any real estate. Hence all the personal property, other than this interest in this real estate — all this interest was as to her personal. That being true, the surviving husband was entitled to distribution out of the entire estate

But there remains still this question.

It should be said that when Mrs. DeMoore died she had no interest in any real estate in the world except so far as the evidence shows, whatever interest she had in this New York property. Yet, by her will, she says:

“I hereby give and bequeath to Mrs. Verona Coon one-half interest in fee simple in all my realty wheresoever located of which I may die possessed, and the other half of said realty I give, devise and bequeath to Mrs. Julia Stevens, wife of A. J. Stevens, of Cleveland. I also give [780]

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 776, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coon-v-demoore-ohcirctcuyahoga-1903.