Cordon v. Gregg

101 P.2d 414, 97 P.2d 732, 164 Or. 306, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 90
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 101 P.2d 414 (Cordon v. Gregg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cordon v. Gregg, 101 P.2d 414, 97 P.2d 732, 164 Or. 306, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 90 (Or. 1939).

Opinions

*309 RAND, C. J.

Francis Marion Hnitt died testate on October 14,1937, leaving an estate of both real and personal property in Douglas county. He left as his sole heir at law James Gregg Huitt, his only child, a boy of the age of seventeen years. The boy died unmarried and without issue some two months later, leaving as his sole heir at law his mother, Mrs. Lucy M. Skeeters, the divorced wife of the testator and one of the defendants herein.

By his will, the testator named the plaintiff as executor and gave and devised all his property to the plaintiff in trust for his son with directions that all the devised property should be paid over and transferred to the son when he reached the age of twenty-one years. The will contained no provision directing what disposition should be made of the property of the estate in case the son should die before reaching the age of majority.

James R. W. Gregg is the duly appointed administrator of the son’s estate. The remaining defendants, the respondents herein, are the persons who would have been the next of kin and heirs at law of the testator had the son predeceased his father. Plaintiff, as executor of the estate, brought this suit, praying for a declaratory decree to have judicially determined whether the undistributed intestate property of the deceased son descended, upon his death, to his mother as his sole heir at law or to those persons who would have been the next of kin of his father had the son predeceased the father. Upon the trial of the cause in the court below, a decree was entered adjudging that all the property of the estate of the son descended, upon his death, to the next of kin of the testator, and, from this decree, the mother and the administrator of the son’s estate have appealed.

*310 It is well settled in this state that the descent and distribution of intestate property is governed and controlled entirely by the statutes of this state and that, it is only whenever the statute does not cover a particular situation that the common law of descent and distribution can be applied in determining heir-ship : Smallman v. Powell, 18 Or. 367, 23 P. 249, 17 Am. St. Rep. 742; Miller v. Miller, 117 Or. 399, 244 P. 526.

It is also settled in this state that, where the sole beneficiary of a trust created by a will dies and no further provision is contained in the will for the distribution of the trust property, the trust is terminated: Winslow v. Rutherford, 59 Or. 124, 114 P. 930.

Section 10-101, Oregon Code 1930, governs and controls the descent and distribution of real property in this state. So far as applicable here it provides:

“When any person shall die seised of any real property, or any right thereto, or entitled to any interest therein, in fee simple, or for the life of another, not having lawfully devised the same, such real property shall descend subject to his debts, as follows: * * *
“3. If the intestate shall leave no lineal descendants, neither husband, nor wife, nor father, such real property shall descend to his or her mother; * * *
“5. When any child shall die under the age of twenty-one years and leave no husband nor wife nor children, any real estate which descended to such child shall descend to the heirs of the ancestor from which such real property descended the same as if such child died before the death of such ancestor.”

But for subdivision 5 thereof, the real property of the deceased child would descend to his mother since she alone is his sole heir at law, and it would pass to her under the provisions of subdivision 3 of said section. The only question, therefore, for decision here is whether the legislature intended, when it provided *311 that “any real estate which descended to snch child shall descend to the heirs of the ancestor from which snch real property descended the same as if such child died before the death of such ancestor”, that the words “descend” and “descended”, as used in the statute, should be given their common-law meaning of a succession of real property to an heir upon the death of his ancestor by operation of law and to exclude from the operation of the statute such real property as had been devised to the heir by his ancestor. Unless so intended by the legislature, the title to the real property of the deceased son must, by force of the statute, vest in the next of ldn of the testator the same as if the child had died before the death of his father. In support of their claim that they succeeded to the real property upon the death of the son, the next of ldn invoked the rule of the English common law that an heir shall not take by devise where he may take the same estate by descent. The reason for the rule is that title by descent was regarded at common law as the worthier and better title because it took away the entry of those who have a right to the land.

We do not believe that this rule does or ever has prevailed in this state, nor do we think that such a rule should be invoked in such a case for clearly in this state those who have a right to the land may enter upon and take possession regardless of whether the person in possession thereof acquired his title by descent or by devise. Moreover, in this case, the son did not take the same estate in the land by devise which he would have taken by descent, it having been devised not directly to the son but to the plaintiff in trust for the son. We recognize that it is a well-established rule that in the construction of statutes, words used in the *312 statute which have a well-defined legal meaning are to he given that meaning.

Until the statute of descent of this state was amended by chapter 184, L. 1905, no such provision as the one now under consideration was contained in the statute and, as far as we are advised, this particular provision has not been construed by any decision of this court. In enacting this provision, the legislature could have had no valid reason for importing into the statute any distinction between a title taken by devise and one taken by descent, such as was recognized by the early English common law.

The word “descended” is defined in The Oxford English Dictionary as “derived, sprung from a person or stock”, while the legal meaning of the word “descent” is there defined as “the passing of property (in England only of real property) to the heir or heirs without disposition by will; transmission by inheritance”. One of the definitions of the word “descent”, as given in Webster’s New International Dictionary, is “derivation, as from an ancestor; procedure by generation; lineage; birth; extraction”. We think it was in the sense of being derived from rather than upon the existence of any distinction between the acquiring of an estate in real property by devise, which was regarded at common law as by purchase, and the descent of property to an heir from his ancestor by operation of law that the word is used in our statute. At the time of the testator’s death, the mother of the deceased child was not an heir of the testator and, if the child had predeceased his father and his father had died intestate, the mother could not have inherited any of the real property of the testator.

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Cordon v. Gregg
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Bluebook (online)
101 P.2d 414, 97 P.2d 732, 164 Or. 306, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordon-v-gregg-or-1939.