Crouse v. Crouse

259 N.W. 443, 219 Iowa 736
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 12, 1935
DocketNo. 42827.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 259 N.W. 443 (Crouse v. Crouse) 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
Crouse v. Crouse, 259 N.W. 443, 219 Iowa 736 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Powers, J.

This appeal presents several propositions relating to the distribution of the rents of real estate between the widow and heirs of an intestate where a homestead is involved. It is the fifth appeal in the contest between these parties. A brief statement of the *738 facts out of which the controversy arises is necessary to a proper understanding of the problems.

In December, 1926, John A. .Crouse was a farmer, sixty-four years of age, a widower, and the father of eight children. He lived on a five hundred-acre farm which he owned near Boone, Iowa. The appellant was his housekeeper. During that month the appellant became his wife. Early in the month of March following, he died as a result of falling or being thrown from an automobile which the appellant was driving. He will be referred to herein as the decedent, the appellant as the widow, and his surviving children as the heirs.

Very shortly following decedent’s death, his heirs instituted an action in partition covering the'five hundred acres of land. In this action the right of the widow to an interest in the land was challenged. Pending determination of questions affecting the interest of the parties in said land, a receiver was appointed for all of the land except the forty acres comprising the homestead which the widow occupied. Crouse v. Crouse, 210 Iowa 508, 229 N. W. 850. In an action at law, following a dismissal of the prayer for partition, the heirs made the claim that the felonious conduct of the widow was responsible for the death of the decedent and, therefore, she was not entitled to take anything from his estate. Section 12032, Code 1931. There appears to have been two trials on this issue in which the jury disagreed. On the third trial a jury found in favor of the heirs and against the widow. On appeal to this court the case was reversed. Crouse v. Crouse, 214 Iowa 725, 240 N. W. 213. When the case was returned to Boone county, it was transferred to equity and tried again. The district court found in favor of the widow and this finding was approved on appeal, Crouse v. Crouse, 217 Iowa 814, 253 N. W. 122. In the meantime, on application of the widow, the widow’s allowance was increased from $1,000 as originally made to $1,600, and this order was approved by this court. Crouse v. Ashford, 208 Iowa 333, 223 N. W. 510. It appears, also, that during this period the widow was indicted for manslaughter and was acquitted.

The decree of the court finding that the widow was entitled to participate in the estate of her deceased husband set- apart to her 80 acres of land out of the five hundred-acre farm so selected as to include the forty-acre homestead on which the buildings were located. This decree was affirmed in this court on the 13th day of *739 March, 1934. Crouse v. Crouse, 217 Iowa 814, 253 N. W. 122. In the meantime, the receiver had- been collecting the rent from the four hundred sixty acres and collected rent for the years 1927 to 1933, inclusive. He used, out of the rentals from time to time, such amounts as were necessary to pay the taxes on the land, including the homestead, and for necessary maintenance and repair of the property. The widow occupied the homestead from the death of her husband in March, 1927, until the jury returned a verdict against her, barring her right to participate in her husband’s estate. She was then ousted on the 21st day of January, 1931, because of the judgment entered on the verdict. The heirs collected the rent from the homestead thereafter until the widow took possession of the homestead as a part of the distributive share which had been set aside for her.

The present appeal is from a decree entered in the equity case where the receiver who collected the rents was appointed and relates to the proper distribution of the balance in his hands, and the extent to which the widow and heirs should be charged with the rents from the homestead. Both parties have appealed. The claims of the respective parties will be considered in the separate divisions of this opinion which follow.

I. The widow claims that she is entitled to the rents from the homestead and, in addition, to one-third of the gross receipts collected by the receiver from the real estate which the decedent left in addition to the homestead, or from the four hundred sixty acres. The trial court rejected this contention and held that the rental value of the homestead should be included and charged to the widow during the period she occupied the homestead, in determining the one-third of the rentals which the widow was entitled to receive from the receiver for the period following the death of decedent up to the setting aside to the widow of her distributive share. The correctness of this holding we first consider.

Rents which accrue on land after the owner’s death are chattels real and belong to those who are the owners of the land when such rents accrue and in the same proportion. In re Estate of Dalton, 183 Iowa 1013, 1015, 168 N. W. 332. Our first inquiry, therefore, is: Who were the owners of this land between the death of decedent and the time when the widow’s distributive share was set apart to her?

*740 We have definitely decided that immediately upon the death intestate of the owner of real estate, his surviving spouse and children take as tenants in common and the surviving spouse becomes vested with an undivided one-third interest and the surviving children become vested with the remaining undivided two-thirds interest, and that the widow’s undivided one-third interest may be divested by her subsequent election to take under a will, or to take a homestead for life in lieu of her distributive share. Van Veen v. Van Veen, 213 Iowa 323, 236 N. W. 1, 238 N. W. 718. In the case at bar, there was no will and there was no election to take a life estate in the homestead, so that the widow must be regarded as the owner of an undivided one-third of the lands from the death of her husband up until her share was set off to her in specific property. Thus far, there is no dispute. Controversy arises over the rents of the homestead and the rental value of the homestead. The widow contends that she has a right to the occupancy of the homestead independent of and in addition to her undivided one-third interest in all the lands, that she should not be charged with rent while she occupied the homestead, and the heirs, who collected the rent from the homestead after she was ousted and until her distributive share was set apart, should be required to account to her ■for such collection. The heirs, on the other hand, contend that while she may have the right to use and occupy the homestead, the value of that use should be taken into consideration in determining the amount she is entitled to receive as rentals from the other land. We are thus confronted with the question as to whether the widow’s right of occupancy of the homestead is to be carved out of her distributive share where such share is large enough to 'cover it, or whether it is a right independent of and in addition to her right to a distributive share.

The homestead rights of a widow in the lands left by a deceased husband are created by statute. They arise under the provisions of the following sections of the Code of 1931:

“10145. Occupancy by surviving spouse.

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259 N.W. 443, 219 Iowa 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crouse-v-crouse-iowa-1935.