Drake v. Knouff

170 N.E. 170, 121 Ohio St. 535, 121 Ohio St. (N.S.) 535, 67 A.L.R. 1160, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 331
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1930
Docket21921
StatusPublished

This text of 170 N.E. 170 (Drake v. Knouff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake v. Knouff, 170 N.E. 170, 121 Ohio St. 535, 121 Ohio St. (N.S.) 535, 67 A.L.R. 1160, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 331 (Ohio 1930).

Opinion

Matthias, J.

This action which was instituted in Miami county involves the construction of the will of Daniel Drake, for the purpose of determining the character of the title to certain lands devised by that will. The portions of the will and codicil essential *536 to a consideration of the question presented are as follows:

Item I of the will: “I give and devise to my beloved wife Susan Drake, the eighty (80) acres of land on which we now reside * * # for and during her natural life * * *. At the death of my said wife, I give and devise said eighty (80) acres of land to my son Thomas L. Drake, in fee simple # # # ??

Item II of the will: “I give and devise to my son, Thomas L. Drake, fifty and 91/100 acres off the south side of the farm on which I now reside, * * * he however in consideration of this devise shall pay to my Executors, in three equal payments, in three years after my death, with three per cent interest thereon, the sum of Twenty-four Hundred and Fifty dollars * * * .”

Item I of the codicil: “I hereby change and amend item No. I in my said original will, so that the devise to my wife of the said eighty (80) acres of land therein mentioned shall be changed to sixty-five (65) acres and that at the death of my said wife said sixty-five (65) acres of the said 80 acres, originally devised to my wife is hereby devised to my son Thomas L. Drake, instead of the eighty (80) acres therein mentioned and devised.”

Item II of the codicil: “I hereby change and amend item II of my said will so that the devise of land therein described, to my son, Thomas L. Drake, shall be sixty-five (65) acres, instead of fifty and 91/ 100 (50 91/100) acres, as therein mentioned, and the eighty (80) acres therein mentioned as devised to my wife, with remainder to my said son, Thomas L. Drake, is hereby changed to seventy-four and % *537 (74%) acres, and the amount provided in said item, which my son is to pay, is changed from $2,450.00 to five hundred dollars ($500.00).”

Item VII of the codicil: “I further will and devise that my son Thomas L. Drake in consideration of the devise to him at the death of my wife shall pay to my estate the sum of forty-one hundred and twenty-five dollars ($4,125.00), in four equal annual payments, commencing one year after the death of my wife, without interest.”

In like terms the testator devised to his sons John C. Drake, George H. Drake, and Theodore A. Drake certain described parcels of land with similar requirements of payments to the executors.

Thomas L. Drake, the devisee named in said will, died November 7, 1897, without issue, leaving Jennie Drake his widow, and as such widow she went into possession of the real estate devised to Thomas L. Drake. She died May 16, 1927, leaving a will whereby she devised said real estate to her relatives, the plaintiffs in this action.

By the undisputed testimony in the record the value of the land devised to Thomas L. Drake was $13,925. The total amount of payments required to be made by him was $4,625.

The sole question presented is whether the title conferred upon Thomas L. Drake under the terms of his father’s will was ancestral or nonancestral. If the former, then under the statute, upon the death of Thomas L. Drake, the title passed to the heirs of the ancestor Daniel Drake, subject to the life estate of Jennie Drake; if the latter, then upon the death of Thomas L. Drake title passed in fee simple to his widow Jennie Drake, and thence, by *538 her will, to her named devisees. If the title came to Thomas L. Drake by purchase, the disposition thereof upon his death is controlled entirely by the provisions of Section 8574, General Code. If it came by devise, then under the terms of Section 8573, General Code, the estate would vest in the widow during her life, and at her death in the brothers and sisters of the intestate, etc.

Hence, our only question is whether the title to said real estate came to Thomas L. Drake by devise or by purchase.

In this instance the record clearly discloses that the value of the property devised was far in excess of the amount the devisee was directed to pay into a fund to be used by the executor to discharge other legacies. Oúr conclusion, however, as to the ancestral character of the title of the intestate to the land in question, does not rest upon the facts peculiar to this ease; it rests upon the broader ground that, when title to real estate comes by will from an ancestor to a devisee named, such title is ancestral in character, even though a charge be made against it by the terms of the will, or some payment be required to be made by the devisee.

By the terms of this will the real estate in question is devised to the son. True the devisee is required to pay certain named sums which are to be used to discharge legacies bequeathed to others. Nevertheless it is a devise of land subject to certain payments required to be made, and its character is in no wise changed or affected by the phrase, “in consideration of the devise.” The title came to the intestate by devise. He has no title except that which came to him by and under the terms of his *539 father’s will. The legal title to real property determines the course of its descent. That proposition is conclusively established in this state in Russell v. Bruer, 64 Ohio St., 1, 59 N. E., 740, and other cases there cited.

The theory that the word “devise” as used in the statute means only and is limited to gratuitous devise, or unconditional devise, finds no support in the Ohio cases. The discussion of the statutes of descent and distribution by Hitchcock, J., in Brewster v. Benedict, 14 Ohio, 368, is interesting and instructive. Referring to this statute he said, at page 385 of 14 Ohio: “In this act, relative to descents and the distribution of personal estates, the legislature seem to have divided the property of which a man might die seized into two classes or two divisions, to wit, such as came to him in the regular course of descent, including such as may have been devised to him, or which may have been conveyed to him by deed of gift, but which he would have inherited had there been no such devise or deed of gift, and such as he may have acquired by his own industry, or by the devise or deed of gift from a person to [from] whom he could not have inherited in the regular line, either lineal or collateral. In the first class of cases, the blood of the person from whom the estate came is to be regarded in the distribution; in the last, the blood of the intestate. That such was the intention, it seems to us there can be no doubt.”

It seems quite apparent that it did not occur to that very able jurist when considering and discussing the comparatively new statute that the word “devise” was therein used in a limited or restricted sense, or as applying to any particular kind of devise.

*540 The decision of this court in the case of Case v. Hall, Admr., 52 Ohio St., 24, 38 N. E., 618, 25 L. R. A., 766, while not directly decisive of the question presented here, is instructive.

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Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 170, 121 Ohio St. 535, 121 Ohio St. (N.S.) 535, 67 A.L.R. 1160, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-v-knouff-ohio-1930.