Duncan v. Duncan

23 S.W.2d 91, 324 Mo. 167, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 379
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 11, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 91 (Duncan v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan v. Duncan, 23 S.W.2d 91, 324 Mo. 167, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 379 (Mo. 1929).

Opinions

This is a partition suit. The questions presented involve the right of the heirs to maintain a suit for compulsory partition of real estate against the will of the widower of an intestate decedent, as well as the extent of the marital estate of the widower in said real estate. The trial court sustained a demurrer of the widower to plaintiff's amended petition, and entered judgment dismissing the amended petition and for costs against plaintiff. Plaintiff appealed.

The petition, omitting caption and signatures, reads:

"Now on this day comes the plaintiff in the above entitled cause and for his amended petition in this cause states that he and the defendants are seized of, and are the joint owners in fee of the following described real estate situate in Jackson County, Missouri, to-wit:

"All of the Northwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section Thirty (30), Township Forty-eight (48), Range Thirty-two (32), Jackson County, State of Missouri.

"Plaintiff states that the interest of this plaintiff and of the defendants Thomas T. Duncan, Lottie Johnson, Bessie Green, Alta Green, David Duncan and Willie M. Duncan, is acquired by inheritance as heirs of Anna Duncan, deceased; that the said Anna *Page 170 Duncan departed this life intestate on the 4th day of March, 1924, and at the date of her death was the owner in fee of above described property; that letters of administration were taken out upon the estate of the said Anna Duncan in the Probate Court of Jackson County, Missouri, on the ____ day of __, 1924, by the defendant Willie M. Duncan, and that the said Willie M. Duncan was duly appointed administrator of said estate on the ____ day of ____, 1924.

"Plaintiff states that the share of said land to which he is entitled is an undivided one-sixth interest in and to the above described real estate, subject to the dower of the defendant, Willie M. Duncan.

"Plaintiff states that the interest of the several defendants therein are as follows: That the defendants Thomas Duncan, Lottie Johnson, Bessie Green, Alta Green and David Duncan are each entitled to an undivided one-sixth interest in and to the above described real estate, subject to the curtesy or dower of the defendant Willie M. Duncan.

"Plaintiff further states that the defendant Willie M. Duncan is the widower of the said Anna Duncan, deceased, and has, or claims to have some right or interest in and to said real estate by virtue of his marital rights; that the curtesy or dower of said defendant Willie M. Duncan, if he is entitled to same, has never been admeasured or set off.

"Plaintiff states that, though the estate of Anna Duncan is not fully administered, the personal property belonging to said estate is more than sufficient to pay all claims and debts against the estate.

"Wherefore, plaintiff prays that partition of said lands may be made between the parties plaintiff and defendant according to their respective interest therein, and if partition in kind cannot be made without great prejudice to the plaintiff and defendants respectively that the same may be ordered to be sold and the proceeds divided between said parties, according to their respective interests, and for such other orders, decrees and relief as to the court may seem meet and just in the premises."

The record advises that a trial was had and evidence introduced, which comprised statements by counsel and the admission of the truth of the statements. The record shows that Anna Duncan died intestate on March 4, 1924, and was, at the time of her death, the owner in fee simple of the land described in the petition. She left surviving her, her husband, Willie M. Duncan, and plaintiff and the remainder of the defendants her children. Anna Duncan acquired the real estate November 7, 1903. Prior to this date living children were born to Willie M. and Anna Duncan. *Page 171

I. A question arises as to whether defendant Willie M. Duncan, the husband of Anna Duncan, who died seised of the property described, had an estate of curtesy in the land. There are two gradations to an estate by the curtesy, to-wit,Curtesy: curtesy initiate and curtesy consummate. TheInitiate and requisites or elements of the estate of curtesyConsummate: initiate are: (1) marriage; (2) seisin in the wifeAbolished. during coverture; and (3) issue born alive before the wife's death and capable of inheriting the estate. In addition to the above requisites, curtesy consummate includes the death of the wife. When these requisites respectively attach, both curtesy initiate and curtesy consummate are vested estates. [17 C.J. 416.]

We have ruled that the Married Woman's Act of 1889 abolished the estate of curtesy initiate (Riggs v. Price, 277 Mo. 333, 210 S.W. 420), and we need not discuss it further. This ruling conforms to the general ruling on the subject. [17 C.J. 417.] However, this ruling does not apply to an estate of curtesy initiate that vested prior to the passage of the Married Woman's Act of 1889. [Powell v. Powell, 267 Mo. 117, 183 S.W. 625.] But, as Anna Duncan did not become seised of the property sought to be partitioned herein until 1903, it is evident, under our ruling, that her husband never became vested with an estate by the curtesy initiate in said land, for the Married Woman's Act of 1889 had therefore abolished such estate.

Relative to curtesy, the General Assembly enacted an act (Laws 1921, p. 119), reading:

"The estate which a widower may have in the real estate of his deceased wife known as `tenancy by the curtesy,' is hereby abolished, and in lieu thereof the widower shall have the same share in the real estate of his deceased wife that is provided by law for the widow in the real estate of her deceased husband, with the same rights of election and the same limitations thereto; provided that nothing contained in this act shall be so construed as to defeat any estate by the curtesy which shall have vested prior to the date of taking effect of this act."

The Act of 1921 does not purport to affect an estate by the curtesy initiate, for it purports to abolish only the estate which a widower may have in the real estate of his deceased wife, to-wit, curtesy consummate. Thus we see that the Married Woman's Act of 1889 abolished curtesy initiate, and the Act of 1921 abolished curtesy consummate. These abolishments of the respective estates took place and existed before respectively the estates of curtesy initiate or curtesy consummate attached and vested in the defendant widower. At the time Anna Duncan became seised of the land in 1903, there was no estate of curtesy initiate in her husband, for the Married Woman's Act had abolished it, and, so far as curtesy *Page 172 initiate in the property was concerned, it had never attached or existed. At the time of her death, there was no estate of curtesy consummate in her widower, for the Act of 1921 abolished it, and, consequently, it never came into existence or vested.

It is true that, prior to the quoted Act of 1921, the defendant, Willie M. Duncan, had what might be termed an inchoate expectance or contingency of curtesy consummate in the lands of his wife. This was only an expectancy or hope, however, for it was her privilege to sell or dispose of such lands without his consent during her life (Farmers Exchange Bank v. Hageluken,165 Mo. 443, 65 S.W. 728), and thus defeat the expectancy of curtesy consummate. In any event, such expectancy was not an estate in her lands, and the expectancy was the subject of abolishment by the Legislature at its discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 91, 324 Mo. 167, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-duncan-mo-1929.