Estate of Rees v. Rudd

290 N.W. 167, 233 Wis. 635, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 52
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 167 (Estate of Rees v. Rudd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Rees v. Rudd, 290 N.W. 167, 233 Wis. 635, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 52 (Wis. 1940).

Opinion

FowleR, J.

John Krom Rees, a resident of New York, died March 9, 1907, leaving a will by which he gave two thirds of the income of his property to his wife during hei life; by paragraph 3 he gave to his children one third of such income, to be divided among them as his wife should direct Paragraph 4 reads:

“At the death of my wife, I direct that all property real and personal be divided equally among the surviving children : or their issue as my wife directs in her will.”

The will was admitted to- probate in New York in 1907. The testator at his death owned real estate in Milwaukee, and in 1916 the will was admitted to probate in Milwaukee *637 county. The testator left surviving him three minor children. The widow in 1923 instituted in the circuit court for Milwaukee county infant-heir proceedings for the sale of this real estate. The court directed this land and all interest of everybody interested therein under the will be sold by a referee, the proceedings to abide the order of the court. A contract for the sale of the land for $320,000 subject to a mortgage of $115,000 which the purchaser assumed was procured, the purchase price over'the mortgage being payable in instalments to “such trustee or trust company as the court” might designate. The contract was approved by the court, sale and conveyance were made and confirmed by the court, and on appeal to this court the order of confirmation was affirmed in Application of Rees, 182 Wis. 239, 196 N. W. 239. This order contained an appointment of the First Wisconsin Trust Company as trustee “to act under and pursuant to- said agreement of sale,” the trust company accepted the trust, and has since administered it, and now has in its possession property inventoried at book values at $189,387.63.

In 1932 inheritance tax proceedings were had in the county court of Milwaukee county in the estate of Rees, the net value of the property was fixed at $31,834.17, and a tax was assessed and paid totaling $158.36, $1.13 of which was assessed to the widow and $52.41 to each of the three surviving children of the-testator.

In 1936 the widow of the testator died and left a will, one provision of which is :

“In execution of the power of appointment vested in me by the will of my late husband, John Krom Rees, I give, devise and bequeath to our children, Mabel Sands Coffin, Emma Rees Rudd, and Florence Dubois Moo-re, all and every, the real and personal property wherever • situated, of which my said husband died seized and possessed, ... in equal shares, or if any of my said daughters shall die before *638 me, to her issue, or should she leave no issue, to her sisters, or to their issue, if they, or either of them, should have predeceased her, such issue to' take the share of her mother.”

This will was admitted to probate in New York. The three daughters of John Rees who survived him also survived his widow, and each of these, after the widow’s will was admitted to probate, filed an instrument stating that she renounced “her right to take under the power of appointment exercised by the widow,” and elected “to reject said appointment and to take the property so appointed” under the will of John Krom Rees. The executor of the widow’s will in 1937 filed in Milwaukee county court, in the proceeding wherein her will was probated, a petition for the appointment of the public administrator as special administrator “for the purposes of adjustment, determination and payment of the inheritance or transfer tax due to the state of Wisconsin, if any, on the property” of the decedent John Krom Rees. Hearing was had on this petition in January, 1939, Hon F. W. Bucklin, county judge of Washington county, presiding. The court on April 7, 1939, entered an order deciding that no inheritance tax was due the state. From this order the state appeals. The ground of the county court’s decision was that the widow of John Krom Rees did not “really have a power to exercise as donee under her husband’s will.”

The state contends that the will of Rees did confer a power of appointment on his widow, and in support of its contention cites the statement of this court in the opinion in Application of Rees, supra, as follows (p. 241) :

“The will of the testator should be carried out according to its terms, in so far as possible. The will in this matter bears evidence of confidence and trust of the testator in his widow. She has it wholly within her discretion as to how the property shall be divided among her heirs at her death.”

If the will of Rees had been directly before the court for construction this statement would rule the instant case. But *639 no question of construction was involved. The will of Rees was indirectly involved because “the issue” of the three surviving daughters of the testator might eventually be entitled to share in the testator’s property if the will were construed as conferring a power upon the testator’s wife. But in the only proceeding before the court the three daughters of Rees, at the time adults, and his widow desired the sale of the property, because the property consisting of land was deteriorating and becoming nonproductive, and to produce income new buildings were necessary which the widow and children were without means of erecting and initiated proceedings for the sale of what interest, if any, the infant children of these daughters might eventually acquire in the land through the will of Rees. The guardian ad litem of infant children of the daughters appealed the order confirming the sale. The court, in protection of the contingent interest of these children, only approved and confirmed the sale of such interest, if any, as they might ultimately acquire under the will. Construction of the will of Rees not being in issue on the appeal, the decision on the appeal is not res judicata as to that construction, although the statement quoted from the opinion does show that the court then considered that the wife had a real power of appointment. Paragraph 4 must therefore be now construed as an original proposition.

Paragraph 4 of the will is a short provision, but different persons may well draw different conclusions as to what the testator meant by it. He manifestly meant something, and what he did mean must be determined and effectuated. His direction was that at his wife’s death the property “be divided equally among the surviving children: or their issue as my wife directs in her will.” The surviving children were the three daughters of the testator by his wife who were named in the wife’s will. It seems to us that by the provision just stated the testator most probably meant that should a daughter die before her mother the mother might then by *640 her will give the portion of the property that would have gone to the deceased daughter, had she survived the mother, to' her issue if she left any instead of to the surviving daughter or daughters of the testator. By the first sentence of paragraph 4 the portion of a daughter who' should die before the mother would go to the daughters or daughter who survived the mother.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 167, 233 Wis. 635, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-rees-v-rudd-wis-1940.