Evers v. Williams

29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 197, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1620
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedNovember 20, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 197 (Evers v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evers v. Williams, 29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 197, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1620 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Morrow, J.

Henry H. Evers died before his employer, Charles J. Ryling, who left a will containing the following item:

“(Iten 3.) I give and devise to Henry H. Evers, my bookkeeper, and his heirs forever, my three houses Nos. 525, 527 and 529 Findlay street, Cincinnati, Ohio, together with the lots of land upon which they are situated, with the privileges and purtenances to the same belonging-.”

Ryling and Evers were not related.

The long established rule or principle is that:

“A devise, or legacy, lapses by the death of the devisee, or legatee, in .the lifetime of the testator.” See Davis Heirs v. Taul, 6 Dana, Kentucky, 52.

[199]*199This principle, however, has been modified in Ohio by the so-called “Statute against Lapses,” Section 10581, General Code, but only to the extent of exempting from its operation the issue of a “child or other relative,” (of the testator,) who was dead at the time the will was made, or dies thereafter leaving issue surviving the testator.

In this case, therefore, we hold that a devise to “Henry H. Evers, and his heirs forever” is the devise of a fee simple estate in the property sought to be given, but Evers’ death before the testator’s death caused the legacy to lapse and the heirs of Evers got nothing by the instrument.

As stated in Rea, Exer., v. Griffin, 21 Nisi Prius (N.S.), 129, at page 136, the words “heirs” is a word of limitation, and not of substitution. See also Wood, Admr. v. Anna M. Seaver, 158 Mass., 411, 33 N. E., 587; also Brison v. Holbrook, etc., 159 Mass., 280; Kimball v. Story, 108 Mass., 382; Horton v. Earle, 162 Mass., 448; and other cases cited in 40 Cyc. 1925, which states the general rule above quoted. See also Rood on Wills (2nd Ed.) Sec. 668, p. 633, 224 Mich. 658, 195 N. W, 430. Alexander “Commentaries on Wills,” Vol. II, Sec. 774, page 1121.

It is necessary to set forth the history of Charles J. Ryling estate. On June 13, 1929, the administrator with the will annexed of the Ryling estate, and the trustee named in the will, filed an action to construe the will in this court. They were in doubt as to the true construction of the will, especially of the third clause of item 4.

The petition was filed June 13,1929. Henry H. Evers was made a party defendant, and a year after the death of Ryling, the court in this case, by entry, made the heirs of Henry H. Evers new parties defendant, stating:

“It appearing to the Court that Henry H. Evers is deceased.”

There is no other reference to the death of Henry H. Evers in the record of the will construction case, and had nothing to indicate therefore that Judge Struble had any intimation of the death of Henry H. Evers before [200]*200the death of Ryling, and that the Evers’ devise lapsed.

In short, the court was asked to construe the will devising property to Henry H. Evers, named as party defendant, and later declared by an entry to be deceased. The court had before him a paper writing, but no information that one of the devisees (not a relative) had pre-deceased the testator.

Counsel for the plaintiff claims, however, citing Strangward v. American Brass Bedstead Company, 82 Ohio St., 121, that the lapsing of the legacy is “another question which might properly have been litigated in the case.”

In 82 Ohio St., a suit for arrearages for rent had been determined once in plaintiff’s favor; later in another suit for rent, the defendant sought to show that plaintiff failed to live up to the terms of the lease; the court said that that ground of defense existed, if it ever did exist, at the time of the prior suit, and stated the rule to be as set forth above, namely, that this was “another question which might properly have been litigated in the case involving the arrearages of rent first passed upon.”

The second syllabus of the Strangward case reads as follows:

“When a matter has been finally determined in an action between the same parties by a competent tribunal, the judgment is conclusive, not only as to what was determined, but also, as to every other question which might have properly been litigated in the case.”

Counsel for the plaintiff here claims that this is the Ohio rule that governs the instant case.

There seems to us to be an entirely new situation presented in the instant case. It appears that the death of Henry H. Evers prior to testator’s death, was not known to counsel for any of the parties to the suit for the construction of the will. The fact therefore, that Evers’ devise lapsed was not within their knowledge. The principle here involved is well illustrated by the language of the Supreme Court in Miller v. Brown, 33 Ohio St., 547, at 554, which concerns the dispute as to a property line. The court says, as to error of the District Court:

[201]*201“That action was for specific performance under the written contract of 5th October, 1866. But rights in Brown had vested prior to that contract, and no decree upon it could affect their prior rights.

The sole purpose of that decree was that Brown was entitled to a deed for eleven inches and not fifteen. Nothing else was determined. No other rights were in issue. The court did not attempt to settle what rights Brown had in the four inches beyond the eleven. They said he was not entitled to a deed for those four inches, but they did not say he had no interest therein whatever. They did not say that circumstances could not create an easement therein. The decree only settled the rights between the parties as to what portion of the land specified in the contract Brown was entitled to have conveyed to him by Miller.

The court, therefore, were correct in holding that this record did not include or pass on it in the present case.”

In Mahaffy v. Rogers et al, 10 O. C. C., 24, the second syllabus reads as follows:

“Where a plea of res adjudícala is interposed,, parol evidence is admissible to show the distinctive issue on which a case was tried when the record is silent in this respect.”

In the instant case, I understand, it appears that no one considered the question of the lapse of the legacy until Mr. Hunemeyer, who examined the title of the property sought to be conveyed to Henry H. Evers, discovered that the death of Evers occurred prior to that of the testator.

It is clear from the evidence, as well as from the statements of counsel, that the question of the lapsing of the legacy was entirely overlooked in the will construction case.

The leading case in Ohio on the question of res adjudícala is The Lessee of John Lore and others v. John Truman, 10 O. S. R., page 45, the first syllabus of which reads as follows:

“Where, a judgment or decree is relied on by way of evidence, as conclusive per se, between the parties in a subsequent suit, it must appear by the record of the former [202]*202suit that the particular controversy sought to be precluded was therein necessarily tried and determined.”

This statement proceeds from the consideration of the rule as established first in the Duchess of Kingston

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Related

Sauer v. Downing
142 N.E. 29 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1923)
Comfort v. Mather
2 Watts & Serg. 450 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1841)
Kimball v. Story
108 Mass. 382 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1871)
Wood v. Seaver
33 N.E. 587 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1893)
Bryson v. Holbrook
34 N.E. 270 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1893)
Horton v. Earle
38 N.E. 1135 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1894)
Duncan v. Drakeley
10 Ohio St. 45 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1840)
In re Spier's Estate
195 N.W. 430 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 197, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evers-v-williams-ohctcomplhamilt-1931.