Hanson v. Harkson

224 N.W. 2, 118 Neb. 208, 1929 Neb. LEXIS 99
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1929
DocketNo. 25914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 2 (Hanson v. Harkson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. Harkson, 224 N.W. 2, 118 Neb. 208, 1929 Neb. LEXIS 99 (Neb. 1929).

Opinions

Goss, C. J.

This is an appeal from the decree of the district court construing a will with particular relation to the word “heirs” therein.

[209]*209. The testator, Louis Hanson, died July 29, 1916. His will was executed June 28, 1915. Its first paragraph provided for the payment of funeral charges, administration of the estate and debts; the second gave to Ane Marie Hanson, his wife, the life income; the third provided a gift to the family church; the fifth appointed his two sons executors; the fourth paragraph, construction of which is asked, reads as follows:

“I give, devise and bequeath to my six children, hereinafter named, share and share alike all my estate, real, personal or mixed, remaining at the death of my said wife, Ane Marie Hanson, after the payment as directed in paragraph III, and desire that they divide the same equally between themselves without sale or partition suit. In case, for any reason, the estate cannot be divided by agreement into six equal shares and conveyed to each other by the legatees, I hereby authorize and empower my said executors, or survivor of them, to divide the estate into six equal parts and execute and deliver good and sufficient conveyance to each one of said children or the heirs of any deceased child one of such parts. The names of all my children are as follows: Callie Hanson, Hans D. Hanson, Ernest Hanson, John M. Hanson, Maura M. Hanson and Eliza M. Harkson. In case of the death of any of my said children prior to the death of my said wife, the share of such one shall go to his or her heirs.”

Ane Marie Hanson, the widow of testator, died May 18, 1925.

Eliza M. Harkson, a daughter, died June 10, 1920 (after her father and before the death of his widow), leaving surviving her three children, Dorothy, Elaine and Ruby, and Henry W. Harkson, her husband. He claims an undivided one-eighteenth of the entire estate of Louis Hanson, being one-third part of the one-sixth part that was devised to Eliza M. Harkson, whose children, through their guardian ad litem, G. Porter Putman, Jr., claim .that their father took no interest in the estate.

The Multnomah State Bank is interested as the holder [210]*210of a mortgage on the undivided interest of Henry W. Hark-son.

The county court held in favor of the children of Eliza M. Harkson and that their father was not entitled to take either as the husband or as her heir.

On appeal the district court held :

“The technical definition of ‘heirs’ is those who would take in case of the demise of a person intestate, those to whom the law distributes in the absence of a will; and technically this would include Henry W. Harkson the surviving spouse of Eliza Hanson Harkson. It would seem, therefore, if the controversy is to be decided from the four corners of the will alone, without testimony as to the disposition of the testator towards Harkson at the time that the will was made and without testimony as to the surrounding circumstances, that there is no escape from the proposition that Henry W. Harkson is entitled to take under the will as well as his three children.”

But the district court, over objection, received oral testimony relating to testator’s feelings toward Henry W. Harkson, and relying thereon to modify the “technical definition of ‘heirs’ ” decreed “that that portion of testator’s property which would have gone to Eliza Hanson Harkson, had she ¡been living at the time of the death of her mother, goes to, and is distributed to, her children, Dorothy, Elaine and Ruby Harkson, and not in any part to Henry W. Hark-son.”

From this decree Henry W. Harkson and the Multnomah ' State Bank have appealed.

Appellants assign the following errors:

1. That the court erred in holding that a vested remainder did not pass to testator’s daughter, Eliza M. Hark-son, upon his death.

2. That the court erred in holding that Henry W. Hark-son was not entitled to an interest in the lands of the testator as the surviving spouse and as an “heir” of Eliza M. Harkson.

3. That the court erred in receiving and acting upon [211]*211oral testimony as to what th'e testator meant in his will by the word “heirs.”

To the objective perception the apparent and external effect of this will was to cast a life estate upon the widow of the testator and the remainder upon his children, if living, or upon their respective heirs if any of the children were dead. As we have shown by the quotation from the decree of the district court, this is precisely what the court found “from the four corners of the will alone.”

The testator died July 29, 1916. His widow entered into the possession and enjoyed the particular or life estate until May 18, 1925, when she died. Thereupon the remainder, attached to the life estate, ripened into a fee simple title, that is, into a freehold estate of inheritance, free from conditions and of indefinite duration. Who took that title so far as the share of Eliza M. Harkson, the deceased daughter, is concerned is the subject of inquiry here. Did it go to her children only or did her husband, as an heir, share it with the children?

One of the points involved and debated by the parties is whether the will created a vested remainder or whether the remainder was contingent. If the remainder vested in Eliza M. Harkson on the death of the testator, then her husband would be entitled to take under her, nothing appearing in the will to show a contrary intention on the part of the testator.

Davis v. Davis, 107 Neb. 70, was a suit to construe a will and to quiet title to interests in devised lands. It was brought by remaindermen claiming that their interests vested on the death of testator. The will gave a life estate to the widow, who was still living, and equal remainders “at her death” to four children. It provided, if any of the children should “die without heirs,” the surviving children should take. After the death of the testator, one son died intestate and childless but leaving a widow. She claimed, subject to the life estate of testator’s widow, an undivided one-eighth interest in the devised lands, being one-half of the one-fourth share of her deceased husband under [212]*212the will of his father. We held that, when the entire will is considered, the phrase “at her death” may fairly be construed to refer to the time when the enjoyment of the estate in remainder begins; that the expression “die without heirs” should be construed to refer to the death of a devisee during the life of the testator; that the policy of the law favors early vesting of estates and that the inference of a vested remainder is stronger than the inference of a contingent remainder, if the meaning of the testator is obscure; and that the deceased son “acquired at the death of his father an undivided one-fourth of a vested remainder in the devised lands, and that one-half of his interest, or an undivided one-eighth of the estate in remainder, descended to Ruby L. Davis under the statutes of Nebraska as the widow and the heir of her deceased husband.”

The case just analyzed referred for definitions to Wilkins v. Rowan, 107 Neb. 180, which was decided on the same day. The facts are for our purpose adequately stated in a point of the syllabus which reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 2, 118 Neb. 208, 1929 Neb. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-harkson-neb-1929.