Heckmann Ex Rel. Heckmann v. Brenton State Bank

291 N.W. 465, 228 Iowa 967
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 2, 1940
DocketNo. 44935.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 291 N.W. 465 (Heckmann Ex Rel. Heckmann v. Brenton State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heckmann Ex Rel. Heckmann v. Brenton State Bank, 291 N.W. 465, 228 Iowa 967 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Hale, J.

F. C. Heckmann died January 19, 1926, testate, leaving surviving him Lana B. Heckmann, Dora Heckmann, and George Heckmann. His will, dated November 10, 1925, and duly admitted to probate, provides first for the payment of debts and funeral expenses, and second, bequeaths 40 acres of land to his son, George. Paragraphs 3 and 4 are as follows:

“3 — -All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate real and personal which I now own or may hereinafter acquire, I give and bequeath to my two daughters Lana and Dora jointly in equal shares, that is to say to each an undivided one-half thereof, and I ask that the Court shall appoint my daughter Lana Heckmann to be and to qualify as Gurdian for my daughter Dora and that Lana have and assume complete charge of her affairs and to care for her during her like-time and after the death of said Dora all that property remaining after the *970 last sickness and funeral charges are paid shall go .and is hereby conveyed to my said daughter Lana Heckmann.

“4 — I name constitute and appoint my said daughter Lana Heckmann to be the Executrix of this my last will and testament and direct that no bond be required of her by any court or judge.”

The land which passed under item 3 of the will consists of 140 aerés. The daughter Dora is incompetent, and after her father’s death she lived with her sister Lana, who had charge of the farm and also owned a farm of her own which she had purchased prior to the death of her father.

On May 29, 1931, Lana executed' and delivered to W. H. Brenton, who later assigned it to the Brenton State Bank, a mortgage on real estate, including the 140-aere farm, “subject to the life estate of Dora Heckmann in and to the undivided one-half interest in and to the * * 140 acres. ’ ’ This mortgage was foreclosed and decree entered March 8, 1937. Under proceedings. on an application to the bankruptcy court under the Frazier-Lemke Law, 11 U. S. C. A. §203, a trustee’s deed issued to the Brenton State Bank for the 140-acre farm on November 21, 1938, subject to “whatever interests Dora Heckmann may have in said .property under the last will and testament of Fred C. Heckmann.'”

At the time of the bringing of the present actions unpaid taxes had accumulated to the amount of $1,167.33. On August 26, 1938, the plaintiff in the equity proceeding (the Brenton State Bank) filed its petition in partition, naming as defendants Dora Heckmann, Lana B. Heckmann, guardian of Dora Heckmann, Lana B. Heckmann, William Hungate and Mrs. William Hungate (tenants), and Polk county, Iowa, and asking a decree establishing and determining the rights of the parties, confirming shares and interests; sale of the premises and division of the proceeds; appointment of a referee and receiver; and general equitable relief. Answer was filed by the defendant Lana and the guardian ad litem appointed for Dora. Thereafter, on November 7, 1938, Dora, by Lana her guardian, *971 filed petition asking construction of the will, claiming that the interest of Dora was under a joint tenancy; that on account of personal services required to be rendered by Lana B. Heekmann which had not yet been performed said Lana had not acquired any interest in the land which she could alienate, and that the real estate in controversy constituted a trust. This application on behalf of Dora was resisted by the Brenton State Bank, plaintiff in the equity proceeding. A motion to strike the bank’s resistance to the application for interpretation was overruled by the court, and by agreement of parties the two cases were tried at the same time and separate judgment and decree rendered. In the equity proceeding the court found that Lana had the right to and did alienate her interest in the property, and that such alienation could not affect the rights of Dora to have the property held intact as a unit for her benefit. The court further found that Lana had no interest in the property, and that one of the undivided halves of the real estate was devised in fee to Lana and that Dora has no right or title therein nor any charge thereon except the right to have it operated in conjunction with the other undivided one-half interest. By the decree Dora was adjudged to be the owner of a life estate in one undivided one half, with the right of operation as above stated in conjunction with the other undivided one-half interest, and the right to one half of the income from the land operated as a whole; and her undivided one half is also subject to the payment of the expenses of her last sickness and funeral. The decree fixed the ownership in the plaintiff Brenton State Bank of all the balance, residue, and remainder of the real estate, and determined its right to receive during the lifetime of Dora Heckmann, after the payment of one half the taxes and tax liens, insurance, and repairs, one half of the income from the land operated as a whole; and after the death of Dora the Brenton State Bank is decreed to be the owner in fee of all the real estate. In the order in the probate proceeding item 3 of the will is construed as devising to Dora Heckmann a life estate in an undivided one half of the property, with the right to have her *972 undivided one half operated during her lifetime in conjunction with the other undivided one half; and a charge was created by the will against the remainder of this undivided one half in which Dora was given a life estate, for the payment of her last sickness and funeral expenses. The order further construes the will as granting all the balance of the real estate to Lana B. Heckmann.

From the decree in the equity case and judgment in the action to construe will, Lana B. Heckmann, for herself ánd as guardian, appeals. From that part of the decree giving to Dora Heckmann the right to have her life estate in the undivided one half operated during her lifetime in conjunction with the other undivided one half, and the right to receive during her lifetime, after the payment of one half the operating expense, one half of the income from the land operated as a whole, and denying sale and division of the proceeds at this time, the Brenton State Bank appeals. For convenience, however, the defendants in the equity case and the plaintiffs in the action for construction of the will will be designated as appellants, and the Brenton State Bank as appellee.

The first ground of objection to the judgment and decree of the court by the appellants is that the court erred in construing and adjudicating the testator’s intention to have been merely the creation of a life estate in an undivided one half of said real estate to Dora. The appellants claim that it was the testator’s intention that the two daughters should hold in joint tenancy, and that the will should be construed that the land should go to his two daughters and that neither one nor the other could hold any part of it singly; and that the purpose and intent of the testator was so to devise his said real estate as to prevent alienation of the interest of either daughter by herself or by anyone else. Appellants also claim that the court erred in adjudging the title to all of said real estate to be a fee in the daughter Lana. Appellants argue at considerable length that paragraph 3 of the will, heretofore set out, created a joint tenancy. The cases cited by appellants do not *973

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291 N.W. 465, 228 Iowa 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heckmann-ex-rel-heckmann-v-brenton-state-bank-iowa-1940.