Henry v. Thomas

20 N.E. 519, 118 Ind. 23, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 473
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1889
DocketNo. 14,222
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 20 N.E. 519 (Henry v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry v. Thomas, 20 N.E. 519, 118 Ind. 23, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 473 (Ind. 1889).

Opinion

Olds, J.

A controversy arose among the general legatees as to the portion they were each entitled to receive under the provisions of the will as hereinbefore quoted, some claiming that the remainder of the estate should be distributed so as to give to each of the children of a deceased brother and sister of herself, and to each of the children of deceased brothers and sisters of Perry J..Brinegar, a portion of her estate equal to the portion given to each of her surviving brothers and sisters and the surviving brothers and sisters of Perry J. Brinegar, deceased,Perry J. Brinegar being the deceased husband of said testatrix. In other words, some of the legatees claimed that the distribution 'should be per capita, and others claimed that distribution should be made per stirpes.

The executor filed his petition in the court below, showing such contention among the legatees, and requesting the court to construe the will and declare its true meaning and intent.

Upon the filing of said petition by the executor, the appellants filed their cross-petition, making the record of the will and probate thereof a part of the same, and asking the court to adjudge each of them entitled, under the provisions of the will, to one-twelfth of that part of the estate in controversy, upon the theory that the will provides that distribution should be madeyier stirpes and not per capita.

Following this, appellee Sarah A. Henry, as guardian of six minor children of William H. Henry, a deceased brother o.f said testatrix, filed a cross-petition showing that there are twenty-five legatees entitled to share in the portion of the [25]*25estate in controversy, and claiming that each is entitled to an equal share thereof. Perry J. Rhue and others, appellees, filed a cross-petition, making a copy of the will an exhibit, and alleging that in order to distribute said estate it was necessary for the court to construe said will, and asking that the same be construed and the interest of the legatees determined. Thereupon the cause was submitted to the court. The will was offered in evidence, and the court found the names and number of the legatees, brothers and sisters of the testatrix and of her deceased husband, and children of deceased brothers and sisters of testatrix and her deceased husband, twenty-five in number, and that they were each entitled to a one twenty-fifth (^) part of said estate under the will, and made an order and rendered a judgment for the distribution of said estate accordingly.

The appellants filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and exceptions reserved to the ruling by the appellants.

The first cause assigned for a new trial is, that the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence.” The second alleged that “ the decision of the court was contrary to law.”

¥e think these properly challenge the construction given to the will, as it fairly appears from the bill of exceptions that the will was all the evidence submitted to the court. The only contest was as to the construction to be given the language used in the devise of the remainder of the estate of the testatrix, and no other evidence was competent in the ■case, unless there was such ambiguity in the language used as to admit of parol evidence, and there was no such ambiguity in the will in controversy as to admit of parol evidence to aid in its interpretation.

It is contended by counsel for appellees that the will is not properly included in the bill of exceptions, and, therefore, can not be considered. The will is made an exhibit to the cross-petition of Perry J. Rhue and others, and as such is [26]*26properly copied into the record on page 17 of the transcript,. The bill of exceptions states that the will was in evidence,, and is copied on page 17 of the record.

When a paper is properly a part of the record as an exhibit which is made a part of a pleading, and once copied into the record, it is useless to re-copy it into the bill of exceptions, and it is sufficient to refer to it in the bill of exceptions, and state the fact that it was admitted in evidence, and' that a copy of it appears at a particular place in the record. To hold otherwise would be to require a needless encumbrance of the record. We do not say that this is a model-bill of exceptions, but in this case copies of the will were set-out and made a part of the petitions and cross-petitions filed by the various legatees. There were no facts in dispute; all that was asked of the court was to construe certain language in the will, the terms of which were not disputed. And the court was asked to decide what share each legatee took by virtue of the will, and to make an order for the distribution of the estate in accordance with the construction given. No answers were filed to the petition or cross-petitions, no denial of any of the allegations in either of them; so that the facts as alleged in the petitions were admitted, and the court was called upon to make a finding and render judgment on the facts as admitted by the pleadings. There was no necessity for any evidence, and the bill of exceptions states that “immediately upon the filing of the petition and cross-petitions the court announced its readiness to hear the same, whereupon the attorneys for petitioners and cross-petitioners-commenced to argue to the court the question as to what construction should be given to the will.”

While the record shows the proceedings to be somewhat informal, yet we think in this particular case it properly presents the question to this court.

The question presented is one upon which the authorities-are not harmonious.

It has been the almost universal rule of law-making bodies,, [27]*27in providing to whom the estate of an intestate shall descend, to provide that the estate shall go to the nearest relatives, and in case of the death of one who would have inherited if living, but who has died, leaving issue surviving, that the surviving issue take the share the parent would have inherited if living; that, when children inherit from the parent, and one dies prior to the death of the parent, leaving children surviving, the child or children of such deceased child take the share the deceased child would have inherited if he or she were living; and this rule has almost universally been adopted when the estate descends to the brothers and sisters of an intestate. Such laws of descent have met with universal approval. Where one estate is disposed of otherwise by will, many pass in the manner prescribed by the law of descent.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.E. 519, 118 Ind. 23, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-v-thomas-ind-1889.