Hieatt v. Simpson

5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 513
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedApril 15, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 513 (Hieatt v. Simpson) 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
Hieatt v. Simpson, 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 513 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Peleger, ' J.

William Hieatt, Sr., had five children, one son named William, and four daughters named respectively Susan AY. Simpson, Harriet W. Bean, Mary H. Black and Olive W. Matson. His son William attained his majority May 22, 1867, and died April 27, 1904, leaving the plaintiff, Estella R. Hieatt, as his only child and heir at law. The four daughters and their children are all alive, and are defendants in this action. William Hieatt, Sr., died in 1866, leaving a will which was dated April 16, 1857. The testator was possessed of a large farm of about one hundred and sixty-seven acres in Sycamore township, and of other property in the city of Cincinnati. By the terms of his will he made provision for the education of all of his children, the amount of which he directed should not be deducted from their shares. lie gave, besides other bequests, $3,000 to each of his four daughters. He also gave a life estate to his widow in this fann unless his son William lived until his majority whereupon he should have the use of the farm during his life. He gave to the son also his watch, gun and other personal property used for his personal enjoyment.

Thereafter he made the following disposition of his property;

“Item 5. It is my will and 1 hereby devise and bequeath that all the rest and residue of my said estate not hereinbefore disposed of and remaining after the foregoing devises and bequests shall have been satisfied, be divided' equally among all my children share ahd share alike to have and to hold •to-[515]*515them and each of them for his or her natural life and no longer.

"And after the death of any of my children his or her said share shall go to and become the property of his or her child or children in fee simple forever, but if any of my said children shall die without a child or children living at his or her death then the share hereby devised to any such of my children so dying shall fall into and become part of the residuum of my estate and be divided and distributed as though it had never come to the said child so dying among my other children for life and afterwards to their issue forever as hereinbefore just directed as though the devise for life to any such of my children so dying had not been made.”

The residence situated upon the farm was destroyed by fire while occupied by the son. The proceeds of the insurance, amounting to $3,000 after payment of costs and expenses, were, under a proceeding brought in this court, invested in two small farms in Montgomery township, and the title taken to William Hieatt for life with remainder over as provided in the will of William Hieatt, Sr., deceased. The plaintiff as the only child of William Hieatt, Jr., after the death of the latter took possession of these three farms, claiming title thereto in fee simple, as well as a fee simple title in one-fifth of the other property left by the testator. The defendants claim that the four. daughters of the testator are entitled to a life estate as to four several one-fifths thereof for their respective lives, with remainder in fee simple to such four-fifths thereof as their children, surviving them, in all the property of the testator, including the farm in question. The interest of Olive W. IT. Matson was conveyed to the plaintiff by quit-claim deed. The plaintiff therefore prays for a decree quieting her. title against the other defendants in the case. To the answers setting up the interests of the defendants as claimed and to the affirmative relief demanded by them against the plaintiff for quieting title, the plaintiff filed a general demurrer, alleging that the answers did not contain facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. It is agreed that this demurrer raises fully all issues necessary to detei'mine the title to all the property left by the decedent.

It is not disputed that the two tracts in Montgomery town[516]*516ship purchased with the insurance money passed to the same beneficiaries entitled to the'farm. Neither can it be denied that the widow of the testator took a life estate in the farm subject to the son William Hieatt reaching his majority. Nor can it be questioned that the son William was entitled to a life estate in the same farm from the time of his majority until his death. The four daughters of the testator claim that after the death of William Hieatt, Jr., they took a life estate in four several one-fifths of the property described in the petition with remainder in their children, and that the plaintiff took only an undivided one-fifth interest in fee simple in this as well as all the other real estate left by the testator.

'The determination of this question depends upon the construction to be placed upon the two paragraphs in Item 5 of the will. The testator directs that the residue of his estate thereinbefore disposed of and which remained after the life estate of William be equally divided among all his children share and share alike, but for life only and no longer. Up to this point in the will, the deceased made no devise in fee, and had created only a conditional life estate in the widow and son of but one tract, to-wit, the farm in question. It is argued by defendants’ counsel that where a remainder over is limited in contingency by a devise, the reversion descended under the statute to the heirs at law .until the contingency provided for in the will happens and takes it out of them. (Gilpin v. William, 25 Ohio St., 283.)

I fail to see the application of this rule to the case at bar. Admitting the possession of the defendants as heirs at law in the interim, they are either divested by themselves as devisees under the will, or by the plaintiff as sole devisee. The principle could only aid them in the absence of a further provision respecting the disposition of the fee.

It is also contended that the intention of the testator is plain that all the children should share alike in his remaining property, and that the remainder in fee of the farm was part of the estate undisposed of, and that it passed to all the children or [517]*517their representatives under this clause. There can be no doubt that the remainder in fee in the farm was undisposed of, but whether it passed under the first paragraph of Item 5 is not so clear. The testator did not create anything more than a life estate in the residue of his property to any of his children. lie omitted the mention of any of his grandchildren in this clause. The testator must have been aware of the life estate in. the farm granted to his only son AYilliam, and yet he included his son in the habendum clause, to-wit, “To have and to hold for Ms or her natural life and no longer.” The use of the masculine pronoun “his” refers to some son, and he has had but one son, named William; and conceding that the will was drawn at a time when he could not have foretold the number of his male children, it can not be questioned that he must have had in mind the fact that in Item 2 he had therefore carved out a life estate in the farm to this son William. In the light of the interpretation that this first paragraph in Item 5 includes the farm, the devise would read substantially as follows: “Having given to my son William as an entirety the farm for his full natural life, I now direct that after his death and the devise to him shall have been satisfied, this farm and all the other property be given again for life to all

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hieatt-v-simpson-ohctcomplhamilt-1906.