Hillman v. McLeod

300 N.W. 157, 239 Wis. 162, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 128
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1941
StatusPublished

This text of 300 N.W. 157 (Hillman v. McLeod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillman v. McLeod, 300 N.W. 157, 239 Wis. 162, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 128 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed October 7, 1941:

Rosenberry, C. J.

Upon this appeal the petitioner alleges that the court erred as a matter of law in reaching the conclusions set out in the statement of facts.

This assignment raises the following questions: (1) Did the gifts renounced by the widow pass to the residuum of the estate under paragraph Twelfth of the will? (2) Is the statute of limitations applicable to this proceeding? (3) Is the relief sought by appellant barred by laches ?

(4) It is argued, (a) that the distribution of the residuary trust fund ought to have occurred at the death of the widow and during her life so much of the income sequestered as was necessary to compensate disappointed legatees; (b) qnless appellant receives compensation out of either the absolute gifts relinquished by the widow or out of the income a substantial distortion will occur in testator’s scheme.

We shall first dispose of appellant’s contention that his loss is $16,081.67. It will be recalled that he paid the widow $10,000 for the interest that she acquired in the property specifically devised to him by her renunciation of the will. We think it clear that this measures the extent of petitioner’s loss. This seems too plain for argument. This is an equity proceeding, not a proceeding upon contract, and what the petitioner is entitled to, if he is entitled to anything, is to be made good. Upon the payment of $10,000 the petitioner had and enjoyed everything that he would have had and enjoyed if there had been no renunciation by the widow.

While the question of sequestration of a renounced interest in an estate has not so far as we are advised been before this court, except in the case of Will of Muskat (1937), 224 Wis. 245, 271 N. W. 837, there are some sixty decisions in other *170 jurisdictions dealing with various phases of the question. Restatement of the Law of Property follows :

“§ 234. Renunciation — sequestration of the renounced interest. When a will otherwise effectively creates prior and succeeding interests; and an attempted prior interest is renounced; and the renouncer effectively claims an intestate share; and there is no manifestation of a contrary intent, then
“(a) if the satisfaction of this derogating claim causes substantial distortion among the other testamentary dispositions, SO' much of the-renounced interest as does not pass as part of such intestate share is sequestered for judicial distribution among the other testamentary distributees ;
“(b) if the satisfaction of this derogating claim causes no substantial distortion among the other testamentary dispositions and acceleration of the succeeding interest is excluded by the manifestation of an intent contrary thereto, so much of the renounced interest as does not pass as part of such intestate share is sequestered for judicial distribution among the other distributees. . . .
“(g) ‘Manifestation of a contrary intent.’ Under the rule stated in this section, sequestration does not occur when there is a manifestation of a contrary intent. Such a contrary intent can be inferred from the language of the will or from the relations existing between the testator and his distribu-tees or between the distributees or from any other relevant circumstance known to- the testator. Such a contrary intent is manifested when the combined effect of the renunciation and of the removal of assets to satisfy the derogating claim so affects the balance of the disposition that it is clear that the testator, if he had known of this partial frustration of his desires, would not have desired such balance of the disposition to- take effect.
“(h) What constitutes a ‘distortionThe satisfaction of the derogating claim made by the renouncer causes a distortion among the unrenounced dispositions of the will whenever such satisfaction operates otherwise than to- decrease or to increase such other dispositions proportionately.”

The following illustration is given: “Thus when the re-nouncer claims common-law dower and consequently the claim is confined to interests in land owned by testator A; and A has *171 devised his land to B and his other assets to his wife C for life, remainder to D absolutely, the wife’s derogating claim affects solely the assets limited to B. D, without acceleration, would still receive exactly what A desired him to have. In either event B would receive less than A desired him to have. A distortion exists.”

It is considered that the sequestration rule contended for by the petitioner in this case is not applicable for a number of reasons, the principal one of which is that the rule only applies where a contrary intent is not manifested by the testator. So far as we are able to discover practically all of the authorities agree upon this proposition. The testator was not only an able lawyer, had been circuit judge, and a member of this court for twenty-three years, but was a man of wide and varied business experience, and, as the decisions which he wrote fully disclose, very much interested in the right of a testator to dispose of his estate. He wrote the opinion in Ludington v. Patton (1901), 111 Wis. 208, 229, 86 N. W. 571, in the course of which, speaking for the court, he said:

“The will did not disturb appellant’s [the widow’s] legal rights, except provisionally. They were written into the instrument, by force of the statute, as effectually as if they had been expressed by the testator himself, leaving appellant the alternative of taking one provision or the other.”

In the case of Harrington v. Pier (1900), 105 Wis. 485. 498, 82 N. W. 345, the court had under consideration the construction of a will executed by one Elizabeth Ann Sutton. The court was called upon to deal with the question of what constituted the residuum of the estate. Judge Marshall, writing the opinion for the court, said:

“The term 'residue’ was used with reference to what might be left of the estate after satisfying «the previously declared purposes. The amount of the residuum was not necessarily one fourth of the net estate, so called. The testatrix must be presumed to have had in mind, in view of the general language of the residuary clause, that all of her estate that for *172 any reason might not pass under the particular bequests would go to the residuary legatees under the general language of the residuary clause.”

In Will of McIlhattan (1927), 194 Wis. 113, 117, 216 N. W. 130, the court held that—

“Upon the election of the widow and the death of Fred Mcllhattan the purposes of the trust ceased, and the estate of the trustees also ceased under the statute quoted. It is a general rule of law that the election of the widow has the same effect as her death, and accelerates the remainders so that the beneficiaries enter directly into enjoyment thereof.

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Related

Harrington v. Pier
50 L.R.A. 307 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1900)
Ludington v. Patton
86 N.W. 571 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1901)
Will of McIlhattan
216 N.W. 130 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1927)
Will of Muskat v. Muskat
271 N.W. 837 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
300 N.W. 157, 239 Wis. 162, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillman-v-mcleod-wis-1941.