In Re Estate of Beaver

206 N.W.2d 692, 82 A.L.R. 3d 778, 1973 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1008
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 25, 1973
Docket55501
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 206 N.W.2d 692 (In Re Estate of Beaver) 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
In Re Estate of Beaver, 206 N.W.2d 692, 82 A.L.R. 3d 778, 1973 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1008 (iowa 1973).

Opinions

• UHLENHOPP, Justice.

Does Merl Beaver have an option to purchase 80 acres of land formerly owned by his father, Ernest Beaver? Is Ida Zajec entitled to the proceeds if Merl Beaver exercises the option or to the 80 acres if he does not exercise it? These are the questions in this de novo appeal.

Testator Ernest Beaver was born in 1877 and died in 1970. He and his wife had four children, Merl, Zilpha, Grace, and Marie. His wife died many years ago, and he did not remarry. After her death he lived in a home he purchased in Eddyville, Iowa.

Upon achieving adulthood, Merl married and thereafter farmed. Zilpha and Grace, who never married, lived from birth with their father in his home, except that Zilpha was away during the weeks she taught school. Marie married one Randell; in 1928 had a daughter, Ida; and in 1930 died. From 1930 until her adulthood, Ida too lived in testator’s home. In 1952 she married Frank Zajec, and they have since lived on a farm she owns.

Testator owned 380 acres of land in two tracts, the west place and the home place. At various periods in the past, he operated all or part of the land. For a number of more recent years, Merl has operated the home place. His son presently operates the west place.

At one time testator gave Merl an acre of the home place for a homesite. Testator also conveyed his Eddyville home to Zilpha and Grace by deed effective at his death, and he deposited $3,000 in an account with Grace as joint tenant. In addition, during his lifetime he gave substantial sums of money to Merl, Zilpha, Grace, and Ida.

In 1948 testator was 71 and Ida was 20. At that time his home place contained 220 acres. His west place consisted of 160 acres, and Merl owned an adjoining 40-acre tract. Testator desired to devise [694]*694his land in such way that Zilpha and Grace would have their land in one parcel and Merl could acquire the home place., He also desired to make a gift to Ida — although he recognized that her branch of the family had already received more from him since he reared both Marie and Ida. In addition, Ida owned her own farm.

Testator conceived the plan of trading to Merl 40 acres in the home place (thereby reducing the home place to ISO acres) in exchange for Merl’s 40 acres adjoining the west place (thereby increasing the west place to 200 acres); of devising to Zilpha and Grace the west place of 200 acres; of devising to Merl 100 acres in the home place; and of granting Merl the right to purchase the remaining 80 acres in the home place for $16,000, with such proceeds, together wtih the income from the 80 acres until Ida became 30, going to her. Testator proposed that plan to Merl.

Testator then went to Attorney Thomas J. Bray in Oskaloosa, Iowa, who drafted the instruments. On November 29, 1948, testator, Merl, and Merl’s wife went to Mr. Bray’s office. Mr. Bray read the will he had drafted and stated that the option and trust fund in it were “arranged for all right.” He asked Merl if the arrangements were agreeable to him, and Merl said they were. In fulfillment of testator’s plan, Merl then conveyed his 40 acres to testator, testator conveyed his 40 acres to Merl, and testator executed the will. (In 1950 testator executed a new will which was the same except for a corrected legal description. He never again changed his will.)

In the will as drafted, testator gave Zilpha and Grace the west 200-acre place and gave Merl 100 acres in the home place. In Item Three he devised the remaining 80 acres in the home place in trust. For present purposes, the material portions of the trust relating to the 80 acres are these:

(c) When my said granddaughter, Ida Mildred Randell, attains the age of thirty (30) years, or at the date of her death if she shall die before attaining such age, I grant unto my son, Merl Beaver, an option to purchase said real estate for the price of Sixteen thousand ($16,000.00) Dollars, to be paid by him to my said Trustee in cash at the time of exercising said option. Said option shall be exercised by my said son within thirty (30) days after my said granddaughter attains the age of thirty years or within thirty (30) days after her death, if she dies before attaining such age by giving a written notice to my said Trustee of his intention to so exercise said option. If my said son shall not be living at the time the said option is to be exercised, then I grant to his legal representative the right to exercise said option with the same force and effect as if my said son were living at said time. If my said granddaughter lives to be thirty years of age, then upon attaining such age I direct my Trustee to turn over to her all the money then in the hands of my Trustee belonging to sai’d trust estate, including the money to be paid by my said son or his estate for the real estate hereby devised to said Trustee, if the option to purchase the same shall be exercised. If said option is not so exercised, then I direct my said Trustee to execute a good and sufficient deed conveying said real estate to my said granddaughter, Ida Mildred Randell.
(d) If my said granddaughter, Ida Mildred Randell, does not live until becoming thirty years of age, then at her death I give and devise the real estate herein devised to my said Trustee to my son, Merl Beaver, and to my daughters, Zilpha Beaver and Grace Beaver, share and share alike, to be their own absolutely, in the event my son, Merl Beaver, does not exercise the aforesaid option, in which event I direct my said Trustee to execute a good and sufficient Trustee’s deed conveying said real estate to said devisees. If said option is exercised by him, then I give and bequeath the money paid by him for said la,nd and all [695]*695other money in the hands of my Trustee to my son, Merl Beaver, and to my daughters, Zilpha Beaver and Grace Beaver, share and share alike, to be their own absolutely, and direct my said Trustee to make distribution accordingly.

Under Item Three the trust estate was also to include any income from the 80 acres from the inception of the trust until Ida became 30 and also one-fourth of testator’s estate not specifically devised. Zilpha was named trustee if she survived, as she did. The residuary clause in the will gave the rest of testator’s property equally to Merl, Zilpha, Grace, and Ida.

Item 3 gives the impression that testator and his scrivener assumed testator would die before Ida became 30. The item deals with several contingencies on that assumption — exercise of the option if Ida lived to age 30 or if she died before 30 or if Merl died before time for exercise of the option. It also deals with 'accumulation of income by the trustee until Ida became 30. But the item nowhere states what testator intended should happen if testator died after Ida reached 30.

Testator died on August 8, 1970. He was 93 years of age and Ida was 41. His will was admitted to probate. On September 3, 1970, in the presence of Zilpha, Grace, and Ida, Merl tendered his check for $16,000 and written notice of exercise of the option. The tender was not accepted, although no objection was made to the medium of payment. The next day, in writing, Merl repeated the exercise of option, and he tendered payment “upon good and sufficient conveyance of said land.” The tender was not accepted.

Thereafter Zilpha, Grace, and Ida commenced this action to construe the will.

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In Re Estate of Beaver
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 N.W.2d 692, 82 A.L.R. 3d 778, 1973 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-beaver-iowa-1973.