In Re Estate of Davis

213 N.W. 395, 204 Iowa 1231
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 395 (In Re Estate of Davis) 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 Davis, 213 N.W. 395, 204 Iowa 1231 (iowa 1927).

Opinions

Evans, C. J.

The -will in question was executed in 1916. Its first five paragraphs are as follows :•

‘ ‘ First. I direct that my executors hereinafter named shall sell and convert all my property, both real and personal, that I may die seized of into money, for the purpose of ■■ settling my estate and paying the legacies as hereinafter mentioned.

‘ ‘ Second. Out of the money received by my executors I will and direct that they first pay all my just debts, including the expenses of my last sickness and burial.

‘‘Third. That iny executors shall set aside the sum of $500.00 and use the same to buy a suitable monument to mark my grave. Said executors to. consult with my children and wife in selecting said monument, I will and direct that on one corner of the stone purchased there shall be an Odd Fellows’ emblem and on the opposite corner there shall be a Masonic emblem.

“Fourth. I also will and direct that my executors pay to the Kingsley Cemetery Association the sum- of $50.00 as an • en *1233 dowment fund for the perpetual care of my burial lot in the Kingsley Cemetery. :

“Fifth. I will and direct that after the above sums of money have been paid out or set aside for purpose mentioned above, that my executors pay my beloved wife, Sarah J. Davis, one third of all the money remaining in their hands. It is my wish that my wife, Sarah J. Davis, shall have all household goods .as a part of her one third if . she so desires. In the event that she wishes- to keep the household goods they shall be appraised and sold to her at their appraised value.' Said sum to be deducted from the one third of the money to be paid to my wife.”

The remaining two thirds of his property was distributed equally among his nine children,- including'the representatives of one deceased. ' ;

At the time of the execution of the will, the property of the testator consisted mainly of a half-section farm-and of a residence property in town, covering an area of five acres. In 1920, the half-section farm was sold and conveyed by the voluntary act of husband and wife, and the proceeds thereof came under the operation of the will.- In March, 1923,- the wife, Sarah, died. Four months later, the testator died, without making any change in his will. The devise to the wife was not conditioned in terms on her survival.

The contention for the plaintiffs is that the will by its terms indicates an intention on the part of the testator to devise to his wife, Sarah, only that part of his estate to which she would be entitled under the law, as her distributive share. It is contended that the ease comes within the rule recognized by us in Tennant v. Smith, 173 Iowa 264, and in Herring v. Herring, 187 Iowa 593. In the Herring case we said:

“It is well settled that, where a devise- in.a will gives the same estate to the devisee that he would take under' the statute of descent, if there were no will, the beneficiary in such case still takes the ‘worthier title’ by descent, and' not under the will. Rice v. Burkhardt, 130 Iowa 520; Tennant v. Smith, 173 Iowa 264; Gilpin v. Hollingsworth, 3 Md. 190 (56 Am. Dec. 737, 738) ; Post v. Jackson, 70 Conn. 283 (39 Atl. 151); Davidson v. Koehler, 76 Ind. 398.”

In the-Tennant case we first applied the foregoing rule to a *1234 devise by one spouse to another. Such application of the rule was followed in the Herring case. In so applying the rule, we followed authorities from other jurisdictions, which are oited in the above quotation from the • Herring opinion. • In order to bring the case within this rule, it is essential that the provision for the surviving spouse under the will should' be identical in quantity and quality with the statutory provision"!» the same end. If such respective provisions be identical in the given ease, then the beneficiary would, be deemed to take under the statute, as conferring the “worthier title,’’ and the provision of the will would be deemed nugatory or canceled thereby. Such identity of provision is deemed sufficient evidence of an intent on the part of a testator that the devise should lapse if the spouse should predecease him: The'question presented was last before us in In re Will of Watenpaugh, 192 Iowa 1178. The devise under consideration in the Tennant case was as follows:

“I give and bequeath to my husband, Jonathan Duncan, such share of my estate as.he is entitled to have and receive under the laws of the state, of Iowa.”

In the Herring case the devise was as follows:

“I give, and bequeath to my husband, Peter Rohret, all that share or part of. my estate; real, personal and mixed, which would go to him under the statute of' distribution of this state, if I should die intestate, neither desiring to increase nor curtail his said distributive share or interest in my estate, but intending to leave him to take just so much as the law gives to a surviving husband in cases of intestacy.”

We construed each of the foregoing provisions as being identical with the statutory provisions, and that it awarded to the devisee neither more nor less than he was entitled to under the statute, and that the deyise. lapsed upon the death of the devisee before that of the testator. In the Watenpaugh case the ' testator devised to his wife property greater in quantity and substantially different in quality than she would have taken under the statute. We held the rule contended for as not applicable, and that the devise did not lapse.

In the case before'us there is no provision in the will which indicates any intent that the devise should lapse in the event of the death of the devisee before that of the testator,- unless it can be said that the testamentary provision in her behalf and the *1235 statutory provisions are identical. The district court held that they were not identical, and .awarded the devise to the heir of Sarah.

We need consider but one feature of this devise, though there are others that would bear interesting discussion. It will be noted that the devise awards to the wife one third of the net estate, subject to the payment of the obligations of the estate. If the estate consisted wholly of personalty, this would be in accord with the statutory provision. In so far as real estate was involved, it was not in accord with the statutory provision. When the will was made, the property of the testator consisted in the main of his half-section farm and the residence property comprising five acres in town. The wife’s right of distributive share in such real estate would not be subject to the payment of debts. It appears, however, that the farm was converted into personalty by the voluntary conveyance of husband and wife in 1920. If the same thing had occurred as to the residence property, it could be said that from that time forth, and at the time of the death of the testator, the will should be deemed to dispose of an estate consisting wholly of personalty.

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213 N.W. 395, 204 Iowa 1231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-davis-iowa-1927.