In Re Estate of Fleck

154 N.W.2d 865, 261 Iowa 434, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 906
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1967
Docket52738
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 154 N.W.2d 865 (In Re Estate of Fleck) 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 Fleck, 154 N.W.2d 865, 261 Iowa 434, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 906 (iowa 1967).

Opinion

Rawlings, J.

A deed was executed by Abner J. Bilsborough and his wife Ellen in January 1900, the material portion of which provided: •

“That we Abner J. Bilsborough and Ellen Bilsborough his wife, * # # do give and convey to'Ruth E. Bilsborough and hér heirs the following described premises situated in the county of Lyon and State of Iowa to wit: the North East quarter (N.E. %) of Section Twenty-eight (28) in township One Hundred (100) North of Range forty-three (43) West of the 5th Principal Meridian together with all the privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging To have and to hold the same to the said Ruth E. Bilsborough and her heirs forever. * * * Nevertheless on the following conditions viz: that all of the rents, issues and profits shall be payable to either of the surviving grantors up to March 1st 1908 and One Hundred Dollars each year thereafter during the natural life of either grantor and that said Ruth E. Bilsborough shall have no power or authority to sell, mortgage, or alienate the whole or any part of the said property or to sell, alienate or anticipate the whole or any part of the rents, profits, or issues thereof nor shall the property be liable for any debt or debts contracted by the said Ruth E. Bilsborough or for any judgments obtained against her in any Court of Law or Equity, but it shall be kept *436 free and unincumbered and shall so descend to her children. And as soon as convenient after her death her said children shall have lawful authority to sell and convey the property and divide the money equally amongst them share and share alike Except some one or more of the said children should not have become of age in which case the property shall not be sold until such time as the youngest child shall have obtained his or her majority.
“Nevertheless if the said Euth E. Bilsborough shall leave a husband and he and her children should prefer living together on the property they shall have power to defer the sale of it until such time as they or a majority of them think fit. But if it should so happen that the said Euth E. Bilsborough should die leaving no children then the said property shall be sold as soon as convenient after her death and the money arising from such sale shall be divided equally amongst her brothers and sisters or their estates share and share alike.”

The grantors and Euth E. Bilsborough (Fleck), hereinafter sometimes referred to as Euth, have since died, she leaving no issue surviving.

By action for declaratory judgment plaintiff-executor of Euth’s estate sought an adjudication of rights in the property here involved.

Defendants claim title vested on Euth’s death in her brothers and sisters or their estates, and they are entitled to any proceeds derived from sale.

The trial court, by application of the repugnancy rule, found adverse to this contention and defendants appeal. We reverse.

I. The ultimate question for determination by this court is whether under the terms of the foregoing deed title passes to the estate of Euth, or to her brothers and sisters or their estates.

Many decisions in this and other states are in varying degrees of conflict as to the interpretation and construction to be accorded comparable instruments of conveyance.

The holding in some of these opinions would apparently lead to the conclusion Euth was granted a title in fee simple, with which subsequent provisions of the conveying instrument *437 are so in conflict as to bring the rule of repugnancy into play. This is the basis upon which the trial court held against defendants.

Undoubtedly the repugnancy doctrine is sound where applicable. See 26 C.J.S., Deeds, sections 90, page 836, and 129, page 974, and 41 Iowa Law Review 602, note 5.

But under the factual situation presented in the case at bar it does not apply.

In fact we are persuaded the deed here involved created a fee simple estate on executory limitation. See generally 28 Am.Jur.2d, Estates, sections 333-345, pages 538-552.

II. Addressing ourselves now to the matter of apparent conflict in Iowa case law on the subject at hand, we turn first to an interesting article written in 1956, wherein the author stated in part: “* * * ramifications of what may be called the ‘repugnancy rule’ have arisen in at least a hundred Iowa cases. Three of them were decided within the last year. * * * It is time for reappraisal.” 41 Iowa Law Review 601.

See also Guilford v. Gardner, 180 Iowa 1210, 1223, 1224, 162 N.W. 261.

We shall therefore adhere, in large part, to relevant delineating case law and text material.

III. According to the early common law there could be no limitation of a fee after a fee, nor could there be a fee in one person with a valid provision that upon the happening of a specified event the fee should shift to another. The fee created in the grantee could be defeated only by the grantor’s taking advantage of the breach of some condition and making an entry, thus regaining possession in himself; because the giving effect to a provision that the fee should go over from the first tenant in fee to another would have involved a transfer of possessory right without the required ceremony of actual delivery of possession. But neither under the modern law, nor in the nature of the thing itself, is there anything which prohibits limitation of a fee after a fee, nor any reason why that may not be done as well by deed as by will. Where it is done, the fee in the second taker becomes effective upon the happening of an event which by the terms of the instrument displaces the first fee and substitutes another in *438 its place. See Editorial comment, 17 A.L.R.2d 12, and Harder v. Matthews, 309 Ill. 548, 141 N.E. 442, 445.

Briefly stated, this court is persuaded the early rule at common law to the effect a fee could not be limited after a fee has in modern times been in large part realistically superseded by the generally prevailing view that a fee may be limited by resort to the devise of executory limitation.

IV. One standard, here of special significance, is that a deed should be construed, if at all possible, to effectuate the intent of the grantor.

As stated in 23 Am.Jur;2d, Deeds, section 159, pages 205, 206:

“When, and only when, the meaning of a deed is not clear, or is ambiguous or- uncertain, will a court of law or equity resort to established rules of construction to aid in the ascertainment of the grantor’s-intention by artificial means where such intention cannot otherwise be ascertained. Unlike a settled rule of property which has become a rule of law, rules of construction are sitbordinate and always yield to the intention of the parties, particularly the intention of the grantor, where such intention can be-ascertained. Since all rules of construction are in essence but methods of reasoning which experience has taught are best calculated to lead to the intention of the parties, generally no rule will be adopted that tends to defeat that intention.

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.W.2d 865, 261 Iowa 434, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-fleck-iowa-1967.