In re Estate of Jones

64 N.E.2d 609, 44 Ohio Law. Abs. 339, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 822
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1943
DocketNo. 165
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 N.E.2d 609 (In re Estate of Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals 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 Jones, 64 N.E.2d 609, 44 Ohio Law. Abs. 339, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 822 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

[341]*341OPINION

By JACKSON, J.

The decedent, Thomas T. Jones, died testate on the 22nd day of July, 1942, leaving Chloe Barnes Jones as his surviving spouse, and Walter O. Jones, David A. Jones and Ann Orpha Shuman as heirs of his body by a former marriage.

The inventory and appraisement of the testator, as filed in the Probate Court of Van Wert county, showed personal goods and chattels to the amount of $1002.00, and moneys belonging to the decedent in the sum of $273.82, making a total of $1275.82. The inventory recites that no property was exempted from the administration for the surviving spouse nor any allowance for a year’s support made to her, by reason of a contract signed by the testator and his surviving spouse on the 17th day of September, 1938.

To this inventory and apraisement the said Chloe Barnes Jones filed exceptions as follows:

1. Said decedent died, seized in fee simple of eighty acres of real estate situated in the township of Washington, County of Van Wert and State of Ohio, and that said real estate is omitted from the inventory.

2. The inventory fails to set off to this surviving spouse any exemptions or year’s allowance.

3. Chloe Barnes Jones the surviving spouse asserts that the purported antenuptial agreement made a part of said inventory is null and void and unenforceable.

Upon the hearing of the exceptions the Probate Court found flhat the antenuptial agreement was void, unenforceable and of no effect; and that the testator Thomas T. Jones was the owner in fee simple of the lands which he possessed at the time of his death; and it was ordered that the antenuptial agreement be set aside and held for naught, and the administrator with the will annexed was ordered to amend the inventory and appraisement to include such real estate and to require the appraisers to set off to the surviving spouse, her statutory exemptions and year’s allowance.

To these orders of the Probate Court the administrator with the will annexed and the next of kin perfected an appeal on questions of law.

The assignments of error are as follows:

1. The court erred in sustaining the exceptions to the inventory.

2. The court erred in adjudging said antenuptial agreement unenforceable and of no effect.

[342]*3423. The court erred in adjudging said deed to convey to the decedent Thomas T. Jones an estate in fee simple.

4. Other errors appearing on the record.

While there are four' assignments of error set forth, the arguments and issues resolve themselves as to assignments of error numbers 2 and 3 which embrace all other assignments of error.

The case was submitted on an agreed statement of facts which is as follows:

Thomas T. Jones died July 22, 1942, leaving the exceptor, Chloe Barnes Jones, his surviving spouse. The testator and surviving spouse were married August 22, 1936. At the time of the marriage and at the time of the death of the téstator he had an interest in certain real estate in his possession by virtue of a deed marked Exhibit “A”. Prior to the marriage on August 22, 1936, the testator' and the said Chloe Barnes Jones entered into an oral agreement the terms of which are embodied in a paper writing signed September 17, 1938, which writing is attached and marked Exhibit “B”. At the time said oral agreement was made and at the time of said marriage and at the time of the signing of the paper writing by Chloe Barnes Jones, the said Thomas T. Jones, the testator, represented to said Chloe Barnes Jones that his then legal interest in the real estate described in Exhibit “A” was the use and .possession of said premises for his lifetime only and that his interest was not such that she could have at his death any right as surviving spouse therein. At the time said oral agreement was made and at the time of the marriage and at the time of the signing of said paper writing, the said Chloe Barnes Jones relied on said representations and made such oral agreement and signed such paper writing believing that said Thomas T. Jones had an interest in said real estate in which she could not at his death have any interest as surviving spouse.

The deed referred to as Exhibit “A” is a warranty deed from Edward T. Jones and Jane Jones, husband and wife, to their son Thomas T. Jones, the testator in question, for the consideration of love and affection and one thousand dollars for the eighty acres of real estate located in the township of Washington, county of Van Wert and State of Ohio.

In the granting clause, the conveyance is made to “Thomas T. Jones and heirs of his body.”

In the habendum clause, the deed recites that it is for the use of “Thomas T. Jones, his heirs and assigns forever.”

In the warranty clause, it is recited “Thomas T. Jones and his heirs of his body.’.’

[343]*343In the granting and warranty clauses, the above quoted words are typewritten, and in the habendum clause the words “Thomas T. Jones” and the word “his” are typewritten, and the words “heirs and assigns forever” are printed.

It is a well-known rule of construction that typewritten phrases are given effect over printed phrases if there is any inconsistency between them.

9 O Jur, Sec. 200, Contracts, page 429.

16 American Jurisprudence, Paragraph 178, Deeds, p. 1043

8 Ruling Case Law, Section 98, Deeds, p. 1043.

What, then, is the meaning and effect, in Ohio, of a granting clause which recites that the premises in question are conveyed to “Thomas T. Jones and heirs of his body”?

The deed is dated January 15, 1897, and under the decisions in Ohio, Thomas T. Jones, by virtue of the deed in question, became the first donee in tail of the estate and held an estate in fee tail, which left Thomas T. Jones, as the first tenant in tail in full enjoyment of all the rights and subject to all the disabilities incident to that species of estates, and upon his decease the right of entry accrued to the issue of his body and their estate immediately became an absolute estate in fee simple.

Pollock v Speidel, 27 Oh St., 87-95.

Dix v Benzler, 32 Ohio Law Abstract, 599.

Since an estate in fee tail is one of inheritance, the real estate in question should have been included in the inventory.

Sec. 10502-1 GC.

16 O Jur, Paragraph 22, Estates, p. 405.

16 O Jur, paragraph 27, Estates, p. 410.

16 O Jur, paragraph 34, p. 415.

Harkness v Corning, 24 Oh St., 416.

Diebel’s Ohio Probate Law, 433.

The State of Ohio, by virtue of §10512-8 GC, limits all estates given in tail by deed or will in lands or tenements lying within the state to be an absolute estate in fee simple to the issue of the first donee in tail.

In any event, whether the estate is for life or in tail and if there were no surviving spouse, the heirs of Thomas T. Jones, being the issue of the first donee in tail, would receive and possess a fee simple estate.

There is considerable difference between a life estate and an estate in tail.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.E.2d 609, 44 Ohio Law. Abs. 339, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-jones-ohioctapp-1943.