In Re Estate of Trimble

14 N.W.2d 673, 234 Iowa 994, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 573
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 6, 1944
DocketNo. 46457.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 N.W.2d 673 (In Re Estate of Trimble) 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 Trimble, 14 N.W.2d 673, 234 Iowa 994, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 573 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Miller, J.—

Charles M. Trimble died testate October 12, 1941. He left no surviving widow. Ilis only surviving child, a son, C. Virgil Trimble, forty-two years old, was his sole heir at law. Other relatives are mentioned in the will. They all survived testator and were his son.’s second wife, Laura Trimble, forty-three; his only grandchild, the daughter of his son by the first marriage, Betty Jean, Trimble, seventeen; his *995 sister, Carrie R. Badley, sixty-seven; Ms two brothers, W. D. Trimble, seventy-five, and H. A. Trimble, fifty-nine; Ms only niece, Helen Adams, thirty-four, and her three children, James Adams, nine, Jerry Adams, five, and Prank Adams, one.

Testator’s will contained ten numbered paragraphs followed by several unnumbered paragraphs. Paragraph 1 named his son executor without bond. Paragraph 2 provided that, “All my property both personal and real remain in the estate * * * during the life of my son * * Paragraph 3 provided, “The net income from my property both personal and real is to go to my son, Charles V. Trimble, with exceptions of. and under conditions further set forth in the various paragraphs of this will.’’ Paragraph 4 made any devise to the granddaughter, Betty Jean Trimble, contingent upon her mother, Mrs. Charles Freeman, and her stepfather, Charles Freeman, foregoing any claim for alimony or support money from testator’s son.

.Paragraph 5 provided that, at the son’s death, the net income of certain property on the north side of the public square in Indianola be divided between testator’s sister and his grandchildren ; after the death of the sister and son, the grandchildren to receive the net income, if living; should the last grandchild die after the son but before the sister, the net income to be divided among his brother or brothers and sister, share and share alike; at the death of the “last relative mentioned in this paragraph,” the property to go to Simpson College.

Paragraph 6 provided that any reference to grandchildren is limited to children begot by the son and does not include any children adopted by the son.

Paragraph 7 provided that the net income from certain property on the south side of the public square in Indianola should go, at the death of the son, to the grandchildren, share and share alike; at the death of the last grandchild after the son’s death, the net income to go to testator’s brothers and sister, share and share alike; at the death of the “last mentioned heir in this paragraph, ” the net income to go to his niece, Helen Adams, if living; at the death of the “last one mentioned in this paragraph, ’ ’ the property to go to Simpson college.

Paragraph 8 provided that, at the death of the son, the net income from the property on the northwest corner of the public *996 square in Indianola was to go to the son’s wife, Laura Trimble, if living; if Laura had secured a divorce from the son, the net income to go to the grandchildren; if the son had secured a divorce from Laura, the net income to go to Laura for life; at the death of the son and Laura, the net income to go to the grandchildren; at the death of the last grandchild after the death of the son and Laura, the net. income to go to the great grandchildren; if no great grandchildren exist after the death of the “last above mentioned heir,” the net income to go to testator’s brothers and sister, if living; at the death of the last one of the • ‘ ‘ above mentioned beneficiaries in this paragraph, this property is to go to Simpson College.”

Paragraph 9 provided that the net income from certain property in Aders addition to Indianola should go to the grandchildren, if living at the son’s death; at the death of the son and the last grandchild, the net income to go to testator’s brothers and sister, if then living; if living ‘ ‘ after the death of the last above mentioned heir in this paragraph, ’ ’ the net income to go to the niece, Helen Adams, for life; at the death of Helen Adams, “after death of above mentioned heirs,” her children to inherit the property.

Paragraph 10 provided that at the death of the son the net income from the ten and one-half acres where testator made his home was to go to his granddaughter, Betty Jean Trimble, for life; if she has any children living at the time of her death, “they are to inherit” the property; should the granddaughter die without surviving issue and before testator’s “last brother or sister, ’ ’ the net income to go to such brothers or sister; after the death of “the last one'of the above mentioned heirs in this paragraph/’ the place “to be inherited by the children” of Helen Adams, the niece; “ If however all of the above mentioned beneficiaries in this paragraph have passed away before that of my granddaughter, this place is to go to Simpson College, at her death.”

The unnumbered paragraphs provided for certain specific outright bequests and devises and contained a residuary clause which provided as follows:

“At the death of my son, the property not above referred . in any paragraph of this will both personal and real, I bequeath *997 to any child or children of his if living share and share alike. If at the death of my son he has no living children, the remainder of my property referred to in this paragraph shall be divided between my legal heirs share and share alike.”

The trial court determined that testator’s son takes only a life estate under the will; also that “said will is valid in all particulars and does not violate the ‘rule of perpetuities’ save and except as to the property designated in said will as the. property ‘located on the northwest corner'of public square, Indianola, Iowa’ as to which property the rule against perpetuities does apply, and as to said property it goes to the various named life tenants, and then becomes a part of the residuary estate and passes to the heirs of the testator, share and share 'alike.” The son alone appeals to this court.

I. Appellant contends that all of the devises or bequests under the will, except those in his favor, violate the rule against perpetuities and are void so that all-of the property in the estate passed to him in fee. We find no merit in the contention.

In some states the rale against perpetuities exists as a development of the common law. However, in Iowa it has been codified as section 10127, Code, 1939, which provides as follows:

“Every disposition of property is void which suspends the absolute power of controlling the same, for a longer period than during the lives of persons then in being, and twenty-one years thereafter.”

One of the early decisions of this court, interpreting the foregoing statute, is that of Phillips v. Harrow, 93 Iowa 92, 106, 61 N. W. 434, 438. The statute was the same then as it is now. After quoting the statute, we stated:

“It was said in Todhunter v. Railroad Co., 58 Iowa, 206, 12 N. W. Rep. 267, that this is the provision made in this state against perpetuities, and that it is not essentially different from that which has long been the law of England. The rule relates to the vesting of an estate, and does not affect its continuance after it has become vested. 18 Am. & Eng. Enc.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.W.2d 673, 234 Iowa 994, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-trimble-iowa-1944.