In Re Estate of Warren

234 N.W. 835, 211 Iowa 940
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 10, 1931
DocketNo. 40347.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 234 N.W. 835 (In Re Estate of Warren) 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 Warren, 234 N.W. 835, 211 Iowa 940 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Wagner, J.

An instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of Columbus H. Warren is as follows:"

“I, Columbus H. Warren, of Sanders County, Montana, do make this my last will and testament, hereby revolting all- former wills, if any, by me at any time made.
*941 “To my mother, Agnes Duncan, I give all my property, real and personal wherever located, of which I may die- seized, to be her own absolutely and without reserve of. any kind.
‘ ‘ I hereby nominate my mother, Agnes Duncan,- as executrix of this my last will and testament, and request the court to appoint her without bond. .
“In witness whereof I have to this my last will and testament, consisting of one sheet of paper, subscribed my name this 14th day of June, 1916.”

The petition in this case was filed by Louis R, Warren, administrator with the will annexed of the Columbus H. Warren estate. The said Louis R. Warren, individually, and his brother, F, W. Warren, joined'said administrator, with the will annexed, asking for the same relief. The petition is attacked by motion to dismiss, in the nature of a demurrer, which, under the law, for the purposes of said motion, concedes the facts well pleaded in .the petition to be true. We glean from'the petition the following facts: Columbus II, Warren; a resident of Page County, Iowa, dieif, September 3, 1928. Administration of his estate was commenced in Page County, on the theory that he; died intestate. Louis R. Warren was appointed -administrator of -his. estate. Thereafter, there was discovered the foregoing will of said deceased, which was .duly admitted to probate .in, the Page County district court on February 27, 1929, and Louis-R. Warren was appointed administrator with the will annexed. , Said decedent ■was never married, and had no lineal descendants. At the time of the-execution of-the aforesaid, will, the: father, of-said ¡decedent was dead, and his mother, Agnes Duncan, .then living, -was his §gle heir apparent. The mother died in.November, 1916. The father of the decedent died-years ago; leaving Agnes Warren as his surviving widow, and his sons, the .decedent and the plaintiffs Louis R. Warren.and F. W. Warren, as ¡his sole.heirs: at law. After the father’s death, the. mother, Agnes, married one E, Duncan, and by this latter marriage, there were .five children,, who, or the lineal descendants of those'deceased, are parties defendant in this cause of action. Mary-Browning, Myrtle Fay, and J. T.. Duncan, two half sisters and a half brother of the deceased’s,..were living at the time of. his death. Charles Duncan, a half brother of the deceased’s, died intestate, before the date of the testator’s death, leaving the defendant Avis Duncan Harvey as his sole *942 heir-at-law. I. E. Duncan, another half brother of the deceased’s, died intestate before the death of the testator, leaving as his only-heirs at law, the defendants Austin E. Duncan, Zilpha Duncan, Lewis Duncan, Pearley Duncan, Adrian Duncan, Hewitt Duncan, Robert Duncan, Charles Duncan, and Mildred Duncan. In addition to the foregoing facts, it is averred in the petition:

‘ ‘ That, by reason of the fact that the said will of Columbus H. Warren purported to give to his mother, Agnes Duncan, who was his sole heir, the same title, both as to quantity and quality, and in all other respects, in his property which she would have received, had he died intestate and survived by her, it is the contention of this administrator with will annexed (joined in by the other plaintiffs) that the said will is void as to said devise, and that the said Agnes Duncan never would have taken anything thereunder, had she survived the said Columbus H. Warren. He further shows the court that, on the death of the said Agnes Duncan, any claim she might have had, or which anyone might have had, under said purported will, lapsed, and that the- property of the said Columbus H. Warren should be distributed (after payment of all just claims) as though said instrument or will had never been executed. That, by reason thereof, the said full brothers, Louis R. Warren and P. W. Warren, take an undivided half of said estate, to be divided equally between them, and that the remaining half should be divided as follows: To Louis R. Warren, E. W. Warren, Mary Browning, Myrtle Pay, J. T. Duncan-, and Avis Dunean-IIarvey, each an undivided one-seventh (1/7) interest in said remaining half; and to Austin E„ Duncan, Zilpha Duncan, Lewis Duncan, Pearley Duncan, Adrian Duncan, Hewitt Duncan, Robert Duncan, Charles Duncan, and Mildred Duiican, jointly, an undivided one-seventh (1/7) interest in said remaining half; -or that each of said last-named children, take ah undivided one-one-hundred-twenty-sixth (1/126) interest in the total estate. That a contention has arisen among the parties above named as to the interests of each in said estate, it being claimed by some that the said will is valid, and that, on the death of the devisee, Agnes Duncan, her heirs should be substituted in her stead, and the estate divided accordingly; that, by reason of said controversy, it is necessary that said will be construed by the court, and the proper distribution of said estate fixed and determined.”

*943 The plaintiffs pray therein, that the rights of the parties be fixed as therein alleged and contended for.

The proposition raised by the defendant’s motion to dismiss is that the petition on its face, in conjunction with the statutory law, Section 11861, Code, 1927, shows that each of the living children of the mother is entitled to one seventh of the entire estate, and that Avis Duncan Harvey, the surviving daughter of Charles Duncan, deceased, is entitled to an undivided one seventh of said estate, and that the aforesaid children of I. E. Duncan, deceased, are together entitled to an undivided one seventh of said estate.

The trial court, from the facts averred in the petition, held:

“That said last will and testament of said Columbus H. Warren, deceased, devised and bequeathed to said Agnes Duncan the same property, both real and personal, both as to quantity and quality, that.she would have inherited from him, had he died intestate, and said Agnes Duncan survived him; that, had said Agnes Duncan survived him, she would have taken from him all of his property, both real and personal, by the worthier title by descent, and not under said last will and testament; that said provisions in said last will and testament in favor of said Agnés Duncan are a nullity, and of no force or effect; that, said Agnes Duncan having died prior to said Columbus H. Warren, her heirs at law would be entitled to no more under said will than said Agnes Duncan would have taken, had she survived him: in other words, said will being a nullity and of no force or effect, so far as Agnes Duncan was concerned, it would be of no more force or effect in favor of her heirs.”

Thus it is seen that the court fixed the shares of the parties to this litigation in accordance with the averments of the petition.

Section 11860, Code, 1927, provides that the word “devisee” shall, when applicable, be construed to embrace “legatees,” and that the word “devised” shall, in like eases, be understood as comprising the word “bequeathed.” Section 11861, Code, 1927, provides:

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Bluebook (online)
234 N.W. 835, 211 Iowa 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-warren-iowa-1931.