In Re Estate of Wood

6 N.W.2d 846, 232 Iowa 1004
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1942
DocketNo. 46124.
StatusPublished

This text of 6 N.W.2d 846 (In Re Estate of Wood) 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 Wood, 6 N.W.2d 846, 232 Iowa 1004 (iowa 1942).

Opinions

Stiger, J.

Clarence and Sarah Wood were brother and sister. Neither married and they lived together on a farm jointly-owned by them for many years. In their later years they moved to Anamosa, where they lived together until Sarah died in 1927 at the age of 60 years. She left a will giving Clarence a life *1006 estate in all lier property, and appointed him executor. He qualified and acted as executor of her estate until his death in 1937.

We cannot agree with the proposition advanced by appellees that the language of the will is so plain and unequivocal that there is no room for construction. Its meaning is doubtful, and, in ascertaining the intention of the testator, we must take into consideration his position, the situation existing, and the circumstances surrounding him at -the time he executed the will.

In 1930, and when he was acting as executor of the estate of his sister, Clarence Wood was swindled out of $40,000 in Mexico-City, Mexico, by.a confidence game perpetrated on this credulous and trusting old man by some professional cheaters who first won his complete confidence. They convinced him that in order to consummate a business deal that would net a profit of $240,000 it was necessary that they have $40,000 in cash. He was promised one third of the profits. He returned to Cedar Rapids with one of the swindlers to raise this sum of money. He turned over to his companion about $32,000 of his own money, and, being unable to obtain the balance on bis own credit, used about $8,000 belonging to the Sarah Wood estate.

In March 1936, he made his last will and testament. Wc will now refer to the more material portions of his will and codicils. Paragraph 3 reads:

“If it is found the estate of Sarah V. Wood, including her two-fifths equity in the home farm and two Argentine Government Bonds, one for five hundred ($500) dollars and one for one thousand ($1,000) dollars, should prove insufficient to pay her bequests in full, then it is my wish and will that a sum sufficient to pay them all in full be deducted from the proceeds of my estate and applied to cover those deficiencies * *

In paragraph 5 he bequeathed $4,000 to his cousin, Etta Lee Shepherd, an objector, and bonds and stock of the face value of about $2,000. When the will was executed, she was a resident of Spokane, AVashington. On August 4, 1936, the testator executed his first codicil and in the first paragraph thereof increased the cash bequest to Miss Shepherd to- $5,000, and stated:

“ It is my will and I direct that this bequest of five thousand *1007 ($5,000.00) dollars be paid first of all and in full, regardless of any bequests made by me to any other legatee under my Will, it being my wish and intention that this bequest of five thousand ($5,000.00) dollars be made a preférred one.”

On August 27,-1936, he made his second codicil, in which he made additional bequests to Miss Shepherd. At this time, apparently, she was residing in the home of the testator in Anamosa, as she filed a claim for $5,000 as housekeeper, nurse, and companion covering this period.

The position of appellant is that the testator intended the payments which he directed in paragraph 3 to be deducted from his estate to pay deficiencies, if any, in bequests of his sister, and these payments were to be made prior to the payment of-legacies, and appellant especially contends that they were to be paid prior to the legacy left to Miss Shepherd by the will of the testator.

The claim of appellees is that the first codicil, in stating that the bequest to Miss Shepherd in the sum of $5,000 should be a preferred one and be paid first, “regardless of any bequests made by me to any other legatee under my will,” shows the testator intended this bequest to have priority over all bequests and over the payments to be made under paragraph 3; that the said payments were in fact “bequests” to the legatees under the will of Sarah Wood, and that by said paragraph he made such legatees his own legatees.

The only issue passed on by the trial court was the question of a proper construction of the will, and it found that the construction placed on the will by appellees was correct and denied the application. t

We are of the opinion the construction placed on the will by the administrator of the estate of Sarah Wood, deceased, is correct.

At the time Mr. Wood executed his will and codicils he had not made restitution to the estate of his sister for the loss occasioned it by the conversion to his own use of the securities of her estate.

Mr. Wood provided in his first codicil that his bequest of $5,000 to Miss Shepherd should be a preferred bequest and *1008 should be paid in full regardless of any other bequests in his will. We are of the opinion that the payments provided for in paragraph 3 were not “bequests made by me to any other legatee under my will” and that the paragraph does not make the legatees of Sarah Wood the legatees of testator. The words “bequest” and “legacy” properly and ordinarily mean testamentary gifts of personal property. There is nothing in the will that suggests testator did not have a full understanding of the accurate meaning of the words or that he used them otherwise than in their appropriate sense. There are eight bequests of personal property in the will and in making these bequests the testator states, “J give and bequeath,” etc. Throughout the will and codicils he refers to his gifts of personal property as bequests. He properly refers to the gift of real estate to Miss Shepherd as a “ devise, ’ ’ and in disposing of his residuary estate he said:

“All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate of every kind and nature, real, personal and mixed, I give, devise and bequeath as follows: ’ ’ etc.

But, in paragraph 3, he carefully avoids the use of the words “bequest,” “gift,” “bequeath,” or “legacy.” He states therein that a sum sufficient to pay the deficiency in the bequests of his sister in full shall be deducted from the proceeds of his estate.

His third and last codicil, the last expression of the intention of this testator, refers solely to the provisions of paragraph 3 and provides that the bequest of Sarah Wood to the Anamosa Public Library in the sum of $10,000 be made effective to the amount of $3,000 and no more. He then states in said codicil:

“That if the assets of the estate of my sister, Sarah V. Wood, shall not be sufficient so that her bequest to said Library can be paid from assets -of her said estate, available for said purpose to the full extent of three thousand ($3,000.00) dollars, then the deficiency so found to exist in the available funds for payment of said bequest by my sister’s estate, shall he taken from my estate.” (Italics supplied.)

*1009 At the time the will was executed in 1936, his sister had been deceased for many years, and there is nothing in the will to indicate the testator desired to make a gift to the estate of his sister or to make her legatees the objects of his bounty.

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