In Re Tyler's Estate

250 P. 456, 140 Wash. 679, 51 A.L.R. 1088, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 769
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1926
DocketNo. 19488. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 250 P. 456 (In Re Tyler's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Tyler's Estate, 250 P. 456, 140 Wash. 679, 51 A.L.R. 1088, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 769 (Wash. 1926).

Opinions

Holcomb, J.

— From an order in probate proceedings setting over to respondent three thousand dollars worth of property out of the separate estate of his deceased wife, under the provisions of § 1473, Rem. Comp. Stat., as amended by § 2, ch. 142, of the Laws of 1923, p. 457, [Rem. 1923 Sup., § 1473] entered in the court below, this appeal is taken.

On November 10, 1924, respondent murdered his wife. On January 5, 1925, Ida S. Spangler was’appointed administratrix of the estate of Anna L. Tyler, deceased. Prior to the filing of the petition by respondent to have the property set over to him in lieu of homestead, he had been tried, convicted, sentenced and committed to life imprisonment.' An affirmative answer to the petition was filed by appellants, alleging the above facts and that respondent killed his wife for the purpose of securing the property. A demurrer to the affirmative answer was sustained.

The question to decide is whether an uxorcide, killing his wife for the purpose of getting possession of her separate property, is entitled to the benefit of the above cited statute. In that statute it is provided:

“If it shall be made to appear to the satisfaction of the court that no homestead has been claimed in the manner provided by law, either prior or subsequent to the death of the person whose estate is being administered, then the court, upon such notice as may be *681 determined by tbe court, upon being satisfied that tbe funeral expenses, expenses of last sickness and of administration have been paid or provided for, and upon petition for that purpose, shall award and set off to the surviving spouse, if any, property of the estate, either community or separate, not exceeding the value of three thousand dollars ($3,000). . . . The order or judgment of the court making the award or awards provided for in this section, shall be conclusive and final, except on appeal, and except for fraud. The awards in this section provided shall be in lieu of all homestead provisions of the law and all exemptions.”

By the express terms of this statute, the apparent duty of the court is to award and set off to the surviving spouse the amount of property therein mentioned in lieu of homestead provisions of the law and all exemptions. The only exception provided for in the statute is that of fraud. But the apparent duty, above stated, must be construed in connection with other statutory provisions and principles in such a case as this. His Honor, the trial judge, rendered a very able judicial opinion upon this question, which, indeed, constitutes a brochure upon the subject. Nor is he to be criticized for accepting the one statute at its face value and feeling fettered thereby, for it is a fact that the majority of about fourteen jurisdictions, which have considered this and analogous questions, sustain him.

It is so offensive to good conscience, repugnant to justice and revolting to the mind of every right thinking person, that one should come into court with bloody hands and receive, as it were, a reward for his iniquity, that we cannot conceive that the legislature, composed of persons of good sense and integrity, should ever have intended, in enacting the statute and its amendment, that such consummation could be accomplished. It must be true that such a state of facts as appear in *682 this case was not in the mind of the legislature at the time the statutes were passed.

It is argued on behalf of respondent, in effect, — with which the trial court agreed, — that the courts must givé effect to the language of the statute as written, it being plain and unambiguous; that to construe this statute so that it would provide that one, as in the present case, should not benefit by his own crime would be to judicially interpret into the statute a provision not there found. It is also declared that it cannot be said that the legislature did not have in mind the making of exceptions, because it provided against fraud.

We are compelled to admit that a majority of the courts which have passed upon similar questions have held that the court has no power to write into an unambiguous law an exception which would prevent one from benefiting by his criminal act, when the legislature has not so provided. Some of the cases which have been examined have dealt with statutes upon insurance policies, where the beneficiary by homicide killed the insured so as to more speedily come into the money. Others have been upon statutes of inheritance or descent, where one has killed a person whose property had been willed to or would descend to him, in order more speedily to come into the estate.

In an early case in Nebraska, Shellenberger v. Ransom, 31 Neb. 61, 41 N. W. 700, 28 Am. St. 500, 10 L. it. A. 810, the supreme court first held that the husband who had murdered his wife for the purpose of acquiring her property was not entitled to inherit under the statute of that state, which did not make any such exception. Upon rehearing in that case, reported in 41 Neb. 631, 59 N. W. 935, 25 L. R. A. 564, in an opinion written by a commissioner, the former decision was overruled, and the opposite view taken.

*683 In McAllister v. Fair, 72 Kan. 533, 84 Pac. 112, 115 Am. St. 233, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1069, a very prominent case, it was held that a husband who had feloniously killed his intestate wife for the purpose of acquiring her property was not prevented, under the statute of that state which made no such exception, from taking such inheritance.

In Owens v. Owens, 100 N. C. 240, 6 S. E. 794, a widow who was convicted as an accessory before the fact of her husband’s murder, was held to be entitled to dower in his lands under the statute of that state, which contained no exception.

In Holloway v. McCormick, 41 Okl. 1, 136 Pac. 1111, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 536, it was held that a husband who had murdered his wife had a right to inherit from her under the statute of that state, because no exception was made thereto by reason of the criminal act.

In In re Carpenter’s Estate, 170 Pa. St. 203, 32 Atl. 637, 50 Am. St. 765, 29 L. R. A. 145, the Pennsylvania supreme court held that a son who murdered his father in order that he might more speedily obtain his inheritance out of his father’s estate was allowed to inherit, notwithstanding his felonious act.

See, also, Deem v. Milliken, 3 Ohio C. D. 491, affirmed by memorandum opinion of the supreme court, 53 Ohio St. 668, 44 N. E. 1134.

Most of these cases cite other cases that are thought to sustain the decision therein in principle or by analogy, but we do not care to set out either the reasoning of the courts in the above cases, or the authorities. It seems to us that there was in all of those cases a too literal, submissive, and complacent acceptance of the bare language of the one statute, rather than fundamental principles of the common law and other written law.

*684 In this state there is also a general statute, Rem. Comp. Stat., §143 [P. C, §8252], which is pertinent. It provides:

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Bluebook (online)
250 P. 456, 140 Wash. 679, 51 A.L.R. 1088, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tylers-estate-wash-1926.