Jackson v. Grant

278 N.W. 190, 224 Iowa 579
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 8, 1938
DocketNo. 44251.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 278 N.W. 190 (Jackson v. Grant) 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
Jackson v. Grant, 278 N.W. 190, 224 Iowa 579 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

Stiger, C. J.

Robert Hornby died intestate February 14, 1920, survived by his widow, Eliza Hornby, and Wilbur Hornby and Minnie Smith, children by a former marriage. At the time of his death, Mr. Hornby was the owner of a 240-acre farm in Monona County and three resident properties in Mapleton, *580 wbieb real estate was unencumbered and valued at over $50,000 at the time of the death of the decedent. Mr. and Mrs. Hornby occupied one of the resident properties in Mapleton as their homestead which was worth about $3,000. After the death of her husband, Mrs. Hornby continued to occupy the homestead until her death on January 8, 1933.

Seth-B. Smith, husband of Minnie Smith, formerly Minnie Hornby, and Wilbur Hornby were appointed administrators of the estate of Robert Hornby in February, 1920, and the estate was closed and the administrators discharged in March, 1921. After the estate was closed, Seth Smith and Wilbur Hornby continued to manage and care for all of the property belonging to the estate until after the death of Mrs. Hornby in 1933 in the same manner as during the year of administration of the estate, carrying on the business as administrators.

In February, 1935, plaintiff, a sister of Eliza Hornby, brought this action in partition as one of her heirs alleging that upon the death of Robert Hornby his widow, Eliza Hornby, took an undivided one-third interest in said real estate, decedent having died intestate, and that such interest descended to her heirs upon her death.

The defendant-appellants, Minnie Smith and Wilbur Horn-by, children of Robert Hornby, claimed as a defense to the action that Eliza Hornby had elected to occupy the homestead for life in lieu of her distributive share and that such life estate in the homestead was all the interest she had in the property of her husband.

The trial court found for the plaintiff and a decree was entered which adjudged and decreed that upon the death of Robert Hornby, his widow, Eliza Hornby, became the owner of an undivided one-third interest in his real estate and that Minnie Smith and Wilbur Hornby each became the owner of an undivided one-third interest in said real estate and that the said widow did not elect to take a life estate in the homestead in lieu of her distributive share.

Mrs. Hornby was not granted a widow’s allowance and her distributive share was not set off to her during her lifetime.

Other issues were presented and determined in the case, but the only question involved on appeal is whether Eliza Horn-by took an undivided one-third interest in the real estate as her distributive share in her husband’s estate or, as contended by *581 appellants, elected to take a life estate in the homestead in lieu of her distributive share.

Instantly on the death of her husband, an undivided one-third interest and estate in his real estate, that is her distributive share, vested in Mrs. Hornby, which vested estate was subject to be divested by a later election to take the homestead for life in lieu of her distributive share. Van Veen v. Van Veen, 213 Iowa 323, 236 N. W. 1, 238 N. W. 718; Crouse v. Crouse, 219 Iowa 736, 259 N. W. 443. Immediately, upon the death of decedent his surviving spouse and children took as tenants in common. As stated, Mrs. Hornby’s vested estate was a defeasible one and the question is whether she divested herself of her said estate by electing to occupy the homestead for life, the burden of establishing said election being on the defendants.

Code section 10146 provides that the survivor may elect to retain the homestead for life in lieu of a distributive share.

No formal election was made and we must turn to the record and determine from the conduct and declarations of the widow and all the facts and circumstances whether she made such election.

After the appointment of the administrators in 1920, they opened an account in the First State Bank of Mapleton designated as “Robert Hornby Estate”, which account was continued by the administrators until February, 1935, two years after the death of Mrs. Hornby. Bonds belonging to the estate were sold, the proceeds of the bonds and money and rents received during the period of administration were placed in this account and, after the estate was closed in 1921, all rents and income from the estate were placed in this account. The administrators drew most of the checks against this account during the period from 1920 to 1935, paying the taxes on all the real estate including the homestead and the insurance, repairs, and improvements on - all the property and all light, telephone, and water bills of the children and Mrs. Hornby incurred in the use of the estate property. They also looked after the renting of the farm and town properties, had a new corncrib built on the farm, kept the water system on the farm in repair, purchased seed for the farm, leased the property in the name of the Hornby Estate and in general managed all of the property. They also paid the expenses of the last illness and funeral of Mrs. Hornby. Minnie Smith, Wilbur Hornby and his wife and Eliza Hornby drew *582 checks on this account. The record does not disclose any limitation on their privilege of writing such checks. Seth Smith testified that Mrs. Hornby wrote two checks, and because she was not accustomed to writing checks and transacting banking business, and drawing checks bothered her, that thereafter his wife drew cheeks on the account giving the money to Mrs. Hornby and the checks were charged to her in the account which was kept by the administrators.

The administrators kept an annual account during the fourteen-year period of all receipts and disbursements made in connection with the estate property. The balance in the account each year was carried over until the next year and no settlement was ever made between Minnie Smith, Wilbur Hornby, and Mrs. Hornby. They borrowed money from time to time from the bank in an amount which reached at one time the sum of $1,600. Proceeds of the notes were placed in the account and the money used for the benefit of all the property, the heirs, and Mrs. Hornby. The notes were paid from the income of the estate property. Mrs. Hornby had no property of her own and was entirely dependent for support on the estate of her husband. The taxes on the homestead property were paid by the administrators each year from checks drawn on the account in the same manner as they paid the taxes on the other real estate belonging to the estate. The administrators paid her telephone, light, and water bills and furnished fuel, groceries, nurse and companion for Mrs. Hornby, insurance and repairs on the homestead, and gave her cash when requested, charging all such expenditures to her in the general estate account kept by them.

After the death of his father, Wilbur Hornby executed a mortgage on his undivided one-third interest of the farm land, though he is now claiming that he at all times was the owner of an undivided one-half interest with his sister, Minnie Smith. A part of the testimony of Seth Smith is as follows:

“After Hornby’s death, Wilbur Hornby and myself were appointed as administrators of the estate. He left no will. I think we closed the estate within a year. After Hornby was gone, there was rent to collect, payment on paving and somebody had to take the initiative and I did as if it was my own stuff.

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Bluebook (online)
278 N.W. 190, 224 Iowa 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-grant-iowa-1938.