Kohler v. Ichler

186 N.E.2d 202, 116 Ohio App. 16
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1961
Docket469
StatusPublished

This text of 186 N.E.2d 202 (Kohler v. Ichler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kohler v. Ichler, 186 N.E.2d 202, 116 Ohio App. 16 (Ohio Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

GUERNSEY, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law and fact from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court in an action to quiet title. Although assignments of error were filed, the appeal was otherwise perfected as an appeal on questions of law and fact and was heard de novo by this court on the facts admitted in the pleadings and the stipulations of fact made in the original trial of the cause.

The trial court having struct from the petition all that portion of the eighth paragraph thereof including and following the words “and that she had an extreme antipathy and animosity and dislike for plaintiff,” and no amendment being ordered by this court, the trial de novo is on the same pleadings as below and excluding the allegations thus stricken. 3 Ohio Jurisprudence (2d), 662, Appellate Review, Section 712.

The following pertinent facts were admitted in the pleadings or stipulated:

1. Minnie Kohler died testate on July 18,1952, having never had issue, leaving surviving her on said date her only adopted child, Ray Kohler, one brother, Warren Ichler, a defendant herein, and one sister, Ruah Stevenson, a defendant herein.

2. Ray Kohler died testate on February 6, 1959, having never had issue and leaving surviving him his widow, Frances M. Kohler, plaintiff herein, who also was his sole heir at law and sole beneficiary under his will, and who had married him on June 26,1929.

3. Mae Ichler, another sister of Minnie Kohler, died in 1949, having never had issue.

4. Defendant Alfred F. Brindley, executor of the estate of Minnie Kohler, has been in posssession of all the real estate herein involved since his appointment. The will of Minnie Kohler was not offered in evidence in this action.

5. By a series of five deeds executed and delivered to Ray Kohler over a period of time from May 31,1940, to June 25,1947, Minnie Kohler conveyed the properties therein described. The granting clause of the first deed contained the provision:

“Ray W. Kohler for life, and then to the heirs of his body, *18 and if he die without heirs of his body, the remainder to revert to the grantor, if living, and if not living, then remainder to grantor’s heirs at law.” (Emphasis added.)

The habendnm clause of the first deed contained the provision :

“To have and to hold said premises, with all the appurtenances thereunto belonging, to the said Bay W. Kohler for life, and then to the heirs of his body, and if he die without heirs of his body, the remainder to revert to grantor, if living, and if not living, then remainder to grantor’s heirs at law.” (Emphasis added.)

The provisions of the granting and habendum clauses in the third deed were essentially the same as the foregoing. The provisions of the granting and habendum clauses in the second, fourth and fifth deeds materially differed from those herein-before quoted only in omitting the emphasized phrase of each of said clauses.

As by the facts admitted or stipulated plaintiff is not herself an heir of Minnie Kohler she may succeed in her action to have her title quieted to the premises conveyed by the five deeds only as the sole heir of Nay Kohler or as sole beneficiary under his will. She had to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that upon the death of Nay Kohler he had an absolute estate in fee simple in said premises which could pass to her as his heir or which could pass to her under the provisions of his will.

The parties have ignored the slight differences in the granting and habendum clauses of the various deeds, and since, as will hereinafter appear, the additional phrase contained in the first and third deeds for the purposes of this action adds nothing to the legal effect of the granting and habendum clauses, we will likewise treat the deeds as being identical in their phraseology and consider them as if they all read:

“To B for life, and then to the heirs of B’s body, and if B dies without heirs of his body, the remainder to revert to A (the grantor) if living, and if not living, then remainder to A’s heirs at law. ’ ’

At common law the woi'ds, “to B for life, and then to the heirs of B’s body,” would ordinarily create a fee tail estate. However, in Ohio, the statute which abolishes the application of the rule in Shelley’s case and the statute against perpetuities, *19 Sections 2107.49 and 2131.08, respectively, of the Revised Code, read in pertinent part as follows:

“When lands, tenements, .or hereditaments are given by deed or will to a person for his life, and after his death to his heirs in fee, the conveyance shall vest an estate for life only in' such first taker and a remainder in fee simple in his heirs. If the remainder is given to the heirs of the body of the life tenant, the conveyance shall vest an estate for life only in such first taker and a remainder in fee simple in the heirs of his body. The rule in Shelley’s case is abolished by this section and shall not be given effect.” (Emphasis added.)
“ * * * All estates given in tail, by deed or will, in lands or tenements lying within this state, shall be and remain an absolute estate in fee simple to the issue of the first donee in tail. ’ ’

The former of these sections has existed in its present form since 1941, and the latter of these sections since 1931. The effect of either, as applied to the operative words of these conveyances, and without considering any reversion, was to initially limit Ray Kohler’s estate in the various premises to a life estate and to prevent same from being enlarged to an absolute estate in fee simple during his lifetime. His widow would, of course, receive nothing from him by virtue of this life estate for the life estate would terminate upon his death. And as he never had had any heirs of his body there is no question that the remainder to the heirs of his body, created by the application of these statutes, upon the respective conveyances, if not alone by the words thereof, also failed.

In the case of Evangelical Lutheran St. Pauls Congregational Unaltered Augsbierian Confession v. Sheffield, 90 Ohio St., 467, without reference to any statute abolishing the rule in Shelley’s case and without reference to any statute against per-petuities, the Supreme Court held that upon the death of the donee of an estate tail without children the real estate would revert to the heirs at law of the donor of the estate tail. In the case of Bunnell v. Evans, 26 Ohio St., 409, the Supreme Court held that:

“Where a testator made a devise to his son John ‘through his natural life and then to his heirs, ’ and in another part of the will used the word ‘heirs’ in the sense of ‘children’ — Held, that the son took a life estate only, with remainder to his children, or *20 issue, and not to Ms heirs generally, and that upon his death without issue, the devise in remainder failed, and the estate reverted to the heirs of the testator.”

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Bluebook (online)
186 N.E.2d 202, 116 Ohio App. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kohler-v-ichler-ohioctapp-1961.