Laver v. Kreiter

19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 566, 27 Ohio Dec. 251, 1917 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 12
CourtRichland County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 25, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 566 (Laver v. Kreiter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richland County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laver v. Kreiter, 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 566, 27 Ohio Dec. 251, 1917 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 12 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Mansfield, J.

Philip Laver died testate in November, 1898, seized of certain valuable real estate in this city.

By items two and three of his will he makes disposition of his real estate as follows.-

Item 2. “I will and devise to my two sons, George M. Laver and Philip J. Laver, the equal use and enjoyment of the rents and profits of my real estate during their natural lives, or during the natural life of the surviving one of them to descend as hereinafter designated in Item three.”
Item 3. “At the decease of my said sons George M. Laver and Philip J. Laver or the surviving one of them, I will and devise my real estate in Item 2, referred to, to the heirs of the body of my said son, namely, the children of my said son George M. Laver, the share to which he would be entitled and to the children of my said son Philip J. Laver, the share to which he would be entitled if living, and if at the decease of the surviving one of my said Sons, George M. or Philip' Laver, the heirs of the body of either shall have deceased, then I devise to the heirs of. either so surviving their heirs and assigns said real estate in fee simple.”

The two sons of the testator named in the will, namely, Philip J. Laver and George M. Laver, at the death of testator had each one child, Edith Laver being the daughter of Philip J. Laver, and Harold Laver being a son of George M. Laver.

Philip J. Laver, the father of Edith, died about the year 1908, being then about 55 years of age. George M. Laver died November 5, 1915, about 63 years of age, and at the time of his death was in the complete enjoyment of the life estate both in his own right and right of survivorship to his brother’s interest to the real estate named. Harold Laver, the son of George M. Laver, at the time of his father’s death was about 30 years old.

On December 2, 1912, about three years prior to the death of his father, George M. Laver, Harold Laver released and quit claimed his interest in the real estate in question to one Martin Kreiter for a valuable consideration, and on November 22, 1915, Martin Kreiter sold this interest by deed of general warranty [568]*568to Boals, Zellers and others, named as defendants in this ease. The surviving life tenant, George M. Laver, died on November 5, 1915, and on November 15, 1915, Edith Laver, surviving daughter of Philip J. Laver, filed this proceeding in partition making Harold Laver, Martin Kreiter, Zellers, McClure et al, parties defendant. On hearing of the partition proceedings, partition was ordered of the premises; subsequently the property was sold in that proceeding, one-half the proceeds ordered distributed to the plaintiff, Edith Laver, and the balance held to await an order'of distribution upon the issues raised by the pleadings filed by Martin Kreiter, Harold J. Laver and defendants, Boals, Zellers et al.

The question is presented -in the first instance under the will of the testator, Philip Laver, Sr., whether the devise to the children of the devisees creates a contingent or vested re- ' mainder, and to determine this question involves the construction of said will, for if the interest to the children of devisees was a vested interest then an inquiry may be made further into the issues of fraud raised by the answer and cross-petition of defendant Harold J. Laver and also the question in lis pen-dens, but if such interest was simply a contingent remainder, that is, the title to the children under the will did not vest' until the death of the surviving life tenant, that would determine the ease for the reason that the deed from Harold Laver to Kreiter being merely a quit-claim without any covenants of warranty, no estoppel would arise to defeat his alleged claim as a tenant in common with his cousin, Edith Laver.

A vested remainder is an estate in presentí although to be enjoyed in the future. A contingent remainder is an estate to vest upon the happening of some future event. So in the case at bar we have the question, was there a vested remainder, the .enjoyment of which was simply postponed until the happening of a future event, or was the vesting deferred until the happening of a future event.

The law favors the vesting of estates from the time of the . death of the testator, unless it appears from the terms of the will that the vesting depended upon a condition precedent to its [569]*569taking effect, and rules of construction give way to intention of the testator as may be gleaned from the terms of the will. Now in the will in question, it will be observed that the testator after the decease of the life tenants does not devise to certain designated persons and their • heirs, but he devises after the termination of the life estate “to the heirs of the body of my said sons,” namely, “the children of my said son George M. Laver the share to" which he would be entitled and to the children of my said son Philip J. Laver, the share to which he would be entitled if living, and if at the decease of the surviving one of my said sons George M. or Philip Laver, the heirs of the body of either shall have deceased, then I devise to the heirs of either so surviving their heirs and assigns said real estate in fee simple. ’ ’

It is to be observed that by this language, by the' words “heirs of the body of my said sons,” he explicitly states what he means by that expression, namely, the children of said sons; that is, I take it that by fair construction what the testator meant in the use of the terms employed was that before the right of possession could -be exercised by the children of either, they must not only survive their own father, but survive the surviving life tenant. Here is an uncertainty both as to the persons who are to take and also as to the time of enjoyment; it is not merely the postponement of enjoyment, but an uncertainty of enjoyment depending upon survivorship; that is, the children or issue of either of the life tenants had no right or enjoyment upon the death of their father, but such right hung upon a further contingency that they must survive the surviving life tenant; it was not a devise to a life tenant and at his death to his heirs, but in the estate in question the life estates were carved out and a remainder to the children of either depending upon the survivorship of the last life tenant.

It appears to the court, from any analysis of this will, that it was not the intention of the testator that the interest of the remaindermen should vest at the time of the testator’s death, and that the interest to the children of either was a mere contingent interest depending upon survivorship with no certainty [570]*570as to who would take and consequently could not vest except at the time appointed by the terms of the will; that is, at the death of the last surviving life tenant. In other words, under the terms of this will 'before the child of either of the life tenants could take a vested interest he or she must survive the last life tenant. If this is not true,, then if a child of either die before the death of the surviving life tenant, the heirs of such deceased child would take, which would practically annul the provisions of the will providing for the right of survivorship in the child or children of either life tenant who survived the last life tenant.

In Spear v. Fogg, 87 Maine, 132, the will under construction reads:

"I give to my sisters Mary S. Pecker and Frances S.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 566, 27 Ohio Dec. 251, 1917 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laver-v-kreiter-ohctcomplrichla-1917.