Lawley v. Keyes

172 Iowa 575
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 172 Iowa 575 (Lawley v. Keyes) 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
Lawley v. Keyes, 172 Iowa 575 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

James and George P.. Hanley died intestate on July 2,1912, seized of real estate in Polk and Dallas Counties. [577]*577The immediate cause of their death was a collision between an automobile, in which they were riding, and a railway train. George P. Hanley died at about 11 o’clock in the forenoon and James Hanley survived until about 2 o’clock in the after-, noon. Neither had ever married. They were the only children of James Hanley, Sr., and his wife, Mary, whose name prior to marriage was Keyes. The wife died, and subsequently, on November 2, 1879, he married Hannah Donahue, Avho survived him as widow and has not married again. By this last marriage, there were no children. The estate of James Hanley, Sr., who departed this life February 27, 1897, was settled amicably between the surviving widow and children. Shortly before the death of James Hanley, Sr., she joined him in the execution of a warranty deed to James and George P. Hanley of some of the real estate involved in this suit, and, on the 17th day of June, 1901, she executed to the same grantees a warranty deed for an undivided one-third interest in real estate described in the deed, receiving from them, at the time of its execution, $7,80.0. In this suit, partition of the real estate left by James and George P. Hanley is sought, and the only issues raised are (1) whether the widow of James Hanley, Sr., is entitled to any part .thereof, and (2) if so, what part. The parties, other than the widow, whom we shall refer to as appellants, insist that she has no interest in the land and that, if she has, this does not exceed 17/72, the portion to which she was decreed entitled by the district court; while she contends that she should have been awarded 15/48 of the estate.

1. Descent and DISTRIBUTION : determination of heirs: unmarried intestate without issue: stepmother. I. The disposition of the estates of deceased persons is regulated solely by statute. Shick v. Howe, 137 Iowa 249. Where an intestate leaves no issue nor surviving spouse, the estate passes to the parents. Code Secs. 3379, 3380. Our decision depends on the construction to be given Sec. 3381 of the Code, which declares that: "If both parents are dead, the portion which would have fallen to their share by the above rules shall be disposed of in the same manner as [578]*578if they had outlived the intestate and died in the possession and ownership- of the portion thus falling to their share, and so on, through ascending ancestors and their issue.”

The argument of appellants proceeds on the theory that this statute casts the descent on the legal heirs of the deceased parents. Were this true, there would be some ground for saying 'that the widow of a deceased parent was not such heir and might not take. Will of Overdieck, 50 Iowa 244; Blackman v. Wadsworth, 65 Iowa 80. But those who are to take are not so nominated. The design of the statute is to lay down a rule by which -the heirs of the intestate shall be ascertained. How ? By learning who- would have taken the estate if the parents of the intestate had outlived him and died in the possession and ownership of the property; and the persons who would thus have taken are, by this statute, declared the heirs of an estate of a person who has died without spouse or issue, and such persons take directly, and not through the parent. This is the purport of decisions somewhat relied on by appellants. See Lash v. Lash, 57 Iowa 88; Wilcke v. Wilcke, 102 Iowa 173; In re Hulett’s Estate, 121 Iowa 423.

[579]*5792' decisis!rufe^ aescenteana‘ [578]*578The fiction of the parents’ outliving the intestate is solely for the purpose of casting the descent. Had the parents thus survived the intestate, they would have shared the estate equally, under Sec. 3379 of the Code, and one half thereof would, under Sec. 3381, quoted above, be disposed of as though each had outlived the intestate. This necessarily is so; for those who would take of the wife’s estate are not £he same as those who would be entitled to take that of the hus.band, unless they leave joint descendants only. Under appellant’s theory, both parents are not only to- be supposed to have survived the intestate, but to have survived either in the same relation as when in life, or unconnected by affinity; for in no othefi way may this statute be construed to cast the descent on those related by blood only. If the first were the rule, then the children of either parent by a subsequent marriage who might have survived the other might not participate [579]*579in the estate, even though it must be disposed of as though their father had died in its possession and ownership. The contrary appears from Neeley v. Wise, 44 Iowa 544. If the parent is to be presumed to survive alone without any preexisting tie save that of blood, then the statute should be construed as contended by appellants. The fiction of the statute extends no further than the supposition that the parents — ■ that is, each of them — outlived the intestate who has died without spouse or issue, and cannot' be construed to contemplate also the continued relation of the parents as husband and wife until subsequent to the intestate’s death. It is each parent, and not the relationship of one to the other, who is to be supposed to have outlived the intestate, in order to ascertain the heirs of the latter. Had Mary Hanley, the mother, outlived these sons, she would have inherited one half of the estate left by them, and this would have passed to her heirs. The other half would have been inherited by Janies Hanley, Sr., had he survived them; and had he done so, he must have had a living wife, Hannah, and the property on his death would, under the law, be disposed of by passing one third or one half to his surviving widow and the remainder to his heirs. Such was the interpretation of the statute in Moore v. Weaver, 53 Iowa 11, adhered to in In re Estate of Parker, 97 Iowa 593; and as these decisions confirm a rule of property adhered to for nearly forty years, we shall not reconsider the question. We remark, however, that there is nothing in the blood line which should constrain the courts to so construe a statute in its interest as to defeat the legislative design to recognize the natural ties of affection in the distribution of property. Seasons may exist and be thought adequate for preferring the stepmother, in part at least, to distant relatives by consanguinity,- who often have had little in common with the 'deceased in his lifetime, or were entirely unknown to him. What would have been our conclusion, were the statute before us for the first time, is not worth knowing. It is-enough to say that, following uniform precedent, we regard the prior [580]*580decisions, laying down an important rule of property, as controlling.

3. Descent and DisTiuBUTioN: shares oí heir: lelr^step-8 son-II. Bach of the intestates died seized of an undivided • one half of the lands in suit. Upon the death of George P. Hanley, some hours prior to the death of James Hanley, his one half of the estate passed to heirs to be ascertained under Sec. 3381 of the Code, as v ’ construed above. One half thereof, or one fourth of the entire estate, passed to James, then the sole heir of Mary, the mother of George, and the other one half, or one fourth of the entire estate, to those to whom it would have been disposed of had James Hanley, Si\, outlived George and died in possession and ownership thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
172 Iowa 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawley-v-keyes-iowa-1915.