Miller v. Unknown of Described Real Estate

70 N.W.2d 560, 246 Iowa 1070, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 439
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 7, 1955
Docket48691
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 70 N.W.2d 560 (Miller v. Unknown of Described Real Estate) 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
Miller v. Unknown of Described Real Estate, 70 N.W.2d 560, 246 Iowa 1070, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 439 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

Hays, J.

Action to quiet title to 112 acres of real estate in Butler County, Iowa, owned in fee by Fred A. Butzlaff at the time of his death in 1907 and disposed of by his will. Actually involved is title to an undivided half interest. Plaintiffs claim title to the whole as devisees in said will. The defendants claim title to an undivided half interest through Louise Fuerstenberger, a devisee, and section 636.40, Code of 1950. Title was quieted in the plaintiffs and the defendants have appealed.

The sole question rests upon the construction of paragraph three of said will. It is as follows:

“Third: I give and devise unto my beloved wife, Augusta, a life estate in and to all real estate * * *. I give and devise the estate in remainder in and to said real estate, after the death of my wife, to my daughter, Louise Buclmell, if she * * * shall survive her mother. Provided, however, if my said daughter, Louise, shall die, leaving a child or children her surviving, then in such case after the death of both my wife and daughter, I will and devise said estate in remainder to the surviving children of my said daughter, * * *. In the event that my said daughter shall die leaving no children her surviving, then in such case, after the death of both my wife and daughter, I will and devise said real estate to the heirs at law of my wife, Augusta Butzlaff, who may be living and entitled to her estate at the time of her death.”

*1072 Surviving testator were his widow, Augusta Butzlaff, and their daughter, Louise Bucknell. A brother and a sister predeceased him, whose heirs are the defendants-appellants.

Augusta Butzlaff died intestate in 1918 survived by her daughter, Louise Fuerstenberger, formerly Bucknell. Also surviving her . were two brothers and a sister, whose heirs are the plaintiffs-appellees.

Louise Fuerstenberger died intestate in 1953 without issue or surviving spouse.

By stipulation it was agreed that Augusta Butzlaff received only a life estate in said real estate; the respective share each plaintiff took in the real estate, if plaintiffs prevailed in the action, and a like designation should the defendants be successful. The trial court held that Louise Fuerstenberger took a life estate, subject to the life estate of her mother; that Louise, having died without issue, plaintiffs, as heirs-at-law of Augusta Butzlaff, take under the terms of the will as set forth in the last sentence of said paragraph three of the will, above set forth. Apparently, from the stipulation and briefs and arguments, all parties agree that Louise Fuerstenberger is, by the terms of the will, eliminated from the “heirs-at-law of Augusta Butzlaff” and we assume such to be the case.

Appellants’ chief proposition relied upon for a reversal is the ruling of the trial court that Louise Fuerstenberger took only a life estate under the terms of the will. They present their proposition as follows: Augusta Butzlaff took a life estate. The estate in remainder was specifically devised to Louise, contingent only upon her surviving her mother, with title in fee to vest absolutely if such contingency was met; that the provisions of the will as to Louise’s children taking, or if no children, then to the heirs of Augusta Butzlaff, were to be effective only if Louise did not survive her mother; that if such provisions were not alternative, conditioned upon the daughter not surviving her mother, they are repugnant to the fee devised to Louise and void.

Notwithstanding the many and varied rules of construction which appear in our prior opinions involving will construction, one rule emerges as paramount. It is that the intention of the testator as expressed in the will as a whole shall govern in ascertaining the meaning or intent of any certain sentence or *1073 phrase therein. Moore v. McKinley, 246 Iowa 734, 749, 69 N.W.2d 73, 82, and cases cited therein. It is also a cardinal rule that a testator is presumed to know the purport of the words used; and if an absolute and unqualified fee simple title is conveyed, any attempt to modify or restrict the same is of no force or effect. In re Estate of McCulloch, 243 Iowa 449, 52 N.W.2d 67; Moore v. McKinley, supra. Thus, once an absolute fee has been devised, further provisions of the will affecting this real estate need not be considered and to this extent there is a modification of the rule that all parts of the will must be considered together.

The second sentence of the paragraph of the will in question states: “remainder in and to said real estate, after the death of my wife.” A remainder is the part left over; a remnant of an estate expectant on a particular estate. 31 C. J. S., Estates, section 68. As stated in 33 Am. Jur., section 47, page 509, the term “remainder” is a relative one and implies a prior disposition of some part of the estate. Thus, regardless of the quantity of the estate devised by the said second sentence, it is a remainder as it is conditioned upon the mother’s life estate. However, since the term “remainder” is usually understood to mean that part of the estate which is left after all of the other provisions of the will are satisfied, In re Will of Richter, 212 Iowa 38, 234 N.W. 285, no specific and absolute estate in fee is necessarily devised by the words in question and other provisions of the will become important in arriving at the intended meaning of the term “estate in remainder.” The rule of repugnancy does not apply. Canaday v. Baysinger, 170 Iowa 414, 152 N.W. 562; Guilford v. Gardner, 180 Iowa 1210, 162 N.W. 261; Frazier v. Wood, 219 Iowa 36, 255 N.W. 647; In re Estate of Organ, 240 Iowa 797, 38 N.W.2d 100.

As to appellants’ second theory, i. e., that the third and fourth sentences of the paragraph in question are alternative contingent remainders; contingent on Louise not surviving her mother: Their theory and argument is that, reading the paragraph as a whole the clear intent of testator is that the words “my daughter shall, die, leaving children” or “my daughter shall die leaving no children” refer to death of the daughter during the mother’s lifetime.

*1074 In many respects the case of In re Estate of McCulloch, supra, 243 Iowa 449, 451, 52 N.W.2d 67, 69, is analogous to the case at bar, especially by eliminating the third sentence of said paragraph three of the will. In that case the will devised “ ‘all of my property * * * to my son * * except as follows: * * *. Should my son die without heirs (lineal descendants) the following described land is to be divided equally between the [named devisees]’.” There it was contended that the time of death referred to death during the life of the testator. Here it is claimed the time of death of the daughter is meant prior to the death of the mother.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W.2d 560, 246 Iowa 1070, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-unknown-of-described-real-estate-iowa-1955.