Minor v. Shippley

152 N.E. 768, 21 Ohio App. 236, 1923 Ohio App. LEXIS 290
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 768 (Minor v. Shippley) 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
Minor v. Shippley, 152 N.E. 768, 21 Ohio App. 236, 1923 Ohio App. LEXIS 290 (Ohio Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*237 Houck, J.

This case is here on appeal from the common pleas court of Licking county. The suit is one to quiet title to a farm located in Licking county, of which John Enyart died seized in September, 1853, and which he disposed of in his last will and testament.

The cause was submitted to the common pleas court upon an agreed statement of facts, and is submitted in this court upon the same statement of facts, which is as follows:

“Agreed Statement of Facts.
“John Enyart, a resident of the township of Hanover, Licking county, Ohio, died testate on the -day of September, 1853, seized of the premises described in the petition, and leaving his wife, Anna Enyart, and one child, Maria Minor, surviving him.
“Said John Enyart left a will which was duly admitted to record in 1854, and the record thereof was destroyed by the burning of the court house in 1875, and on the 24th day of November, 1883, the said will was proved and admitted to record in the probate court of Licking county, which will is as follows:
“ ‘Item 2. I give to my wife, Anna, all the proceeds of my farm on which I now reside in Licking county, Ohio, until my daughter Maria shall arrive at the age of eighteen years.
“ ‘Item 3. When my said daughter shall arrive at the age of eighteen years then she shall have one-fourth of the proceeds of said farm, my wife one-fourth so long as she remains my wife, and the *238 remainder shall go to the Preachers’ Aid Society of the Methodist Protestant Church and the Muskingum Annual Conference.
“ ‘Item 4. At the death of my said daughter, I give the whole of said proceeds of said farm to the Preachers’ Aid Society, but said society are not to sell the farm.’
“The Preachers’ Aid Society is a charitable organization connected with the Methodist Episcopal Protestant Church.
“The real estate described remained after the death of John Enyart in the possession of his widow, Anna Enyart, until her death in 1864, and after her death it was in the possession of his daughter, Maria, until September, 1894.
“On the 11th day of April, 1893, the Preachers’ Aid Society began a suit in the court of common pleas against Maria Minor, asking that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the farm, put it in repair, etc., and divide the proceeds of the farm between said Aid Society and the said Maria Minor, according to the terms of said will, and for all other relief to which said plaintiff was in equity entitled.
“It is agreed that the complete record in said case No. 8332, being volume 76, p. 243, shall be admitted.
“Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant on the 27th day of September, 1894, and on September 24, 1894, the Preachers’ Aid Society by a quitclaim deed conveyed all its interest in the property to said Maria Minor, and she has been in possession of said property until some time in 1921. Maria Minor died intestate and with *239 out issue in February, 1921, and tbe plaintiff is ber widower.”

If the farm came to Maria Minor by purchase, then tbe plaintiff is entitled to have bis title quieted and to be granted all tbe relief prayed for in bis petition. However, if tbe farm came to Maria Minor by devise or descent, then in that case tbe plaintiff bas but a life estate therein.

Tbe solution to this inquiry must and will be determined in tbe light of tbe facts and tbe provisions of tbe will of John Enyart, deceased, found and contained in tbe agreed statement of facts.

It must be remembered that no fixed and definite rule can be followed in tbe construction of wills. Each will stands alone, and the intention of tbe testator must be determined by tbe language used in each particular case.

Hence, if tbe language of a Avill is plain and its meaning is obvious, a court bas no right in any way or manner to qualify, or to attempt to change, by tbe application of extraneous. facts, tbe plain meaning of tbe language employed.

From a careful reading of tbe will now before us, it will be seen that while tbe language used is not as clear and definite as it might be, yet we find nothing ambiguous therein. It follows that tbe intention of the testator is not in doubt if we give tbe words and language used by him their plain and simple meaning.

We find and bold, under tbe will of John Enyart, that upon tbe death of Maria Minor tbe fee-simple title vested in tbe Preachers’ Aid Society. In other words, tbe proceeds of said farm, under tbe language of the will, went to Maria Minor during *240 her lifetime, and at her death “the whole of said proceeds of said farm [went] to the Preachers’ Aid Society.”

At the death of Maria Minor there vested in the Preachers’ Aid Society the corpus, the body, the farm absolutely and in fee. "We find and hold this, notwithstanding that following the language constituting the devise are the words, “but said society are not to sell the farm.” We hold these words to be inoperative and of no legal force and effect. Having given the fee to the Preachers’ Aid Society, it could not thereafter be limited, and if this were permitted it would violate a well-known rule of construction pertaining to wills. In other words, such would be against public policy and contrary to law.

It follows that from the delivery of the deed on September 24, 1894, from the Preachers’ Aid Society to Maria Minor, the fee simple to the farm in controversy vested in her and from that time she might have legally conveyed the absolute title to same, if she had desired to do so, by deed or will.

It is urged by some of the counsel for defendants that the words, “I give the whole of said proceeds of said farm,” are not sufficient to vest the absolute fee title in the devisee. We find this claim not well taken, and we further find that the rule in Ohio is to the contrary, viz., that such words are sufficient to transfer the fee. The general and fixed rule of construction is: that a gift of the income of the real estate is a gift of the real estate itself, and a gift of the perpetual or unrestrained income is a gift of the fee.

Section 10580, General Code, reads: “Every *241 devise in a will of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, shall convey all the estate of the devisor therein, which he conld lawfully devise, unless it clearly appears by the will that the devisor intended to convey a less- estate.”

The language of the will as to the devise in question does not limit the estate conveyed to an estate less than a fee, and in fact there is nothing in the will, when considered in its entirety, that indicates any intention on the part of the testator to do so; but the contrary is clearly apparent that a fee is conveyed.

The burden of proof is thrown by this statutory provision upon the one asserting that the devise is of the lesser estate.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 768, 21 Ohio App. 236, 1923 Ohio App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minor-v-shippley-ohioctapp-1923.