Nunnelley v. Sloan
This text of 343 So. 2d 657 (Nunnelley v. Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Appellant, Frank V. Nunnelley, shot and killed his wife, Flossie L. Nunnelley, on August 23, 1974. He was indicted for first-degree murder, and he entered a plea of guilty to manslaughter. Adjudication was withheld and a term of probation imposed. The decedent died intestate without any lineal descendants. She was survived by appellant and by collateral heirs which included her brothers, sisters, nieces and nephews. At the time of her death she owned a parcel of real property, an insurance policy and certain personal property. The realty was held by appellant and the decedent as tenants by the entirety. It was located in Hillsborough County, Florida, legally described as:
[658]*658Tract Q The east 130.0 ft. of the West 910.00 ft. of the South Vz of the North lh of the SE Vi of the NE xk of Section 19, Township 29 South, Range 21 East, Hills-borough County, Florida, less the North 50.0 ft. thereof as recorded in OR Book 1343 on Page 662, public records of Hills-borough County, Florida. TOGETHER with all the furniture, furnishings, fixtures and appliances located in the home on said property. ...
Floyd L. Sloan, one of the decedent’s brothers, filed a petition for letters of administration naming the collateral heirs as the surviving heirs at law. The court appointed Sloan as administrator of the decedent’s estate. Appellant then filed a petition for an order that he be declared the sole surviving heir at law and for the removal of Sloan as administrator. After hearing the court entered an order declaring appellant to be the sole surviving heir at law and appointing Tim Moran as successor personal representative. Moran subsequently filed a petition for approval of a plan of distribution and discharge proposing that all of the assets of the estate of the deceased be distributed to appellant as sole surviving heir. The collateral heirs filed a response to the petition and a petition for approval of a plan of distribution and discharge asserting that they were entitled to the whole of the real property at issue here. In the alternative they proposed that a one-half interest in the property pass to the collateral heirs because appellant had terminated his right to acquire his wife’s interest in the property through survivorship because he had wrongfully' killed her. The court entered an order finding that appellant was the owner of a one-half interest in the realty and that an undivided one-half interest in the property passed to the collat-erals in equal shares. The only issue raised on appeal is whether appellant is entitled to the one-half interest awarded to the collateral heirs. We agree with the trial court that he is not.
The Florida Probate Code provides that the convicted murderer of a decedent shall not inherit from the decedent. Section 732.802, Florida Statutes. The statute is not applicable in this case because property held as an estate by the entirety is not an asset of a deceased tenant’s estate and because appellant was not convicted of murder. Fenn & Koren, The 1974 Florida Probate Code—A Marriage of Convenience, 27 U.Fla.L.Rev. 1, 41-42 (1974). Consequently neither appellant’s right to inherit from the estate nor his right as a surviving tenant is defeated by the statute. Ashwood v. Patterson, 49 So.2d 848 (Fla.1951). Therefore the applicability of the statute is not determinative of this case.1 We subscribe to the fundamental principle of equity that “ ‘no one shall be permitted to profit by his own fraud, or take advantage of his own wrong, or found any claim upon his own iniquity, or profit by his own crime . .’ ” Ashwood, supra, at 850. See also Carter v. Carter, 88 So.2d 153 (Fla.1956). Applying this principle to the survivor’s right to the whole interest of property held by the entirety, the Supreme Court of Florida has held that the estate is severed by the willful, felonious act of one spouse which results in the death of the other. Ashwood, supra; Hogan v. Martin, 52 So.2d 806 (Fla.1951). In that circumstance the deceased spouse’s one-half interest in the property is to be treated as if it had been held by the spouses as tenants in common. The property would be distribut[659]*659ed to the heirs of the decedent according to the order of succession established by the probate code as if the wrongdoer had divorced the decedent.2 See Ashwood, supra.
AFFIRMED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
343 So. 2d 657, 1977 Fla. App. LEXIS 15174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nunnelley-v-sloan-fladistctapp-1977.