O'Brien v. Sedalia Trust Co.

5 S.W.2d 74, 319 Mo. 1001, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 74 (O'Brien v. Sedalia Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Brien v. Sedalia Trust Co., 5 S.W.2d 74, 319 Mo. 1001, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 667 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

Suit to construe the will of Sarilda Hicks who died in 1923. The issues presented on the appeal have been so narrowed that it is unnecessary to set out at length either the pleadings or the will itself. The testatrix provided: (1) for the payment of her just debts, funeral expenses, etc.; (2) she devised one-half of her remaining or net estate to her husband, Jacob W. Hicks, for life, with remainder over to her sister Maud E. Bandy for life; (3) the other one-half she devised to her said sister, Maud E. Bandy, for life, with remainder over to her said husband, Jacob W. Hicks, for life; (4) on the death of both Jacob W. Hicks and Maud E. Bandy the estate property was to be converted into cash, invested, and the income paid in specified parts, for the upkeep of a cemetery, to the Y.M.C.A. of Sedalia, and to the trustees of the First Christian Church of Sedalia. The validity of these trust legacies was determined by the decree below, and no complaint is made here respecting that branch of the case. We shall not refer to it again. To state the points at issue we must go a step further.

The estate involved consists solely of eighty-five acres of land in Pettis County, Missouri, which was the separate property of the testatrix. Both life tenants are dead, Maud E. Bandy dying first. There was no children born of the marriage of Jacob W. Hicks and Sarilda Hicks, and she left no lineal descendants. Jacob W. Hicks did not make and file an election to take one-half of his wife's real and personal estate subject to the payment of debts. Neither did he elect in writing to renounce the will under Sections 328 and 329, Revised Statutes 1919.

The defendant executor, the Sedalia Trust Company, which is also executor of the will of Jacob W. Hicks, has appealed, along with some of the other defendants. Their first assignment is that the trial court erred in refusing to decree that Jacob W. Hicks as widower *Page 1006 of the testatrix took a one-half interest in her estate subject to debts, in spite of the will, under Section 320, Revised Statutes 1919, enacted for the benefit of widowers when the wife dies childless. The appellants contend he was entitled to that interest, absolutely, without making or filing an election or renunciation of the will, and that the widow could not cut down or diminish the share so granted him by the law. Appellants' other assignment — there are only two — is that the devise of the other half of the real estate to Maud E. Bandy for life, remainder over to Jacob W. Hicks for life, created an estate tail, which, under the Section 2267, Revised Statutes 1919, vested the remainder in fee in Jacob W. Hicks as second taker. So it will be seen by the two assignments the appellants claim the entire title was in the widower after Maud Bandy died and when he died.

As to the first assignment, the respondent admits Jacob W. Hicks took a one-half interest in the land under the statute mentioned, Section 320, if it was in force in 1923 when the testatrix died; but respondent maintains it was not. She points to the Act of 1921 abolishing tenancy by the curtesy, in which it is provided that a widower shall have the same share in the real estate of his deceased wife that she would have in his, with the same rights of election and the same limitations thereto. From this it is argued that Section 320 was repealed by necessary implication; that both widowers and widows now share in the real estate of their deceased consorts under the same statutes; and that if Jacob W. Hicks was entitled to a half-interest in the testatrix's land it must have been under Section 321, Revised Statutes 1919, declaratory of widows' rights, and then only pursuant to election and renunciation of the will as is required of the widow in such cases. Since he died without doing this it is contended he was bound by the testamentary provision made for him and that the same must be treated as superseding and in lieu of his election dower in the land (Sec. 328, R.S. 1919). As indicated, this view was taken by the trial court. We proceed to a discussion of the issue.

I. Laws 1921, page 119, on which respondent relies is as follows:

"The estate which a widower may have in the real estate of his deceased wife known as `tenancy by the curtesy,' is hereby abolished, and in lieu thereof the widower shall have the same share in the real estate of his deceased wife that isCurtesy: provided by law for the widow in the real estate ofWidower's her deceased husband, with the same rights of electionDower. and the same limitations thereto; provided that nothing contained in this act shall be so construed as to defeat any estate by the curtesy which shall have vested prior to the date of taking effect of this act."

The act was passed without an emergency clause and was approved March 29, 1921. The first question confronted is whether this statute *Page 1007 applies only when the widow dies intestate. The inquiry is not suggested by anything in the enactment itself, but arises out of the fact that earlier at the same session on March 10, 1921, the General Assembly passed another act — also without an emergency clause — repealing and reenacting Section 506, Revised Statutes 1919, in which it was provided that any married or unmarried woman not less than twenty-one years old may make a will devising her real estate "subject to the rights of the husband, if any, to his curtesy therein." [Laws 1921, p. 117.] Are these two acts to be read together and construed as meaning the widower of a testate wife shall have curtesy whereas the widower of an intestate wife shall not? We think not. The will statute was Senate Bill No. 96, and its obvious, sole purpose was to increase the minimum age for testamentary capacity of women from eighteen to twenty-one. That was the only change made by the reenactment. It recognized but did not legislate concerning curtesy. Nineteen days later House Bill No. 178 abolishing curtesy was approved. The right of curtesy existed when the will statute was passed; it was simply done away with by the later legislation at the same session.

If the other view be taken and the will statute be regarded as prospective legislation enforcing and continuing the curtesy right in the circumstances stated the two statutes are in irreconcilable conflict. Clearly, there is no reasonable ground for putting the widowers of testate wives in a separate class and saying they alone shall have curtesy; and it would be violence to the provisions of the curtesy statute, which are unequivocally to the contrary, to read such an exception into it. This being so the latter act, abolishing curtesy, must be held to have repealed that part of the earlier on the same subject by necessary implication, though both were passed at the same session and by virtue of Article 4, Section 36, of the Constitution took effect at the same time. [State v. Bressie, 304 Mo. 71, 74,262 S.W. 1015; State ex rel. State Tax Commission v. Crawford,303 Mo. 652, 661, 262 S.W. 341.]

But the point really urged on this first assignment is this. It will be noted the quoted statute says tenancy by the curtesy is abolished and in lieu thereof the widower shall have the same share in his deceased wife's real estate that the law would give her in his; and at the conclusion of the section is a proviso declaring the act shall not be construed to defeat curtesy estates theretofore vested.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.2d 74, 319 Mo. 1001, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-sedalia-trust-co-mo-1928.