Potter v. Worley

57 Iowa 66
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 24, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 57 Iowa 66 (Potter v. Worley) 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
Potter v. Worley, 57 Iowa 66 (iowa 1881).

Opinions

Seevers, J.

The material facts are the real estate in controversy was owned by John Worley in his lifetime. He died December 14, 1864, on which day he executed a will devising all his property to Sarah Worley his wife for and during her life. Said will further provided that upon the death of Mrs. Worley, the property of the testator should be equally divided between his brothers and sisters, who are defendants in this action. Sarah Worley, at the decease of her husband, took possession under the will of all the property, both real and personal,-and used and controlled the same as her own until her death in 1877.

The plaintiffs are her heirs at law, and as such claim that Mrs. Worley upon the death of her husband, became the owner of one-third of the real estate in fee simple of which her [67]*67husband died seized as her dower, and that they are entitled to recover the same, although Mrs. Worley did not object to the will and relinquish all the rights conferred thereunder, and did not have the said one-third interest assigned, or set apart during her lifetime. The legal propositions presented under the foregoing facts are:

1. doweii : wm. I. Whether Mrs. Worley by accepting the provisions of the will thereby barred her rights to the one-third of the real estate in fee simple as her dower. This question under a precisely similar will has been determined in the negative in Metteer v. Wiley, 34, Iowa 214, the ground of the ruling being that there was no inconsistency between the taking under the will and the claim to dower. The case just cited, and that at bar, are distinguishable from Kyne v. Kyne, 48 Iowa 24. In this last case, the acceptance of the provisions of the will was inconsistent with any claim of dower by the widow. Hence it was held her failure to object to the will, and assert her right to dower, prevented her devisees after her death from asserting a claim thereto.

2 _. imas. signed: liens, II. Does the failure of Mrs. Worley to have her dower interest assigned and set apart during her lifetime, prevent her heirs from recovering the same, after her death. If there been no will, there could not, under the statute, Code, § 2440, be any doubt that upon the death of her husband, Mrs. Worley would have been vested with the legal title to one-third of the real estate, of which he died seized. This being so the estate would have descended to her heirs, whether her interest had been set apart or not. The estate vests immediately upon the death of the husband, or it does not do so at all. Being a fee simple estate, it must of necessity descend to the heirs of the widow, unless she in some manner disposes of it in her lifetime. Such an estate cannot be obliterated, or destroyed by the mere passive action of the owner unless there is some statute which so declares. The only statute bearing on this question is Rev., § 2435, which [68]*68was in force when the will was executed, and at the time Mrs. Worley took possession thereunder. This statute was in force at the time the will v?a& executed in Metteer v. Wiley, before cited, and at the time the rights in that case accrued.

The only point decided in Rausch v. Moore, 48 Iowa, 611, is that an unassigned dower interest was not liable to be seized on execution or attachment in a suit at law.

Reversed.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Iowa 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-worley-iowa-1881.