Rench v. Rench

184 Iowa 1372
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 184 Iowa 1372 (Rench v. Rench) 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
Rench v. Rench, 184 Iowa 1372 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The will in question contained the following provisions:

“1. I direct that all my debts and the expenses of my last sickness and funeral, if any, be paid.
“2. I give to my beloved wife, Elma Bench, in lien of dower and distributive share under the statute, the use and income from all the rest, residue and remainder of my property, of all kinds, so long as she may remain a widow. I also give her, during such time, full right and powfer to sell and convey any or all of such property if and when necessary for the support and proper provision for herself and our child or children.
“3. If my said wife shall remarry, then the share of the capital stock of the Farmers Savings Bank of Lavinia, Towa, and the two shares of the-capital stock of the Lavinia Elevator Company of Lavinia, Iowa, which I own, shall go to Harry Delbert Bench, the son of my brother Henry T. Bench, and the income from one half of the remainder of my property then undisposed of shall.go to my said wife during her natural life, in lieu of dower and distributive share, and the income from the other half shall go to our daughter, Bernadine Etta Bench, if living, until she shall [1374]*1374reach her majority, and then the one half of said property shall vest in her absolutely and the other half shall go to her upon her mother’s death. Should - our said daughter be dead, without issue, then the share that would go to her shall go to my said, nephew. This provision for my said wife is not intended to prevent her from remarrying, but is made with the thought that so long as she shall remain a widow my property should support her, and, if she should remarry, our daughter might not find it pleasant to remain at home with her mother and her new husband.
“4. Should my said wife not remarry, upon her death, the shares of stock described in the next paragraph above, 3rd, shall go to my said nephew as provided in said paragraph, and the remainder of my property then remaining undisposed of shall go to my said daughter or her issue, if any. If she should be dead without issue, the whole shall go to my said nephew.
“5. To recapitulate in a measure, it is my will that whatever property may remain undisposed of at the death of my wife, except said shares of capital stock, whether remarried or not, shall be the property of our said daughter, if living, or of her issue, if any, if she be dead; and, if she be dead without issue, then it shall all be the property of my said nephew.”

From the foregoing, it will be observed that, if the widow had accepted under the will, and had remained a widow, she would have taken a life estate in the land; and the only.child of the testator, if living, would take the remainder, with a possible contingent remainder to Harry Delbert Rench. If the widow had accepted under the will, and remarried, then she would -have taken a life interest in one half of the real" estate, with a remainder over to the child, if living, and the child would have taken the other half of the land, subject to certain contingencies. On the question of remarriage of the widow, the will took account [1375]*1375of both contingencies of: (1) remarrying, and (2) not remarrying. The testator failed, however, to take account, in his will, of the contingency of non-acceptance by the widow of the provisions of the will. What happened was that, in December, 1916, the widow filed her election to take her distributive share, and thereby to reject the provisions of the will. In March following, this suit was instituted. After the beginning of this suit, and while it was pending in the district court, in May, 1917, the widow remárried. Because Paragraph 3 of the will deals with the contingency of remarriage, and disposes of the property otherwise than as provided in Paragraphs 2 and 4, and because tire widow has remarried, some confusion has crept into the argument, by the assumption that the two thirds of the real estate not included in the widow’s distributive share must be disposed of in accordance with the direction of Paragraph 3. If the widow had accepted under the will, and remarried, this assumption would be correct. But inasmuch as the widow rejected the will, and did so while she remained unmarried, the status of the parties became fixed by such rejection, and at the time thereof. Thenceforth, the question of remarrying or not remarrying became entirely immaterial, so far as its effect upon the provisions of the will is concerned. In the construction of the will, therefore, Paragraph 3 thereof may be disregarded. We must look to Paragraphs 2, 4, and 5 alone, for an ascertainment of the rights of the remainderman.

I. Our foregoing statement assumes that the widow did elect to take her distributive share. This is controverted by the appellant, who contends that, previous to such- attempted election on her part, she had already elected, by unmistakable conduct, to take under the will, in lieu of dower. This issue of fact was determined by the district court in favor of the widow. The evidence upon which such finding was made was of such a nature as to give to the [1376]*1376trial court peculiar advantages in judging the same. An examination of the record satisfies us that the finding of the court has such substantial support as to forbid our interference therewith.

II. /"The widow having rejected the will, its provisions in her behalf must be wholly disregarded. The carving out of the estate of the widow’s distributive share leaves only two thirds of the estate as subject to the provisions of the will. Such two thirds must be disposed of in accordance with the provisions of the will, and such provisions must be construed in the light of the widow’s rejection thereof. Under the will, the testator’s daughter is the primary remainderman. Contingencies were specified in the will whereby Harry Delbert Bench, appellant, miglit have become the remainderman. Under the evidence, we have no need to determine whether the daughter of the testator took a contingent remainder or a vested one. For the same reason, we need not determine the nature of the interest, if any, taken by the appellant as a devisee. The decisive question presented is: What was the effect upon the primary remainderman of the.rejection by the widow of the life estate provided for under the will? Clearly, such rejection terminated the life estate.. The termination of the life estate removed the only obstacle to the present enjoyment and possession of the estate by the remainderman. The rejection by the widow had precisely the same effect upon the life estate as her death would have had, if it had occurred at that time. Clearly, her death would have completely vested the title and present enjoyment in the primary remainderman, she being still living. The authorities are practically uniform that, in the event of a rejection by the widow, of the provisions of the will, such will must be construed as to the remainder of the estate in the same manner as though the death of the life tenant had then occurred, unless the will, by its terms, discloses a contrary.intention. [1377]*1377In other words, for the purpose of the construction of the will as applied to the devisees, the rejection of the life estate by .the widow was the equivalent of her death, and accelerated the right of the remainderman to enter into the complete possession of the unappropriated part of the devised estate?] In 2 Bedfield on Wills (3d Ed.) *258, the rule is stated as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
184 Iowa 1372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rench-v-rench-iowa-1918.