Reynolds v. Bond

83 Ind. 36
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1882
DocketNo. 9541
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 83 Ind. 36 (Reynolds v. Bond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Bond, 83 Ind. 36 (Ind. 1882).

Opinion

Franklin, C.

This action was brought by appellees as legatees of the will of Ornon Bond, deceased, against appellants, claiming an interest in the lands alleged to be charged with the payment of the legacies, asking to have the legacies declared a lien upon the land, and that it be sold for the payment of the same.

Separate demurrers were filed and overruled to the complaint, which ruling is assigned as error.

The substantial allegations of the complaint are, that Ornon Bond died in 1873, seized in fee of certain described lands; that item four of his will is as follows: “ It is my will that my son Jesse should have the balance of my quarter above described one hundred and ten acres, by paying $50 an acre, and to pay $1,000 a year, the first payment to be due twelve months from the time of my death, then $1,000 each year after until paid, and the money to be divided equally between the heirs named, Riley, Eliza, Jane, Nathan, John, Jesse and Joel;” that the legatee Jesse accepted the provisions of said item four, and took possession of said land, and paid off and discharged the legacies above named to Nathan, Riley, Joel and himself; that the plaintiffs are the other legatees and descendants of legatees, some of whom, named in said item, have since died, and that the money so bequeathed to them is still unpaid and is now due; that afterwards the said Jesse Bond died intestate, and left no estate save what had been taken by his widow under the law; that prior to his death he executed to (appellant) The Travellers Insurance Company a [38]*38mortgage on said land to secure the payment of $3,000, which is unpaid; that, after the execution of said mortgage, he conveyed the land to the defendant W. C. Reynolds; that Lydia C. Reynolds is his wife, and that the defendants Haines and Small claim some interest in the land.

Prayer that the amounts due the plaintiffs should be found, and decreed to be liens senior to the liens of appellants. A copy of the will is made a part of the complaint.

Two objections are made to the complaint:

1st. It does not allege that the executors had not collected the legacies charged upon the land from Jesse Bond.

2d. That the estate of Ornon Bond had been finally settled.

The complaint does charge that the legacies had not been paid to the appellees, and as Jesse Bond was both payor of the legacies and executor of the will, it is no excuse for him to say that he had charged himself as executor with themonejq but had not paid it to the distributive legatees. The land could not be released from the charge by this formal transfer of the fund, to which the legatees were not parties.

Ornon Bond died in January, 1873; the land was bequeathed to Jesse Bond by his paying $5,500,$1,000 annually; he accepted the provisions of the will, took possession of the land, and paid a part of the distributive legacies, and thereby took the land with the personal obligation to pay, and the charge of the payment of the legacies upon the land.

This suit was commenced August 24th, 1880.

The legacies were then all due, and we think it was sufficient to allege that they had not been paid to the legatees, and that it was not necessai’y to allege that the money had not been paid to the executors.

Upon this point we are referred to the eases of Jackson v. Martin, 18 Johns. 31, and Fox v. Phelps, 17 Wend. 393.

In the first case above named, the question was as to what kind of an estate passed, whether for life or a fee, and the court held that if the performance of the conditions was made a charge upon the land, an estate for life passed, but if the [39]*39performance was made a charge upon the person, the estate was a fee simple.

No such question is raised in this case, and we do not think the authority applicable. We think it obvious in this case, that a conditional fee passed, and that the performance of the condition was made a charge upon the land. Lindsey v. Lindsey, 45 Ind. 552, and the authorities therein cited.

In the ease in 17 Wend., supra, certain real estate was willed to two sons, with a provision that it should be leased and the proceeds applied in the education of two other children, until they arrived at a certain age (the court held that this provision was a charge upon the land). The will contained a further provision that, upon the daughter’s arrival of age, or marrying, the land should be valued, and that the two sons to whom it was willed should pay, and they were respectively required to pay, an equal part of his estate to the rest in cash. The court held that this provision, although it was a personal •charge on the devisees, might still be enforced as an equitable mortgage on the estate in their hands. And the case of Birdsall v. Hewlett, 1 Paige, 32 (19 Am. Dec. 392), is referred to in support thereof.

In the case at bar, the legatee was to have the land by paying so much at designated times to the other children, to be •equally divided between them, which presents a strong case ■of a charge upon the land.

Upon the objection that the complaint does not aver a final settlement of Ornon Bond’s estate, we are referred to the •cases of Highnote v. White, 67 Ind. 596, and Gould v. Steyer, 75 Ind. 50.

The first of these two cases was an action of replevin brought by a legatee against the administrator with the will annexed, for a chose in action belonging to the estate, in which this court rightly held that the administrator'was entitled to the possession of the note, at least until such estate was settled’. We can not see wherein that case applies to the question under •consideration.

[40]*40The second case referred to was a suit by a legatee against a residuary legatee to have property sold, both real and personal, after the death of the widow, which had been passed over to her by the executor of the husband’s estate, she having a íife-estate in the same, the legacy being payable at her’ death, and the residuary legatee having taken possession of the property. The court held the complaint bad, because it did. not show a settlement of the estate, and a discharge of the administrator with the will annexed. We can not seethe-applicability of that case to this question. The complaint in this case seeks to make the payment of the legacies a charge-upon the property conditionally bequeathed, alleging that the estate of the legatee, to whom it was conditionally bequeathed., is insolvent.

In the recent case of Lofton v. Moore, post, p. 112, it was held by this court, that a devisee, who has accepted the devised real estate, is personally liable for the payment of the legacies given by the will, but this personal liability will not relieve the real estate, and that where, by the terms of the will, a legacy is secured by making it a charge on real estate,, such lien must be enforced against the real estate without resorting first to the personal estate of the testator.

In the case at bar, the real estate being the primary source for payment of the legacies, it is not necessary to aver a settlement of the personal estate, before applying to have the lien declared upon the realty for the payment of the legacies.

We think the complaint stated facts sufficient to constitute a good cause of action, and there was no error in overruling the demurrers to it1.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Ind. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-bond-ind-1882.