Schrader v. Schrader

139 N.W. 160, 158 Iowa 85
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 160 (Schrader v. Schrader) 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
Schrader v. Schrader, 139 N.W. 160, 158 Iowa 85 (iowa 1912).

Opinions

Weaver, J.

John Peter Schrader died leaving a will, which has been duly admitted to probate. The meaning and effect of two clauses of said will having become a matter of dispute, this action was brought for their construction. Having first given his personal estate and a life interest in all his real estate to his wife, he undertakes to devise the remainder over in certain described tracts of land to his sons George, Henry, and Frank in the following manner: By the first of the disputed clauses he provides that a certain described tract of land shall, on the death of his wife, Dora, be equally divided between his sons, George, Hénry, and Frank, and then adds, “It is further my will that in the event that the said Dora Schrader shall die before I do that upon my death the last described premises shall be equally divided between my three sons.” By the other clause it'is provided as follows: “ If my well beloved wife Dora Schrader shall live after me, then it is further my will that on the death of said Dora Schrader my well beloved son, George Schrader, shall become the sole, absolute and unqualified owner, on the condition hereinafter expressed, of the following described real premises: [Here follows description of land other than that mentioned in the first clause.] It is the express condition that before George Schrader shall become the sole, absolute and unqualified owner of said real premises that he shall pay to my well beloved son, Henry Schrader, [87]*87the sum of $500. And it is further my will that in the event my well beloved wife, Dora Schrader, shall die before I do that upon my death the said last above described real premises shall pass to the sole, absolute, and unqualified ownership of my son George Schrader, upon condition that he, my son George Schrader, shall pay to my son, Henry Schrader, the sum of $500.”

The testator died October 1, 1904, survived by his wife and three sons, above named. Thereafter, on June 8, 1906, the son George Schrader died intestate, leaving surviving him his wife, Louisa Schrader, and his infant daughter,’ Dora Schrader, his only child and heir, who are the defendants in this proceeding. George Schrader did not in his lifetime pay the said sum of $500 to his brother Henry; nor had it been paid by the widow or child of George when this action was instituted. On July 23, 1909, Dora Schrader, widow of the testator, died, and upon the lapsing of her life estate in the lands above described, question .at once arose as to* what interest therein, if any, accrued to the widow and child of George.

It was and is the contention of Henry and Frank that under the terms of the will George Schrader took no vested interest in any of said lands upon the death of their father, but that the devise to him was contingent upon his surviving their mother, the life tenant, and, having died before such devise became effective, and before acquiring any heritable estate in the property, no interest therein of any kind passed to his wife or child.

The trial court held and decreed that, under the devise of the first tract of land, George Schrader acquired a vested estate in the remainder of the undivided one-third of said tract, and that upon his death this interest passed to his wife and child. From this part of the decree the plaintiffs have appealed. As to the land last described, the court found that the devise of this tract made the payment of $500 to Henry a condition precedent to the vesting in George of any right or interest in the remainder over after the death of his [88]*88mother, and as a necessary result of such conclusion it was decreed that he never acquired a heritable estate in such property, and that his wife and child acquired no interest therein through him. From this finding and decree, the defendants have appealed.

1. reminders: when vested. I. Giving first attention to the plaintiff’s appeal, it is very clear that it if their claim has any substantial foundation it is in the provision that this land is to be divided between the three sons “on the death .of - the said Dora Schrader.” If it was clear that the testator thereby intended to make this devise to his three sons contingent upon their survival of their mother, and that neither was to acquire any estate therein until her death, then, of course, such intention would prevail, and plaintiffs should have a decree in their favor. But it is a well-settled rule that an intention to postpone the vesting of a remainder over until the death of the life tenant will never be inferred from language such as is here employed. It has been held in a multitude of cases that, in the absence of other language necessitating a different construction, a provision that the remainder over shall pass to the remaindermen “on the death” of, “at the death” of, or “after the death” of the life tenant, or other terms of like import, has reference to the time when the devisee shall come into the right of possession and enjoyment of the property devised, and will not prevent the vesting of the remainder immediately upon the death of the testator. See Archer v. Jacobs, 125 Iowa, 480; Shafer v. Tereso, 133 Iowa, 342.

The case before us is clearly one calling for the application of the rule of these precedents, and, as we have no inclination to depart from or discredit it, the decision of the trial court, so far as it is involved in the plaintiff’s appeal, must be .affirmed.

[89]*892 same : condition subsequent vesting of remainder. [88]*88II. Proceeding next to the matter of the defendants’ appeal, we have to inquire whether it was the intention of the [89]*89testator, as expressed in his will, to make the payment of $500 by George Schrader to his brother Henry a condition precedent to the acquirement by Qeorge 0f any right to or interest in said land, or was it his purpose to make the gift to Henry a charge upon said property in the hands of George, and thus safely secure its payment.

The trial court, it seems, held to. the former theory of construction, but after considerable investigation we are led to adopt the latter. In the first place, as between contingent and vested estates, conditions precedent and conditions subsequent, forfeitable rights and nonforfeitable rights, the courts always incline to the latter whenever it' can fairly be done without violence to the language of the instrument under which the claims of the parties are asserted. In no class of cases can this rule be more equitably applied than in the adjudication of rights dependent on the construction of wills.

It must be presumed that in making his will the testator undertook to provide for what he deemed an equitable division of his estate. Without the condition in question, George would have obtained considerably more than one-third of his father’s real estate, and the testator apparently sought to equalize the distribution by requiring George to pay $500 to Henry.

There is no reason for thinking he intended to do anything more than to insure such equalization by making the payment of said sum a positive and unequivocal charge upon the land, and this is as effectually accomplished by treating the provision as creating a lien or providing a condition subsequent as it would be by considering it a condition precedent. The recital in the devise that George is to become the sole, absolute, and unqualified owner of the land on the death of Dora Schrader is not sufficient to postpone the vesting of his estate in remainder.

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Bluebook (online)
139 N.W. 160, 158 Iowa 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrader-v-schrader-iowa-1912.