Scott v. Fulkerson

60 S.W.2d 34, 332 Mo. 734, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 20, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 34 (Scott v. Fulkerson) 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
Scott v. Fulkerson, 60 S.W.2d 34, 332 Mo. 734, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 430 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This case comes to the writer on reassignment. Though referred to by the parties as a suit to construe the will of one E. Wirt Fulkerson, deceased, it is in reality an action to determine title to part of the real estate owned and devised by said *Page 736 testator and for certain equitable relief, the decision depending, however, upon the construction of the will. The suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Grundy County where the testator had been domiciled and his will was probated and where the lands in question lie, and was sent on change of venue to the Circuit Court of Daviess County where it was tried, resulting in a judgment for the defendants from which plaintiffs have appealed. The plaintiffs are Charles H. Scott individually and Mary Margaret Scott and Grace Lucille Scott, infant granddaughters of the testator, only children of a deceased daughter, who sue by Charles H. Scott their guardian and curator. Scott is the father of the minor plaintiffs. The defendant Mary Margaret Fulkerson is the widow and the other two defendants, Lee Witten, a married daughter and Cortez D. Fulkerson, a son, are the only living children of the testator. Said two grandchildren, daughter and son constitute testator's heirs. The grandchildren were respectively about seven and three years of age when the will was executed, April 10, 1919. Testator died December 10, 1925, being then about seventy-four years old. The widow's age is not shown except that she was "old" when her husband died.

By the first clause of his will the testator provided for payment of debts and funeral expenses. The second clause reads:

"I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Mary Margaret Fulkerson, all of my household furniture, carriage and harness, together with all poultry and all live stock of every kind and description, all rents and profits, and incomes of every kind which may arise or be derived from my dwelling houses, lands and other appurtenances thereto wherever situated without the same being invoiced or accounted for by her to the probate court, or anyone else, and all money, notes, and evidences of indebtedness due to me of every kind, and I direct my executors to pay and turn same over to her as soon after my decease as it can be arranged; all of which I give to her to hold for her use and enjoyment during the term of her natural life, with a full power to use and spend the money and to sell and dispose of any or all of the property at any and all times as she may think proper, without order from, or reporting same to the probate court, and use the proceeds thereof as she may desire.

"I further give and devise to her during her natural life all of my real estate wherever situated."

By the third clause testator gives to his daughter Lee Witten. "subject to my wife's life estate therein," a certain described farm which, it is therein stated, is subject to an $8000 deed of trust, and certain town lots. By the fourth clause he gives to his son Cortez D. Fulkerson, "subject to wife's life estate," a described farm and certain town lots. The fifth and sixth clauses read:

"Fifth: I give and devise to my grandchildren, Mary Margaret Scott and Grace Lucille Scott (and should either die without first *Page 737 having bodily heirs, then to the survivor) my old home place, consisting of about one hundred forty (140) acres, known as the Hazel Dell Farm, in Grundy County, Missouri, to have and to hold the same during their natural life, the title to become absolute in them or either of them on the birth of issue, and to revert to the heirs of my body in the absence of such contingency.

"Sixth: In order to equalize the values of the farms given to my son, daughter and grandchildren, it is my will that the farm of my grandchildren be charged with the sum of fifteen hundred dollars ($1500) said sum to be paid within a year after my death to my daughter Lee, and that my daughter Lee assume and pay the Deed of Trust of eight thousand dollars ($8,000) for which her farm is now subject according to its date and tenor, and if not paid at my decease to be charged to her said farm and not to my general estate."

The personal estate of testator, aggregating about $3600, was turned over to the widow under clause two of the will. Testator owed no debts at his death.

The chief controversy between the parties herein is whether or not the widow, Mary Margaret Fulkerson, took and owns under the will a life estate in the realty devised to the grandchildren in the above quoted fifth clause of the will. She and her codefendants assert that she does own such life estate and the court so found and adjudged. Plaintiffs contend that by clause five the grandchildren took a defeasible fee in the land therein devised free from any life estate or other interest of the widow, notwithstanding the devise to the widow in clause two. No question is raised as to the title to any of the real estate other than that referred to in said fifth clause of the will, which is fully described in the petition and in the judgment. Other controversies in the case will be referred to later in this opinion.

[1] Both sides concede and assert the well-settled proposition that the cardinal rule to be observed in the construction of a will is to ascertain and give effect to the testator's intent as therein expressed, and that in seeking such intent from the language used by the testator all parts and provisions of the will must be given due consideration. It is not disputed that where an estate is given in clear and unambiguous terms in one part of the will it will not be held to be cut down to a lesser estate by words less clear and decisive in a subsequent part, Payne v. Reece, 297 Mo. 54, 247 S.W. 1006, but: "E converso, if an estate be granted in one clause of the will its quantity may be cut down to a lesser estate by an express provision to that effect, or by words so strong and clear as to have that effect by plain and necessary implication." [Cox v. Jones, 229 Mo. 53, 63, 129 S.W. 221.]

[2] In the second clause of the will in question the testator clearly gives to his wife a life estate in all of his real estate. First he gives and bequeaths to her, in addition to the personal property, the "incomes *Page 738 of every kind which may arise or be derived from my dwelling houses, lands and other appurtenances thereto whereversituate," to hold for her use and enjoyment during the term of her natural life. (Italics ours.) Then, as though to emphasize his intent and make doubly sure that she shall have the use and enjoyment of all the real estate during her life he adds: "I further give and devise to her during her natural life all of myreal estate wherever situated." (Italics ours.)

It cannot be successfully denied that said second clause of the will, in clear and unmistakable terms, gives to testator's wife a life estate in all of his real estate including that devised in the fifth clause to the grandchildren named. But appellants argue that the fifth clause makes no reference to the life estate given to the wife by clause two and in terms equally clear and strong devises the land there mentioned to the grandchildren subject only to the condition named as to birth of issue, resulting that the devise of the life estate in clause two is thereby cut down to a life estate in the remaining lands owned by testator. So far as concerns the land mentioned in clause five the construction contended for would not merely cut down the quantity of the estate granted by the second clause but would destroy it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 34, 332 Mo. 734, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-fulkerson-mo-1933.