Sefcik v. Sheker

41 N.W.2d 709, 241 Iowa 571, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 437
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 7, 1950
Docket47538
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 41 N.W.2d 709 (Sefcik v. Sheker) 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
Sefcik v. Sheker, 41 N.W.2d 709, 241 Iowa 571, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 437 (iowa 1950).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Plaintiffs (and all defendants except David Sheker', individually and as administrator) are either heirs, or spouses of heirs, of Anna Vavricka, deceased. Her husband, John, died in May 1941. He left a will giving her all his personal property, a life estate in a town residence property, and an annuity of $700, constituting a lien on his two-hundred-aere farm. Subject to these provisions he devised all said real estate to their only child, Philomena Sheker, wife of David Sheker, whom we shall refer to as defendant.

At the time of John’s death he and his wife, daughter and son-in-law had lived together for some time as one family on a farm lie had previously deeded to his daughter. His own farm, involved here, was, however, being worked, and continued thereafter to be worked, by defendant.

*573 A year or two after John’s death the family’ moved to town and occupied the premises he had devised to his wife for life. There they lived until Philomena died, childless and testate in March 1947, devising all her estate to defendant. Thereafter the mother and her son-in-law continued to live in the home until she died intestate the following August.

Philomena had been named in her father’s will as executrix but she declined to act, and defendant was made administrator with will annexed. The estate was closed June 2, 1942. The widow never made formal election to accept the provisions of her husband’s will in lieu of her distributive share (which we shall for convenience call “dower”), nor was any statutory notice ever served on her to put her to such election.

However, defendant contended, and the trial court held, there ivas an election by reason of the widow’s acts and conduct. Defendant also argues no election was necessary, which claim will be referred to later. From the decree against them plaintiffs have appealed.

Plaintiffs claim the widow’s one-third interest in her husband’s estate passed to her heirs. Defendant claims the entire estate by devise from his wife. The respective arguments of the parties will appear as we proceed. We shall not follow their order of presentation however.

I. The pertinent statutes as they stood in 1941 when John Yavricka died are the same as they stand today in the Code of 1946. Section 683.2 dates back to section 3270 of the Code of 1897, carried forward through the Codes of 1924 to 1939, as section 11847. It provides that a devise to a spouse shall be presumed to be in lieu of dower unless a contrary intent was manifested by the terms of the will. Under the previous Code of 1873 the presumption was the other way. Hahn v. Dunn, 211 Iowa 678, 685, 686, 234 N.W. 247, 82 A. L. R. 1503; In re Will of Foster, 76 Iowa 364, 369, 41 N.W. 43. This change wrought by section 3270 of the Code of 1897 is the only fundamental one since the Code of 1873. The doctrine prior to 1897 has “become obsolete.” Hahn v. Dunn, supra. Other changes relate only to procedure in requiring election between devise and dower by a surviving spouse and in the statutory mode of making such election. With these we are only incidentally concerned here, *574 since there was no effort to require Mrs. Vavricka to elect and she in fact made no statutory election.

II. Plaintiffs argue there is no such thing nnder present statutes as nonstatutory consent short of conduct resulting in estoppel. Obviously the reference is to equitable estoppel or estoppel in pais. Curiously — and significantly — the basis for this argument is found in cases involving wills which became effective, not under present statutes, but under the Code of 1873. Byerly v. Sherman, 126 Iowa 447, 102 N.W. 157; Miksch v. Miksch, 179 Iowa 716, 721, 722, 161 N.W. 675; Ross v. Alleghany Theological Seminary, 204 Iowa 648, 651, 215 N.W. 710; Archer v. Barnes, 149 Iowa 658, 660, 661, 128 N.W. 969; Thorpe v. Lyones, 16Ó Iowa 415, 421-425, 142 N.W. 82; Koep v. Koep, 146 Iowa 179, 181, 123 N.W. 174.

The one exception we have found is Pring v. Swarm, 176 Iowa 153, 163, 157 N.W. 734, 737, in which the will became effective in 1910. But in that ease the court did not say there could be no election by conduct short of estoppel. Instead it was merely held there was neither election nor estoppel — “no election having been made and no estoppel being established.” There is cited Thorpe v. Lyones, Byerly v. Sherman, both supra, and Jones v. Jones, 137 Iowa 382, 114 N.W. 1066, all involving wills probated prior to 1897.

The significance of the time element lies in the statutory change already referred to made by the Code of 1897. It may be illustrated by the Miksch case, supra. In that Case the will gave the widow a life estate but did not specify the devise was in lieu of dower. The statute (Code of 1873) contained no equivalent to section 3270, Code of 1897, creating the presumption of inconsistency between devise and dower. See cases cited in Division I, hereof.

There was therefore no occasion for. election, the widow could take both unless in some way estopped as to one estate or the other. The defendants, evidently realizing the situation, pleaded and attempted- to prove' estoppel.

The opinion (179 Iowa at page 721) accepts the challenge as made:

“Assuming, for the purposes of the case, that the mother could, by her conduct with reference to the land, estop herself *575 from claiming anything more than a life estate therein, we have next to inquire whether there is shown in her conduct anything which makes it inequitable for her or her devisees to assert any greater or other right.”

And again (page 722): “Where, under the Code of 1873, the devise to¡ the widow is not inconsistent with her claim of a statutory share, if the doctrine of estoppel is ever to be applied in such cases, it certainly should require a very clear and conclusive showing of some deception or misleading act upon her part to the injury of others, to impose upon her the loss of her right either under the will or under the statute.” (Italics supplied.)

This clearly does not refer to election between inconsistent alternatives but to a course of conduct sufficient to estop the survivor from claiming both devise and dower. See In re Estate of Emerson, 191 Iowa 900, 903,” 183 N.W. 327; Arnold v. Livingston, 157 Iowa 677, 682-684, 139 N.W. 927.

Of course there is some similarity between equitable estoppel and election. Each is equitable in origin and each precludes someone from claiming anything inconsistent therewith. But they are quite dissimilar in their elements and in the quantity and quality of proof necessary to establish them. In a loose sense when one has elected one of two inconsistent choices he is estop-ped to claim the other. But this is not estoppel in its true sense, or in the sense argued by plaintiffs.

The' elements of estoppel are generally understood. There must be conduct amounting to false representation or concealment and someone in reliance on it must be misled into doing or failing to do something he would not otherwise have done or have failed to do. 31 C. J. S., Estoppel, section 67 (1); Peoples Savings Bank v. McCarthy, 206 Iowa 28, 32, 217 N.W. 453.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.W.2d 709, 241 Iowa 571, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sefcik-v-sheker-iowa-1950.