State v. American National Red Cross

245 N.W. 399, 60 S.D. 608, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 124
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1932
DocketFile No. 7343.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 245 N.W. 399 (State v. American National Red Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. American National Red Cross, 245 N.W. 399, 60 S.D. 608, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 124 (S.D. 1932).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

In January, 1919, at Sioux City, Iowa, the testator, Theodore Engles, made his last will and testament. He died at Rochester, Minn., in October, 1925. During the last twenty years of his life he owned and resided on an eighty-acre tract of land in Bethel township, Clay county, S. D. He died without heirs or next of kin. The estimated worth of the real property was about $12,000, and there was some $2,000 of personal property. The said last will and testament bequeathed to one of his friends, Micheál Fisher, forty acres of land, and also forty acres to his friend Andrew Fisher; and it will be observed that the said last will and testament was made a little more than six years prior to his death. The balance of his property was disposed of by the fourth clause or paragraph, which reads as follows: “Fourth. The balance of my property both real and personal, I give and bequeath to- Red Cross Society.”

*609 Said will was prepared by one Sam Jacobson, a banker, and-who was also named as executor of testator’s'will. It was witnessed by Micheál Fisher and Edward Mart. Micheál Fisher, the devisee named in paragraph 2, was one of the two witnesses to the said last will and testament. It is contended by the American National Red Cross that the real estate passes to it under the fourth paragraph or residuary part of said will. The state of South Dakota contends that said real estate passes to it (the state) for want of legal heirs. Five propositions were presented for consideration in the trial court, and, for a better understanding of the matters involved, we are enumerating them.

‘T. Does a devise to a person who is also one of the two subscribing witnesses to the will fail because of the fact that the said devisee is such a witness?

‘‘2. Does a specific devise which fails pass under the residuary clause of the will, or does it go to the heirs at law, or in the absence of such heirs, to the state?

“3. Is the language designating the residuary devisee, to-wit, ‘Red Cross Society,’ sufficiently definite to identify the American National Red1 Cross?

“4. Can the American National Red Cross receive bequests and devises under its charter?

“5. Can the American National Red Cross receive bequests and devises by way of charitable uses or trusts?”

The executor made his final account and report and filed his petition for final distribution in the county court. The state intervened claiming the balance or residue of the property under the escheat laws, claiming also that the forty acres was not intended by the testator to pass by the residuary clause, the same being a specific devise. In addition to the American National Red Cross of Washington, D. C., filing its petition in intervention, the Wakonda branch of the Clay County Chapter of the American National Red Cross also intervened, claiming that it was entitled to all of the residue, including the forty acres in question. From the decision of the county court, the state and the American National Red Cross- appealed to the circuit court of Clay county.

The -circuit court at the conclusion of the trial made its findings, conclusions, and judgment in favor of the interveners, the *610 American National Red Cross of Washington, D. C., to the effect that it was entitled to the property in controversy, including the real estate.

Upon the appeal to this court, we believe that certain questions raised by the assignments of error eliminates Micheál Fisher’s claim to the property on account of the fact that he was one of the two attesting witnesses to Engles’ will and that the specific devise to said Fisher in paragraph 2 of said will was and is clearly void under section 638, S. D. Rev. Code 1919, which provides as follows: “All beneficial devises, legacies or gifts whatever, made or given in any will to a subscribing witness thereto, are void, unless there are two other competent subscribing witnesses to the same. * * * ”

The forty acres specifically devised to Micheál Fisher in paragraph 2 being void, does it go to the heirs at law or in the absence of such heirs to the state? Three sections of our statutes seem to point the way in determining the construction to be placed upon testator’s testament and especially the legal effect where a certain object of his bounty fails by virtue of the person to receive the bounty being legally incapable of receiving the gift. Sections 642, 657, and 658, of the 1919 S. D. Rev. Code, provide in part as follows :

“§ 642. After-Acquired Property Passes by Will. * * * Every will made in express terms, devising, or in any other terms denoting the intent of the testator to devise all the real estate of such testator, passes all the real estate which such testator was entitled to devise at the time of his decease.”

“§ 657. When All Property Passes. A devise or bequest of all the testator’s real or personal property, in express terms, or in any other terms denoting his intent to dispose of all his real or personal property, passes all the real or personal property which he was entitled to dispose of by will at the time of his death.”

“§ 658. Devise of Residue Passes All Not Otherwise Devised. A devise of the residue of the testator’s real property passes all the real property which he was entitled to devise at the time of his death, not otherwise effectually devised by his will.”

By the foregoing sections, and especially section 658, it is quite plain that the common-law rule has been abrogated, and that, instead of the heirs at law inheriting when a specific devise fails *611 for any reason, or in their absence it escheats to the state, it now passes under the residuary clause and finds its way into the residuum in such a way as to convey such land to the residuary legatee, and in this case to the American National Red 'Cross, if the language in the residuary clause is sufficiently specific and definite in its terms to identify it as the beneficiary which the testator had in mind and1 wished to endow.

Appellant urges the failure of testator to^ specifically name and identify the beneficiary in the residuary clause, in that he used the term “Red Cross Society”; that the designation is so uncertain that it may mean the American National Red Cross of Washington, D. C., or it may mean the local Chapter of the Red' Cross of which he was a member, and that it is therefore most likely that he wished to bestow the gift upon the local organization. Appellant further urges that the language is insufficient to pass the real property to the “Red Cross Society” in that the testator used only the words “give and bequeath” and failed to' use the usual term “devise.” An investigation of authorities as to what particular society testator had in mind seems to indicate that the words “Red Cross Society” means the national organization. See American National Red Cross v. Felzner Post (1928) 86 Ind. App. 709, 159 N. E. 771. This belief is strengthened by the wording of the congressional act or charter creating the American National Red Cross (36 USCA § 1 et seq.).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Watson v. Dailey
673 P.2d 645 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1983)
Matter of Estate of Campbell
673 P.2d 645 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1983)
Lovskog v. American Nat. Red Cross
111 F.2d 88 (Ninth Circuit, 1940)
In re Lanart's Estate
9 Alaska 535 (D. Alaska, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 399, 60 S.D. 608, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-american-national-red-cross-sd-1932.