Swetland v. Miles

35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 458, 31 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 529
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 458 (Swetland v. Miles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swetland v. Miles, 35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 458, 31 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 529 (Ohio Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

SHIELDS, J.

Suit was brought in the court of common pleas of said Knox county by Harriet T. Miles against Mary B. Swetland et al, to' contest the validity of the last will and testament of Phoebe Thompson, deceased. The petition was in the short form authorized by Sec. 12082 G. C. An order was duly entered on the journal of said court as provided, and upon the issue being submitted to a jury whether the writing produced was or was not the last will and testament of the said Phoebe Thompson, deceased, the verdict of the jury was that the same was not her last will and testament. Upon a motion for a new trial being overruled, judgment was entered upon said verdict and a petition in error was filed in this court seeking a reversal of said judgment.

The principal errors alleged are (1) that the court below erred in holding that the plaintiff below is not equitably estopped to maintain said action; (2) that said court erred in excluding the testimony of the witness, Calvin Trott, offered in behalf of the defendants below; (3) that said court erred in giving in its charge to the jury a certain proposition of law sub[459]*459mitted in Bequest No. 3, hereinafter referred to; (4) that the verdict of the jury is against the weight of the evidence.

Copying the statement of counsel for plaintiffs in error as contained in their brief covering a chronological history of the ease in respect to the execution of said will and the relation of the several plaintiffs in error and defendant in error hereto to each other and their relation as beneficiaries under said will, including the initial and partial distribution of said estate by the executors thereof, we have the following:

“Phoebe Thompson died June 7, 1907. The paper writing purporting to be her last will and testament was executed November 28, 1904, and probated December 31, 1907. She was survived by one daughter and three granddaughters, her husband, Dr. Thompson, having died some twenty years before her death. The surviving daughter, Mary T. Swetland, died in July, 1912. She was survived by two of the granddaughters of the said Phoebe Thompson, two of the defendants below— Anna E. Swetland Gotchall and Harriet T. Swetland. The other granddaughter, Harriet T. Miles, the defendant in error, is the daughter of Mrs. Charles E. Miles who died about the time of the date of the birth of the said Harriet T. Miles, October 29, 1896. At the time of her death the said Phoebe Thompson had two sons-in-law, Charles E. Miles, the fáther of the said Harriet T. Miles, and H. C. Swetland, the father of two of the plaintiffs in error, Anna E. Swetland Gotchall and Harriet T. Swetland.
“By the provisions of said will each of these two sons-in-law was bequeathed the sum of $1,000, and the surviving daughter. Mary T. Swetland, was bequeathed all the shares of the capital stock of the said Phoebe Thompson in the First National Bank of Mt. Yernon, Ohio.
“That Charles E. Miles was the duly appointed, qualified, and acting guardian of the defendant in error, Harriet T. Miles, having been appointed as such guardian by the Probate Court of Franklin County, Ohio, December 20, 1897.
“Upon the probate of said will the said Charles E. Miles father of the defendant in error and her guardian was, with the said H. C. Swetland, appointed and qualified as executors under said will, December 31,1907. On February 17, 1908, said executors prepared an inventory of the estate of the said Phoebe Thompson, deceased, showing her personal estate to be $32,572.07.
‘ ‘ That on or about January 20,1908, said executors with the said Mary T. Swetland, who was named in said will as trustee [460]*460of the residuary estate bequeathed to her said three granddaughters, met at the Thompson homestead and there and then some arrangement, understanding, agreement — some family arrangement, understanding or agreement was reached and concluded whereby there was a distribution of the assets of the estate of the said Phoebe Thompson, deceased, in the amount of $15,000. The said Charles E. Miles, father and guardian aforesaid, took $5,000 of the assets of this estate, and Swetland and his wife, or both, for their two children, took $10,000 worth of the assets of the estate.
“At the same time or shortly thereafter, Charles E. Miles took or received his legacy out of the assets of said estate the sum of $1,000, likewise said Swetland took his legacy of $1,000; at the same time, likewise, Mary T. Swetland took'the forty (40) shares of stock in the First National Bank of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, appraised at $5,400, her legacy under the will. The $15,000 distributed and divided by this agreement was not inventoried.

The foregoing statement embraces the facts upon which counsel for the plaintiffs in error claim the court below erred in holding that the same do not constitute an equitable estoppel against the plaintiff below and bar her from prosecuting this action. Although a child of tender years, a minor, at the death of her grandmother in June, 1907, which is conceded and although recognizing the saving clause in Sec. 10531 G-. C., which gives to minors the right to contest a will within two years after attaining their majority, counsel for plaintiffs in error contend that the defendant in error by and through the action of Charles E. Miles as her guardian, under the distribution made of said $15,000, of the assets of said estate, as appears in the foregoing statement of counsel for plaintiffs in error, works an equitable estoppel against the said defendant in error as the ward of said guardian from contesting said will.

In their brief counsel for plaintiffs in error in commenting upon this branch of the case quote from the case of Van Duyne v. Van Duyne, 14 N. J., Eq., 49, wherein the Chancellor announcing the opinion in that case says:

“The rule in equity is well settled. A man shall not take any beneficial interest under a will, and at the same time set up any right or claim of his own, even if otherwise legal and well grounded, which shall defeat or in any way prevent the full effect and operation of every part of the will. ’ ’

[461]*461An examination of this case shows that a bill was filed to enforce a certain provision made in favor of the widow of the testator against certain real éstate devised by him to his son, wherein the support of the widow was made a charge upon said real estate and the same was made subject to the support of the wife of the testator during her widowhood. By answer the son set up that he did not take said real estate by gift, but that he was a purchaser thereof for a valuable consideration, averring that he had rendered certain services to his father, the testator, after attaining his majority without receiving compensation therefor, and that the services so rendered were an equitable set-off against the value of said 'real estate so devised, and that therefore said real estate was not equitably chargeable with the support of said widow beyond the value of her dower therein. It is scarcely necessary to add that the defense here set up was held to constitute no defense to said bill. This is not new, but well settled doctrine, and it is quite apparent that the ease cited is not applicable to or determinative of the question at issue here.

Counsel also cite in support of their contention the case of Hamblett v. Hamblett, 6 N. H.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 458, 31 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swetland-v-miles-ohioctapp-1920.