Tucker v. Lungren

5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 577
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 577 (Tucker v. Lungren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Lungren, 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 577 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Haynes, J.

This case comes into this court by way of appeal, and the subject matter relates to a claim of contribution. Primarily, it relates to a claim that is made by the administrator of the estate of Dr. Samuel S. Dungren as to whether he is entitled to the proceeds of certain property for the [578]*578purpose of paying off the indebtedness of the estate that was sold on partition sale.

The facts show that Dr. Dungren died testate in the month of March, 1892. The debtor had been a practicing physician for some years in the city of Toledo, and was possessed of certain accounts and real estate, and also had certain life insurance policies on his own life. The will provided, first:

“I do desire that all my debts and liabilities, of whatsoever kind, owing by me at my death, shall be paid from moneys derived from accounts due me for medical services rendered.”

And then he wills to his wife certain property; and to his children certain property; among other things, he wills to his wife, Mary F. Dungren, and to his youngest daughter, Virginia, otherwise known as Daisy, “To share in equal proportions, the residence now occupied by myself, together with the appurtenances thereto belonging, said premises being more particularly described as follows, viz: Dot 450, Port Dawrence division, and that part of lot 1,417, Vistula division, of the city of Toledo, Ducas county, Ohio, now standing in my name on the county records and owned by me.” This property at the time was incumbered with a mortgage of $4,000, being a part of the purchase price of' the premises, which was unpaid at the time of his death; and it is in relation to the paying off of this mortgage that this controversy has occured. He then gives to his youngest daughter the proceeds of a policy of insurance on his life for $3,000, in the New York Dife Insurance Co. He then wills to his wife, Mary F. Dungren. and to his youngest daughter, Virginia Dungren, “ in equal proportions, to be by them divided as they may agree, all my personal property of whatsoever nature and kind, save and except as set forth in item 4th to Charles Marshall Dungren, and in item 5 to Virginia Dungren, otherwise known as Daisy. The bequest in this item 6 I desire to cover and include all the residue remaining from debts due 'me, whether shown by my book accounts or otherwise, after having paid all liabilities of my own provided for in item 1 hereof.” He then gives and bequeaths to his five chiidren in equal parts, to share and share alike, 40 acres of land, more or less, in Green county, Iowa, 80 acres in Ducas county, Ohio, and 25 lots in Denk’s addition to the city of Toledo; also to be divided in the same manner the proceeds of a certain policy of insurance on his life in the sum of $10,000 in the Connecticut Mutual Dife Insurance Co. of Hartford, Conn. He also willed that certain real estate that was held in trust by D- S. Baumgardner, should go to his estate, and after the pay. ment of the debts owing by him should, be divided according to law.

The general debts have all been paid, and the accounts have all been collected and exhausted. There is in the hands of the administrator the sum of $1,100 received from the sale of some property, and there is in the common pleas court a certain amount of money arising from the sale of these lots in Denk’s addition. One of the heirs filed a petition in partition in the court of common pleas, and such proceedings were had that the lots were sold, and upon those partition proceedings the sale was sonfirmed, and the money received therefrom is now in the hands of the court, or is subject to the order of distribution by the court. The administrator of Dr. Dungren’s estate says that there is due on the notes secured by the mortgage upon the home property $4,000, which has been allowed as a valid claim against the estate., and he prays that this money which is now in the hands of the court be turned over to him to [579]*579apply in the payment of that debt and thus relieve the mortgaged property from the payment of the debt; and the parties holding that property are here asking the same order or judgment. Thus the question which arises here' is whether either the administrator or those parties holding that estate have a right to call upon these five heirs who own this Uenk property for contribution for the payment of that mortgage. And there is also another question, as to whether the money that was devised to the different heirs, arising from the life insurance, which money has been collected and divided among the respective heirs, shall be subject to contribution, so far as is necessary, for the payment of that $4,000 mortgage.

It will be seen that by the terms of the will Dr. Lungren gave to his wife and Virginia the homestead property by name; that at the time he made his will that property was subject to the purchase money mortgage, and that his interest in it was the equity of redemption. He owned these lots in Denk’s addition, and they were free from incumbrance when he'willed them to his five children absolutely. It is claimedhere, first, that there being debts owing by the estate, to-wit: the debts arising upon the notes secured by this mortgage, the debt itself being the principal and the mortgage being given to secure it, that the administrator has a right to the- proceeds of all property belonging to the decedent for the purpose of paying off that debt, and that inasmuch as there is no general fund in his hands, the general estate having been exhausted, he has a right to have the life insurance money of $10,000 placed in his hands to use for the purpose of paying off that mortgage; that that money having been distributed among the heirs, he has a right to call upon them for contribution, and in like manner he has a right to have this money which arises from the sale of these lots, at least so far as is necessary to reimburse the insurance fund, paid into his hands for the purpose of paying this debt. We were cited by counsel for administrator to Jarman on Wills, as laying down the general rule in regard to charges on estates. He says, page 1440 :

“As to the general right of a devisee, in cases not affected by the statute, to be exonerated from an incumbrance to which the testator, either before or after the making of his will, has subjected the devised estate, there cannot, at this day, be any doubt or controversy. And it is clear that the legatee of any chattel, specially bequeathed has the same right.
“ Thus where a testator holding lands for which he received rent and paid a head-rent, died leaving arrears of rent due to him, which he specifically bequeathed, and also arrears of head-rent due from him, it was held that the latter must be paid out of the general personal estate in exoneration of the specific legatee.
“So a sum due from the testator to his lessor, in respect óf a renewal granted during the testator’s lifetime, is payable out of the general personal estate, in exoneration of a specific legatee of the leasehold. And the specific legatee of leaseholds, on which the testator had covenanted to build, has been held entitled to have the covenant performed at the expense of the general personal estate, although the time for performing the covenant has not expired. But where a lessee was liable for dilapidations at the time of his death, it was held that his specific legatee must himself bear the cost of repairs.
“Under a gift of leaseholds ‘free from all outgoings and payments except- the annual and other rent,’ it was held that the legatee was en[580]

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-lungren-ohcirctlucas-1896.