Waldon v. Baker

1939 OK 82, 88 P.2d 352, 184 Okla. 492, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 7, 1939
DocketNo. 28488.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1939 OK 82 (Waldon v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waldon v. Baker, 1939 OK 82, 88 P.2d 352, 184 Okla. 492, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 97 (Okla. 1939).

Opinion

GIB'SON, J.

This action is one in ejectment and to quiet title, instituted by plaintiffs in error against defendants in error and others. The parties will be designated in the order of their appearance at the trial.

Plaintiffs claim title to the premises as alleged devisees of a remainder in fee therein under their father’s will. The will had been duly probated, distribution had according to its terms, final settlement made, and the estate closed.

The aforesaid will devised to the testator’s widow an undivided one-seventh interest in and to all the deceased’s lands, and a like interest to the children of a then deceased child of the testator. To each of the living children, consisting of these plaintiffs, and a son, Byrd AValdon, since deceased, the will devised “an undivided one-seventh (1/7) interest in all the farm land owned by me at the time of my death, * * * during their ’ natural life, creating a life estate, the fee to descend to their children, as follows:” Then follow separate paragraphs, all in identical words, except each one names a different living child. Omitting name and sex of devisee, as indicated, each paragraph reads as follows:

“To my '(son, or daughter, naming him, or her), I give, bequeath and devise during (his or her) natural life, an undivided one-seventh (1/7) interest, the fee to descend, to the issue of (his or her) body.”

The sixth paragraph of the will follows the above devises, and is in the following language: '

“I further direct that should any of my children die without living issue or children of living issue, then the fee shall go to my living children in equal parts.”

Subsequent to the settlement of the estate in county court as aforesaid, all the devisees in esse became parties .to a partition suit in district court wherein the lands of the testator were divided in kind among said devisees. The fee-simple title to a certain tract was set aside and confirmed to the widow, and a certain portion in fee to the children of the deceased child. To each of the living children a life estate in separate parcels was set aside, in the following language:

“A life estate in and to the following described land, (describing it) is hereby vested in (naming child), the fee to descend to his children.”

In that action the will was construed and, as to the children, these plaintiffs and Byrd AValdon, now deceased was interpreted as leaving to each of said children an undivided one-seventh interest in the life estate, with remainder in fee to the issue of his body.

The present action is by the living children! of testator to recover the fee-simple title1 to that portion of the lands in which ai life estate was vested in Byrd AValdon, who died without issue. They assert that by virtue of the 6th paragraph of tlie wilr, devising to them a remainder in fee in default of children of the life tenant, they are entitled to possession and to have the fee-simple title quieted in them.

AVe gather from the record that the defendant Ben E. Baker claims fee-simple title to the premises by virtue of a quitclaim deed procured from Byrd AValdon, and by a tax deed thereafter acquired by Baker. He asserts that the aforesaid judgment in partition and the order therein confirming the report of commissioners vested the fee-simple title in the said Byrd AValdon, and that the plaintiffs are now bound by that judgment, and estopped to assert any right under the 6th paragraph of the will, above, purporting to devise to them a remainder in fee on default of issue surviving Byrd AValdon.

*494 The judgment in the partition suit seems to have been silent concerning the 6th paragraph of the will.

After the issues • were settled, defendants moved for dismissal, contending that the pleadings disclosed no right in the plaintiffs to maintain the action. This motion was sustained, with prejudice to future action. The appeal is from that order.

The motion to dismiss is equivalent to a motion for judgment on the pleadings, and will be so treated. We are therefore to determine from the facts pleaded which of the two asserted claims was the superior one.

Without doubt, the will, passed to each of the living children a life estate in an undivided one-seventh interest in all the testator’s lands and, in addition thereto, the remainder in fee and in cotenancy to the survivors in event of death of any of said children without surviving issue. Aside from their respective fractional life estates, the will passed to or created in the testator’s children merely a contingent remainder in fee to those respective interests. The contingency was failure of surviving issue of the life tenant of each interest. 69 C. J. 635, sec. 1725; Id. 655, sec. 1749.

A remainder in fee limited to the children or the heirs of the life tenant’s body, though such heirs be unborn at the time of the grant, is recognized by statute as a valid grant. Section 11766, O. S. 1931, 60 Okla. Stat. Ann. sec. 41. A remainder made contingent upon the failure of such heirs cannot vest until such failure becomes a settled fact. The latter is a contingent remainder and may not vest until failure of surviving issue of the life tenant becomes certain. Section 11759, O. S. 1931, 60 Okla. Stat. Ann. sec. 34. Though the fee-simple title is never in abeyance, the power of alienation may be suspended in the manner above stated. Section 11756, O. S. 1931, 60 Okla. Stat. Ann. sec. 31; section 11759, supra. The will in the instant ease accomplished that end. As to each of the testator’s children and his or her particular life interest, the remainder in fee limited upon • each of said interests to their respective surviving issue, and over to the other of said children in default of such issue, was not in any event a vested remainder, but suspended the power of alienation in any manner that would tend to deprive potential remaindermen of their rights under the grant. We do not mean to say, however, that a contingent remainderman in being may not effectively assign his contingency in a manner to estop him from later asserting his title after the contingency transpires. See section 11755, O. S. 1931, 60 Okla. Stat. Ann. sec. 30; 5 O. J. 852, 853, 854, sec. 16; 21 O. J. 998, sec. 156; 21 O. 3. 1032, sec. 231.

It is certain that under the will and decree of distribution in county court these plaintiffs were entitled upon the death of Byrd Waldon to take the fee-simple title to the undivided one-seventh interest which was limited upon his particular life estate.

The effect of the aforesaid partition suit is discussed at some length in the briefs. As above indicated, the defendants take the position that all the estates, vested and contingent, in the land claimed or to be claimed by plaintiffs as devisees under the will were adjudicated in said suit; and that as to each party thereto, his claim in the parcels set aside to the others was thereby settled and foreclosed, and that the judgment therein gave to each the fee-simple title to his respective tract.

The record here does not disclose the complete judgment roll in the partition suit. We have before us, however, the will as pleaded therein, the judgment in partition, and the order confirming report of commissioners dividing the land in kind.

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Bluebook (online)
1939 OK 82, 88 P.2d 352, 184 Okla. 492, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldon-v-baker-okla-1939.