Windnagel v. Windnagel

146 N.E.2d 457, 104 Ohio App. 22, 4 Ohio Op. 2d 69, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 880
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1957
Docket5511
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 N.E.2d 457 (Windnagel v. Windnagel) 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
Windnagel v. Windnagel, 146 N.E.2d 457, 104 Ohio App. 22, 4 Ohio Op. 2d 69, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 880 (Ohio Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Petree, P. J.

Gottlieb Windnagel executed a will on March 30, 1910, in which he made the following provisions:

“I t e m I.

“I give, devise and bequeath to my wife, Fredericka Windnagel all my estate, both personal, real and mixed, hereby authorizing and empowering her to sell and convey by proper instruments of conveyance, any and all personal property which I may leave, and to re-invest the proceeds thereof, and to change said investments from time to time in such manner and form as she may desire, and authorizing and empowering her to use and dispose of for her own welfare and benefit, and for such purposes as she may wish, all of said property both real, personal and mixed, without being required to account for said *23 property or the disposition of the same to any other person or persons, hereby giving and granting unto her as full and complete power and authority to control, manage and deal with my estate as I now personally possess.

“Item II.

“After the death of my said wife, Fredericka Windnagel, I give, devise and bequeath all of my said estate, and the proceeds thereof, which may be in the possession and under the control of my said wife at the time of her death, to my children, Emilie Marie Heinger (Heminger), John Leonard Windnagel, Fred Gottlieb Windnagel, Eugene Adolph Windnagel, and Herbert George Windnagel.

“If any of my said children shall have died before the death of my said wife, then I give, devise and bequeath the share which would have passed to said child to the heirs of said child. I direct that the sum of Fifteen Hundred—($1,500-) Dollars be deeucted (deducted) from the share of my said daughter, Emilie Marie Heininger (Heminger), said sum having heretofore been paid to her as an advancement.” (Parenthetical material added.)

The testator died on December 24,1913, seized of the premises which are the subject of this action and also other property. At the time of the death of Gottlieb Windnagel, he left four children, John, Eugene, Emilie, and Fred (or Frederick G.), and a widow, Fredericka Windnagel, who later married one Heybach. Herbert, the other son mentioned in the will of Gottlieb Windnagel, died before the testator at the age of eleven, leaving no issue.

Fredericka Windnagel Heybach executed a deed (plaintiffs’ exhibit 2) on December 31, 1936, to her son, John Windnagel, who was also the son of the testator and mentioned in Item 2 of his will. On the same date, the widow executed a deed to Eugene Windnagel (plaintiffs’ exhibit 3), also mentioned in Item 2.

At the time that these deeds were executed, four children of the testator were living. One of these four, Frederick G. Windnagel, died in 1938, leaving the plaintiffs, Dale Glenn Windnagel and Emma Windnagel, his heirs at law. The deeds to John for lot 54, described in plaintiffs’ exhibit 2, and to Eu *24 gene for lots 2 and 3, described in plaintiffs’ exhibit 3, reserved in the widow, Fredericka Windnagel Heybach, a life estate in the premises described therein and recited in each deed that “the fee to vest in the grantee absolutely after my death.” Each deed provided no revenue stamps. The trial court in its findings of fact, No. 7, recites:

“7. The respective grantees, John Windnagel in the deed recorded in D. B. 1065, page 546, and Eugene C. Windnagel in D. B. 1065, page 547, paid the nominal consideration (consideration) recited in the deeds, of $1.00, to their mother, the grantor Fredericka Windnagel Heyback (Heybach), and no other consideration for said conveyances was paid or passed from the grantees to the grantor at the date of conveyance.” (Parenthetical material added.)

An additional deed was made by testator’s widow, Fredericka, to a daughter, Emilie Marie Heminger, for lot 1, which was owned by the testator at the time of his death, but in this deed the grantor, Fredericka, reserved a life estate and also imposed a charge thereon in the amount of $375 each to John Leonard Windnagel, Eugene G. Windnagel, and Fred G. Windnagel, her three other children living in 1936, the time the deeds were executed. Emilie Marie Heminger, widow, on April 2, 1942, quitclaimed any interest she had in the premises known as lot 54 to John Windnagel and lots 2 and 3 to Eugene Windnagel. The premises mentioned in the quitclaim deeds are the ones under consideration in this partition suit. The title of the defendants in this case depends upon the will of Gottlieb Windnagel, their father. Each of the defendants would get a one-fourth interest if they take under the will. Emilie is apparently satisfied with her quitclaim deeds and has not joined in this action. That leaves the one-fourth interest of Frederick G. Windnagel, deceased, which his child and widow claim in this action by virtue of the will. The defendants claim that they are the sole owners of the respective properties described in the deeds of Fredericka Windnagel Heybach, their mother.

On the question of what estate was given by the testator, Gottlieb Windnagel, to his widow and the four children living at the time of his death, we find some help in Johnson v. Johnson, 51 Ohio St., 446, 38 N. E., 61, the syllabus of which reads as follows:

*25 “1. A testator, after providing for the payment of his debts, used the following language in his will: ‘ Second—1 give and devise unto my beloved wife, and her assigns, all of the remainder of my property, both real and personal, however the some (same) may be known, or wheresoever the same may be situate, with full power to bargain, sell, convey, exchange or dispose of the same as she may think proper; but, if at the time of her decease, any of my said property shall remain unconsumed, my will is that the same be equally divided between my brothers and sisters, and their children, if deceased, the children to have the same amount the parent would be entitled to if living.’ Held-. That under this will the widow took only a life estate in the property, both real and personal, with power to bargain, sell, convey, exchange or dispose of the same as she might think proper for consumption in her life support, and that what remained at the time of her death, unconsumed in supporting her, belongs to the remaindermen designated in the will.

“2. The -widow under this will was, by implication, a quasi trustee for those in remainder, and the interest of the brothers and sisters of the testator, in the uneonsumed property, was a vested right which could not be destroyed by the act of the widow in disposing of the property by gift to a third party, or otherwise than for her support or the benefit of the estate.

“3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 N.E.2d 457, 104 Ohio App. 22, 4 Ohio Op. 2d 69, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/windnagel-v-windnagel-ohioctapp-1957.