167 Iowa 174 | Iowa | 1914
The issue is between Sarah E. Hibbs, a defendant on the one side, and Lucinda J. Baker (now Chapen), Martha E. Marsh, and Mary K: Gunter, plaintiffs, and Hannah Hibbs, Nora D. Lee, James Hibbs, Stephen A. Hibbs, Lloyd Hibbs, and Carl Hibbs, defendants, on the other. Sarah E. Hibbs claimed an undivided one-fourteenth interest in the lands under the will of S. A. Hibbs, deceased, which, so far as material, reads as follows:
I give and bequeath to Eliza Hibbs, my beloved wife, all my personal property, she to sell enough to pay all my debts out of said property, including my last sickness and burial expenses, her to have the personalty all in her own right, to do as she pleases with after all the debts are paid, to be in lieu of dower, also to have the use and full control of all the real estate during her natural life to control and use the same as I might if living. At the death of my wife, Eliza Hibbs, my:
Testator died seised of the real estate in controversy March 11, 1902. His will was executed September 26, 1901,
The real question in the case is one of law, and it is this: Did Okley Hibbs and Merna Hibbs, grandchildren of the testator, take a vested estate under the will before quoted, or was it a contingent one, dependent upon their surviving the widow, Eliza Hibbs ? They are not mentioned in the will by name, and if they took any estate it is because of their being “the heirs of the body of P. W. Hibbs, deceased.” P. W. Hibbs was dead at the time of the execution of the will, but his heirs were mentioned simply as a class, although they were then well known to the testator by name. In other words, the devise was to a class, and the will provides that at the death of testator’s wife, the farm was to be sold and the proceeds were to be divided as therein stated, and in part to the living heirs of the body of P. W. Hibbs, deceased, a son by a former marriage.
It is contended for appellant that by the terms' of the will the children of P. W. Hibbs, living at the time of testator ’s death, took the share devised to them as a vested remainder, and that upon their death, unmarried and without issue, their shares went to their mother, Sarah E. Hibbs. In support of this claim reliance is. placed upon some well-established rules, to wit: That a will speaks from the time of testator’s death; that a remainder will be construed to be a vested rather than a contingent one, if this may be done without doing violence to the terms of the will; that if a beneficiary be living at the time of testator’s death, the devise takes effect although the time of its enjoyment is postponed until a future period. All these propositions may be conceded; but most of them are mere presumptions, which may be met by evidence to the contrary. For instance while it is true as a general rule that a will is ambulatory in character, and speaks only from testator’s death, nevertheless the testator may make it speak as of some other period, and as a rule control the disposition of his property as he wills. He may, if he sees fit, make it
This is peculiarly true where, as in this case, the gift was to a class living at a particular time. And it is a general rule that where there is a devise of a life estate with a remainder to.a class, those members of the class, and those only, take, who are in existence at the time fixed for distribution. And if none of them are in existence, the gift fails. Olsen v. Youngerman, 136 Iowa, 404; Wilhelm v. Calder, 102 Iowa, 342; Kalbach v. Clark, 133 Iowa, 215; McClain v. Capper, 98 Iowa, 145.
Again, the general rule is that a gift of a remainder to the living heirs of one already deceased creates a contingent and not a vested estate. Birdsall v. Birdsall, 157 Iowa, 363; Twaites v. Waller, 133 Iowa, 84. As supporting the rule of this court, see Olney v. Hull, 21 Pick. (Mass.) 311; Golladay v. Knock, 235 Ill. 412 (85 N. E. 649, 126 Am. St. Rep. 224); Barr v. Denny, 79 Ohio, 358 (87 N. E. 267); In re Moran’s Will, 118 Wis. 177 (96 N. W. 367).
Without reference to any particular rules, it is quite apparent from the reading of the will that testator did not intend to pass a vested estate to the heirs of P. W. Hibbs, then deceased. He expressly provided that his real estate be sold only after the termination of the life estate to the widow, and that the proceeds and not the land itself be divided among the parties named, and “the living heirs of the body of the late P. W. Hibbs.” Manifestly by the use of these terms he meant the heirs of P. W. Hibbs living at the time of the death of his widow, Eliza Hibbs. The intention of the testator, when ascertained, must be given effect, unless there be some arbitrary rule of law to the contrary. There is no such rule applicable here. On the contrary, the cases we have cited clearly indicate that under all canons of construction the estate created by the will was what is known as a contingent remainder, and as the beneficiaries died befqre the death of the widow, childless and unmarried, they took nothing, and
Blain v. Dean, 160 Iowa, 708, also relied upon by appellant, is not in point, and contains nothing at variance with the rules here announced. No question is made that the gifts are of real estate; hence we do not consider the doctrine of equitable conversion into personalty, and this decision is not to be taken as an authority one way or the other on that proposition. This doctrine would not afford any comfort to appellant in any event.
The decree is right, and it is — Affirmed.