Bayes v. Howes

113 Ky. 465 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1902

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE PAYNTER

Reversing.

S. T. Bayes (lied August 4, 1890, testate, leaving a widow and an infant son, Dennis B. Bayes, a child by a former marriage. The widow, Sip Bayes, has inter-married with appellee H. 8b I-Towes. The son, while an infant, died,, in October, 1899, leaving the appellants, two grandmothers, his only heirs at law. The testator’s will was duly probated. The widow never renounced the provisions of ihe will. The testator, at the time of his death, owned a house and lot in Paintsville, which he occupied as a homestead. He had several hundred dollars in debts due him, which were subsequently collected. There was an insurance policy upon his life for $2,000, and his son Dennis B. was the beneficiary therein. Without going into details as to provisions of the will, it Jr sufficient to say that he devised to his widow $50, to be disposed of as she wished. The rest of his estate, after payment of debts, including the insurance policy, was devised to his son. Thus the matter stood for *469about nine years, when this action was instituted by the widow to recover the value of her dower interest in the house and lot, and her distributable interest in the persona Ity, and the value of the property which would have gone to her exempt from payment of debts. The theory upon which the action is prosecuted is that, though the widow did not renounce the provisions of the will, she is entitled to dower, and a widow’s share in the distribution in the personal estate, less the $50 bequeathed to her. The court below decided that she was entitled to the relief sought.

In reviewing the judgment, it is necessary to interpret some sections of the Kentucky Statutes and some opinions of 'this court. Section 1403, Kentucky Statutes, relates to the distribution of the personal estate of an intestate, and the articles to be set apart to the widow or children, etc.; particularly designating the property to which the widow and children are entitled as exempt from sale to pay the debts of fhe intestate. The section concludes as follows: “The appraisers shall state in their appraisement the articles and value of each, set apart by them to widows or infants, separately from the articles appraised for sale. The provisions of this section shall apply to cases where the husband dies testate, and the widow renounces the provisions of the will in the time prescribed by law.” Section 140-1, Td., reads as follows: “When a widow claims her dowable and distributable share of her husband’s estate, she shall be charged with the value of any devise or bequest to her by his will; or she may, though under full age, relinquish what is given her by the will, and thereupon receive her dower and distributable share as if no will had been made, but such relinquishment must be made within twelve months after the probate, and acknowledged before and left *470for record with the clerk of the court where probate was made, or acknowledged before a subscribing witness, and proved before and left with the clerk; but if, within said twelve months, an appea^ be taken from the judgment of the county court probating the will, the widow shall hot be required to make such relinquishment until within the twelve months succeeding the time such appeal is disposed of. Nothing herein shall preclude the widow from receiving her dowable and distributable share, in addition to any devise or bequest made to her by the will, if such is the intention of the testator, jdainly expressed in the will, or necessarily inferable therefrom.” Section 213fi, Id., reads as follows: “A conveyance or devise of real or personal estate, by way of jointure, may bar the wife’s interest in the property and estate of the husband; but if made before marriage, without her consent, or during her infancy or .after marriage, she may, within twelve months after her husband’s death, waive the jointure by written relinquishment, acknowledged or proved before and left with the oierk of the county court, and have- her dower or share of his estate as her.ein provided. When she so demands and receives .her dower, or such share of his estate, the estate conveyed or devised in lieu thereof shall determine and revert to the heirs or representatives of the grantor or devisor.” It is insisted on behalf of the appellees that the proper construction of section 1.404 is that, although a widow does not renounce the, provisions of her husband’s will, she can take what is devised to her; and, if it does not exceed in value what would have been her dowable and distributable share of his estate, she is still entitled thereto, less the value of any devise or bequest to her by his will. If this be a proper interpretation of the section, then it would never operate on a devised estate, where it could aíl be claimed by the widow and children, *471as against husband’s creditors. To so interpret the section would-be to ignore the latter part of it, where it is provided that the widow shall not be precluded from receiving her dowable and distributable share in addition to any devise or bequest made to her by the will, if such is the intention of the testator, plainly expressed in,the will or necessarily inferable therefrom. This language shows that the Legislature did not intend that the widow should have her dowable and distributable share in addition to a devise or bequest to her unless the testator made it plain that such was his intention. The statute gave the widoAV time within which to determine whether or not she would take that which the laAAr’ giATes her or accept the provisions made for her in her husband’s avíII. Tf shé receives some part of the estate devised to her betAveen the death of her husband and the expiration of the time for the renunciation of the will, then it is proper that she should be charged therewith in the assignment of doAver and the distribution of the estate. To meet that contingency, the Legislature, in the first clause of the section, provided that she should be charged therewith. This clause of the section relates alone to the money or property received by the widow before she renounces the provision of the will. The conclusion Avhich we have reached as to the meaning of section 1404 is supported by the concluding part of section 1403, as it is there provided that the section shall apply to cases “where the husband dies testate, and the widoAV renounces the provisions of the av ill in the time prescribed by the Iuav.” The converse is that she is not entitled to the distributable share in her husband’s personal estate if she has not renounced the provisions of his will. The mere fact that the amount devised to the AvidoAV is less than her dowable and distributable share Avould haA'o been in her husband’s estate can not alter the *472legal effect of her act in failing to renounce the provisions of the will. This court in Smither v. Smither’s Ex’r, 9 Bush, 233, in discussing the question as to the effect of the will on the rights of the widow in her husband’s estate, said: “The statute recited is a mere enactment of that principle of equity recognizing the common-law right of the wife to dower, but requiring her, when the husband has made a different provision, to abide by it, or adhere to her common-law right. She is not allowed to accept Avhat is given her by the will, and at the same time defeat the object and intention of the devisor by asserting her right to dower, but must make her election.” In Chamber v. Davis, 15 B. Mon., 527, it said: “But when she takes under the will she holds the estate as devisee'merely, and derives no right to it as widow, although the devise may have the effect to bar her claim to dower. The statute allows her the right to waive the provisions made for her by the will, and demand her dower (1 Morehead & B., Kentucky Statutes p. 575), but, if she fail to do it, and claims under the will, she occupies the same attitude of other devisees. The act is voluntary on her part, and, if she accept the. provision made for her by the will, she must take the estate subject toi all claims against it. If she had the right to hold it exempt from the payment of her husband’s debts, it would follow that a testator, by devising his estate to his wife, could place it out of the reach of his creditors. The estate in her hands as devisee has no such exemption; nor has she the right, as widow, to require that the testator’s other estate shall be applied to the exoneration of the estate devised to her. In Brown’s Ex’r v. Brown, 22 R., 840 (58 S. W., 993), the court evidently had in mind the view of section 1404 which • we have expressed, for it is there said: “By this provision of the statute the widow is given twelve months to familiar*473ize herself Avith the nature and extent of the estate left by her deceased husband, and to determine whether she will claim under the will, or renounce its provisions and claim under the statute of descent and distribution. And the fact that during this interval of time she may have received some property from the estate of her deceased husband' makes no difference as to her rights under the statute. The fact is undisputed that she properly renounced the provision made for her by the will within sixteen days after its probation, and there is no evidence that the executor or devisees were in any manner prejudiced by her failure to make her election on the day the -will was probated. The property turned over to her by the executor and appraisers was of -less value than the amount due her. under the statute, and in the judgment of the court she was properly charged with the amount and value thereof.” In Watson v. Christian, 12 Bush, 526, the court was discussing the character of interest which the widoAV took in the husband’s estate, and the effect of her failure to renounce the provisions of her husband’s will, and said: “The widow of a deceased husband holds the homestead interest in his estate, like she holds the dower interest, by reason of having been his wife and haA'ing survived him; in other words,-the law vests in her the right to a homestead and to doAver in her late husband’s lands by reason of being his widoAV. But Avhen she elects to hold under the provisions of her late husband’s will she can not be entitled to any part of his estate by operation of law, and contrary to the provisions of the will.. As, therefore, the appellant jiccepted the provisions of the testator’s will, and as by it his estate was charged with the payment of his debts, she can not now defeat the claims’ of his creditors by an effort to hold a homestead in the devised premises by operation of law.” Huhlein v. Huhlein, 87 Ky., *474250 (10 R., 107), (8 S. W., 260), following Timberlake v. Parish's Ex’r, 5 Dana, 345, recognized that at common law the devise to the wife is not construed as in lieu of dower, unless such an intention is expressed, or plainly inferable from the will; and that she is entitled to it also unless the will requires a different interpretation. But the court held that our statute has changed this rule by providing that the widow shall not be precluded from receiving her dowable and distributable share in addilion to any devise or bequest made to her by the will, if such is the intention of the testatoiyplainly expressed in the will, or necessarily inferable therefrom. In that, case the court said, “The acceptance by her under the will operated by way of jointure as to any claim for dower.-” It follows from this that under section 2130, Kentucky Statutes, the wife, by the will, is barred from receiving dower, because she did not relinquish her jointure as provided therein. We do not think there is any conflict in the case of Ballard v. Caperton, 2 Metc., 412, and the cases from which, we have quoted. Neither is Glider v. Eubanks, 12 Bush, 510, in conflict therewith, and neither is it authority for the position which counsel for the appellee takes. When the court said in that case, “It does not necessarily follow, from the fact that a widow accepts a devise or bequest made to her; by her deceased husband, she shall be deprived of her right to dower,” it did not mean she would be entitled to dower in addition to the devise or bequest, unless the testator plainly expressed in the will the intention that she should not have it in addition thereto. Wien the court said in that case, “Generally speaking, she may, by accounting for the value, of the devise or bequest, maintain her right to be endowed,” it is not meant that sin* can do so without renouncing the provisions of the will. Without giving an analysis of Kelley v. Ball, 14 R., 132, *475(19 S. W., 581), we conclude it is not fe conflict with, tlie other opinions of this court. Although the husband did not give the wife the proper share of his estate by his will, she did not renounce its provisions, but accepted the bequest, and she can not now claim against the will.

The judgment is reversed, with directions to dismiss the petition.

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