155 Ind. 329 | Ind. | 1900
— Appellee instituted this action in the lower court against appellant to quiet his title to the undivided one-half of a certain tract of real estate situated in the town of Williamsport, Warren county, Indiana. There was an answer in denial and a cross-complaint upon the part of the defendant. The latter, by her cross-complaint, alleged that she was the owner in fee of the entire premises in dispute, and she sought thereby to quiet her title as against the plaintiff, appellee in this appeal. Upon the issues joined under the pleadings there was a trial by the court, and a special finding of facts and conclusions of law thereon, to the effect that the appellee was the owner in fee of the undivided one-half of the premises described in the complaint, and was entitled to have his title quieted; and, over the exceptions of appellant to the court’s conclusions of law upon the facts found, judgment was rendered accordingly.
The second and third clauses of the will are as follows: (tS) “I give, devise, and bequeath to my beloved wife, Matilda Cameron, all my property, real and personal, of every character and description, wherever the same may be situated, to use and dispose of as she may desire, with power to sell and convey the same, or do with the same as she may desire.” (3) "At the death of my wife I will and direct that all of the property which she may then own shall be equally divided between my granddaughter, Lena Prances Cameron, and my foster-son, George Parish, share and share alike, except as herein otherwise provided to one acre of real estate.”
By the fourth clause he directed that, in the event his said wife, Matilda, had not, during her life, disposed of the one acre of land owned by him and situated near the Indiana Mineral Springs — being the one acre mentioned in the third clause of the will — then, and in that event, the title thereto was to vest in his said grandchild, Lena Cameron, her mother, Sue Cameron, and the said George Parish during their lives, and at their death the title thereto was to vest in fee simple in their surviving heirs.
• The fifth clause of the will provided that, in case the said Parish or the said Lena Prances Cameron died without issue of their bodies, or either of them, alive, then the property which they received from his wife at her death was to go to and vest in George Cameron, his nephew, and Thomas'
On December 16th following the execution of the will, William Cameron died, leaving surviving him his wife as his widow, and his will was duly admitted to probate in the Warren Circuit Court; and C. Y. McAdams, the executor therein named, duly qualified as such, and continued to administer his trust until he was regularly discharged as such executor on the 13th day of. March, 1893.
The court finds that the said widow, Matilda, at no time after the death of her husband, filed any written election with any one to take her interest in her husband’s property pursuant to the laws of Indiana in preference to the provisions of her husband’s will, but that she elected to and did take all her husband’s property under his said will. The executor, pursuant to the will, turned over to her money, household goods, and a decree of foreclosure to the amount of $2,334.21. Prom this sum the executor paid out, under directions from her, the sum of $55.19 on taxes due upon her real estate, and the further sum of $182.71 upon a school fund mortgage existing against her real estate at the time the same was purchased and conveyed to her.
It is further found by the court in its special finding that, after the death of William Cameron, his widow, Matilda, took possession of all the real estate of which he died the owner, and that she converted all the personal property turned over by said executor into cash, and loaned and used the same as she felt disposed; that she sold one piece of real estate owned by the testator at the time of his death, situated in the town of Williamsport, for the sum of $800, and caused a portion of the other lands, owned and held by her husband at his death, to be platted, and during her lifetime she disposed of sixteen other tracts or lots by warranty deed
On the 13th day of July, 1898, Matilda Cameron died intestate, and the value of all the personal property then owned by her, all of which came to her under her husband’s will, was $1,682.28, and • consisted of household goods, horse and carriage, notes, and money. After her death, to wit, on July 20, 1898, appellant and appellee, out of the moneys on hand at her death, fully paid and settled all her debts and funeral expenses, which amounted to $293, leaving a residue of her personal estate amounting to $1,389.22, which was then and there equally divided between appellant and appellee. At the time appellant and appellee made the division of the property acquired by Matilda Cameron under her husband’s will, and which remained undisposed of at her death, as heretofore stated, they each supposed that the title to the real estate in controversy in this action was in William Cameron at the time of his death, and, thereupon, acting under this supposition in regard to the title of said real estate, they leased the same to one Johnson for a term of one year at an agreed rent of $10 per month, one-half of which, by the terms of such lease, to be paid to each of them. And the said tenant took possession of the property, and' has ever since held and is now in possession thereof pursuant to said lease.
A short time before the commencement of this suit, appellee, George Parish, discovered the fact that the title to said real estate had always been in Matilda Cameron from the time it was conveyed to her, as heretofore stated, up to the time of her death, and was never at any time owned by William Cameron; and thereupon he communicated the information to the appellant, Lena Frances Cameron, and de
Upon the foregoing facts the court stated its conclusions of law as follows: (1) That the plaintiff, George Parish, is the owner in fee simple of the undivided one-half of the property in controversy, and is "entitled to have his title quieted; (2) that the defendant, Lena Frances Cameron, is the owner in fee simple of the other half of said real estate, and is entitled to have her title thereto quieted.
Appellant asserts title to the entire premises involved in this action by virtue of inheritance as the sole heir of her grandmother, Matilda Cameron, while, upon the other hand, appellee claims title to the undivided one-half thereof under the provisions of the will of William Cameron. , Counsel for appellant insists that under the second clause of the will in question, when tested by the doctrine asserted in the case of John v. Bradbury, 97 Ind. 263, the wife of the testator acquired but a life estate in the property devised thereby to her, with the power of disposing of the same during her natural life; that by the third clause it must be held that the testator intended that all the property which he devised to his wife under the previous clause remaining undisposed of at her death should go in equal parts to appellant and appellee; that, by the provisions of said third clause, the testator merely intended to direct in respect to the disposition of the property which his wife had acquired tinder his will, and which in whole or in part she might still own at the date of her death; and that said clause can not be interpreted so 'as to include other property owned by the
That the second clause of William Cameron’s will, standing alone, must be held, under the well settled principles of law so universally asserted and affirmed by our own decisions and other authorities in general, tó have invested his wife with an absolute title to the property thereby devised to her, can not be successfully controverted. Ross v. Ross, 135 Ind. 367; Rogers v. Winklespleck, 143 Ind. 373; Mulvane v. Rude, 146 Ind. 476, and authorities there cited; Rusk v. Zuck, 147 Ind. 388; Van Gorder v. Smith, 99 Ind. 404.
In order to construe the will in controversy as creating a life estate only in the testator’s surviving wife, with power of disposition over the property bequeathed to her, we would be required to extend the rule farther than it was carried by the decision in the case of John v. Bradbury, 97 Ind. 263. In Goudie v. Johnston, 109 Ind. 427, it wás said that the former case possibly carried the doctrine too far. Certainly, however, it may be asserted that the
The principal point, however, involved in this appeal does not depend upon the question as to whether Mrs. Cameron took a life estate or one in -fee simple in the property bequeathed to her by her husband’s will, but the real question presented is: Did that instrument, under its terms and provisions, present such a case as required her, under the equitable doctrine of election, to decide whether she would -accept the benefits bestowed upon her therein, and thereby adopt the will as an entirety, and by such acceptance impliedly consent that the property in controversy, owned and held by her at the date of her death under a deed of conveyance, should be subj ected to the provisions of her
Story in his Equity Jurisprudence, §1077, in treating upon the subject, says: “In short, courts of equity, in such cases, adopt the rational exposition of the will, that there is an implied condition that he who accepts a benefit under the instrument shall adopt the whole, conforming to, all its provisions and renouncing every right inconsistent with it.”
The equitable doctrine is to the effect that a person can not be permitted to hold under a will and also to hold against its provisions; or, in other words, having once accepted beneficial interests under a will, he will be held to have confirmed and ratified every part thereof, and will not thereafter he permitted to interpose any right or claim of his own, however well founded it may be, which would defeat or in any manner prevent the full operation of such will. "Where a person, under the terms of a will, has been thereby properly put to his election, and can be said to have elected to accept the benefits bestowed upon him by its provisions, he thereby binds or precludes, not only himself, hut also those who claim through him, his representatives and heirs. Wilson v. Wilson, 145 Ind. 659. Of course, under the will in question, Matilda Cameron, as the widow of the testator, was, under §2666 Burns 1894, required to elect within the time therein fixed as to whether she would renounce the provisions made for her by her husband’s will, and elect to be governed by the statute of descent in respect
It is settled that whenever it is reasonably clear that the provisions' of a will are intended to be in lieu of the widow’s interest in her husband’s estate, under the law, if she accepts the former, she thereby waives the latter. Burden v. Burden, 141 Ind. 471; Hurley v. McIver, 119 Ind. 53; Archibald v. Long, Ex., 144 Ind. 451. But, under the will in this case can it be held that Mrs. Cameron, by her election to adopt and abide by the provisions made for her therein, did anything more than to waive her rights and claims in and to her husband’s estate, which she had and held under the law as his widow? Can it, in reason, be further said that by this election she bound herself to permit the real estate in dispute to pass under the operation of her husband’s will, and go to the parties in this action, as therein provided? We are of the opinion that this latter question must be answered in the negative. We are bound to assume, until the contrary clearly appears, that the testator, by his will, only intended to dispose of property subject under the law to his disposition, and, in order to create a proper case for election, under the equitable rule in question, his intention to dispose of property not his own must be made clearly to appear beyond a reasonable doubt from the will itself. It must be disclosed by such instrument that he therein assumed the power to dispose of the property of another person, who thereunder was also made a beneficiary. This feature of the doctrine of election, as settled by the authorities, is well stated by an eminent author as follows: “In order to create the necessity for an election,
In Havens v. Sackett, 15 N. Y. 365, on page 373 of the opinion, it is said: “It must be clear beyond all reasonable doubt that he [the testator] has intentionally assumed to dispose of the property of the beneficiary, who is required, on that account, to give up his own gift.”
When tested by this rule, which is so fully affirmed and
The court, therefore, "erred in its conclusions of law in holding that appellee was entitled to the undivided one-half of said premises. The judgment is ordered to be reversed, and the cause remanded to the lower court, with instructions to restate its conclusions of law upon the facts found in favor of appellant to the effect that she is the owner of the premises described in the complaint and in the cross-complaint, and under the latter she is entitled to a judgment quieting her title against appellee to the real estate in question.