78 Mo. 55 | Mo. | 1883
This was an application to the probate court of Lincoln county, for distribution of an intestate estate. Jacob Copenhaver, being possessed of a large amount of real and personal estate in Lincoln county, died intestate in the year 1878, leaving neither descendants, father, mother, brothers nor sisters living, but leaving thirty-two nephews and nieces and twenty-five known
“In the matter of the distribution of the estate of Jacob Copenhaver, deceased. It is agreed by the distributees in the above entitled matter that Jacob Copenhaver died in February, 18Y8, possessed of a large amount of real and personal property, leaving no children or their descendants, nor father, mother, brothers or sisters living, but left as his only heirs at law, thirty-two nephews and nieces and twenty-five known grand-nephews and nieces, and the unknown heirs of one niece living at the time of his death; and it is further agreed that the only questions in this matter submitted for the decision of the court are: 1st, Do the nephews and nieces living at the time of the death of said Jacob Copenhaver take per stirpes the share their ancestor would take, or do they take per capita in their own right ? 2nd, Do the children of the nephews and nieces take the shares their ancestors would have taken if living, or are they, by the law of descent, cut off" from any share of the estate ?”
The probate court, to which the application was made for distribution of $10,000, decided that the nephews and nieces took per capita and that the grand-nephews and grandnieces took per stirpes the shares their immediate ancestors would have taken had they been alive. The circuit court on appeal reversed this decision and ordered that the estate be divided into seven equal parts corresponding to the number of the intestate’s deceased brothers and sisters, and each part to be distributed per stirpes among the descendants of the respective brothers and sisters — that is, the descendants of each several brother or sister taking together the share
The above is the conclusion reached by the court of appeals in its opinion reported in 9 Mo. App. 200, where the questions presented are at some length discussed, and for the reasons therein given and what is herein said, the judgment of said court reversing the judgment of the circuit court is hereby affirmed.