Suit by appellant to contest the will of her mother, Lena Hoppel. The appellees, being the other heirs and beneficiaries under said will, answered that the plaintiff (appellant) had no interest in the estate of her mother and no right to maintain the action. Judgment on the answer for the appellees, from which the plaintiff appeals.
The substance of the answer is: That on the 21st of June, 1893, during the life time of her mother, a cause was pending in the Vanderburg Circuit Court, wherein the appellant and her husband were plaintiffs, and her mother, Lena Hoppel and other named beneficiaries under the will of her father, John Hoppel, deceased, who are also legal heirs of her mother, were defendants; that in said suit appellant was attempting to establish certain rights and interests in the estate of her said father in contravention, of the
On the one hand it is affirmed by appellant that the answer is bad, because it shows that at the time of the compromise and settlement appellant had no interest or right in her mother’s estate, who was then living, that was the subject of contract and conveyance, and, there being no warranty in the agreement, an after-acquired interest, upon the death of the mother, would not pass under the agreement and decree. On the other hand, appellees contend that the answer is good, because it shows that the decree of court was entered upon an agreed family settlement, fair in its terms, to* which the ancestor and heirs expectant, including appellant, were parties, each agreeing thereto knowingly and with freedom from fraud; and appellant, having received the agreed consideration for the relinquishment of her expectant interest in the estate of her mother, is. bound thereby. The situation at the time of the agreement was this: Appellant was a legatee for $2,500 under her father’s will, payable after her mother’s death, but conditioned that, if appellant died childless, $1,000 of the legacy should go
We see no reason why this agreement should not have the force and effect its terms indicate. Appellant cites and relies for a reversal upon the principle announced in McClure v. Raben, 125 Ind. 139, 9 L. R. A. 477. But it is perfectly plain that this case does not come within the class to which the McClure case belongs. The transaction falls far short of being an attempt by an heir to sell and transfer to a stranger his expectant interest in his ancestor’s estate without the knowledge and consent of such ancestor. The reasons which invoke the law’s disapproval of contracts for the sale of expectancies, without the knowledge and consent of the ancestor, are wholly absent from the case before us. Here a mother is dealing directly with her children, one of whom has become dissatisfied as to her rights in her father’s estate. “To settle all differences that have arisen” as the agreement reads, in the distribution of the patrimony, and thus to restore peace and good fellowship in the family, the mother intervenes between her children, and, to accomplish her maternal purpose, appropriates part of her own estate. The settlement contract was fair to appellant, so far as any
Judgment affirmed.