97 Iowa 420 | Iowa | 1896
Juliette A. Taylor died in August, 1892, seised in fee simple of lots 59 and 60, in the city of Ottumwa. Her only heirs are the plaintiff and C. 0. Taylor, who is the executor of her estate. She left
The will of the decedent provided for the payment of all her debts, and that remains in force. The statutes relating to that subject also require the payment of her debts. Code, sections 2822, 2386, 2387, 2420. It is, therefore, the duty of the defendant to pay the taxes in controversy, and the plaintiff, as the owner of premises on which they are alien, is interested in having him perform that duty. The fact that he acquired the premises by virtue of the will, and then conveyed them to the plaintiff by a deed containing covenants of special warranty only, is immaterial, nor is it important that, as executor, he may not have been entitled to take possession of the premises. Our conclusion is based upon the fact that the taxes were due and payable when the testatrix died, and that they constituted a debt for which her estate is liable. The order of the district court appears to be right, and is AFFIRMED.