18 Ohio App. 136 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1920
This action is brought to quiet title in the plaintiffs to eighty acres of land situate in the township of Royalton, county of Fulton. The questions presented áre determined by the construction of the will of one Richard Hinkle. At the time of his death Richard Hinkle was the owner of the eighty acres, holding one-third by inheritance and two-thirds by purchase from his sisters. Richard Hinkle died in 1902, leaving a last will and testáment. The first item of the will provides for the payment of his funeral expenses and debts. The second, third and fourth items of the will are as follows:
*137 “Second. All the- rest, residue and remainder of my personal estate, of every name, nature and description, and wherever situated, I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Anne J. Hinkle, her heirs and assigns forever.
“Third. To my said wife, Anne J. Hinkle, I give, devise and bequeath all the real estate owned by me that is situate in the county of Lenawee, and State of Michigan, to her heirs and assigns forever.
“Fourth. To my said wife, Anne J. Hinkle, I give, devise and bequeath all of the real estate of which may be seized and own at the time of my death, which is situated in the state of Ohio, to have, hold, use and enjoy as her own, so long as she shall remain my widow; but should she marry again, after my decease, then, from the date of such marriage, I give, devise and bequeath such real estate lying & being in the State of Ohio to my sisters Jane M. "Warner and Louisa Hartshorne and my half brother Elias O. Sixby, to have hold use and enjoy to them their heirs and assigns forever in fee simple.”
The plaintiff Jane M. W. Fletcher is the sister named in the will as Jane M. Warner, and the plaintiffs Frances E. Bartelle and Cora A. Hartshorne are the daughters of the sister mentioned in the will by the name of Louisa Hartshome, who is now deceased. Anna J. Hinkle never remarried and died in the spring of 1919, leaving a last will and testament by which she attempted to dispose of the eighty acres in Pulton county. The plaintiffs claim title to the land' by virtue of the will of Richard Hinkle, and the claims of the defendants rest upon the will of Anna J. Hinkle.
Not only does this construction express the manifest intention of the testator, but it. is in accord with the well-established rules of construction. The rule is clearly and concisely stated in the case of Eaton v. Hewitt, 62 English Reports, 591, 594, also reported in 2 Drewry & Smale, 184. The language there used is as follows:
“It is. a rule now well established that, where a*140 testator gives to a woman a life interest, if she so long remains unmarried, and then directs that in the event of her marrying the property shall go over to another, although according to the strict language the gift over is expressed only to take effect in' the event of the marriage of the tenant for life, the gift over is held to take effect even though the tenant for life does not marry.”
The rule thus announced has been followed in a long line of decisions, a few of which are the following: In re Cane, Ruff v. Sivers, 60 Law Journal, 36; Haab v. Schneeberger, 147 Mich., 583, and Metcalf v. Framingham Parish, 128 Mass., 370, 375.
Counsel for defendants have called attention to a later Michigan ease, In re Shumway’s Estate, 194 Mich., 245. We have examined this case and find nothing therein in any way conflicting with or modifying the rule' as announced in Haab v. Schneeberger.
We find, therefore, that the will of Richard Hinkle, by the fourth item thereof, gave to his wife a life estate in the Fulton county farm subject to be divested by remarriage before her death, and a vested remainder in fee simple to his sisters and half-brother. There is nothing contained in the will which can be regarded as a condition precedent to the vesting of the remainder, and it is the settled law of Ohio that in the construction of devises, of real estate all estates are to be held to be vested except where there is a condition precedent to the vesting so clearly expressed that the courts cannot treat the estate as vested without deciding in direct opposition to the terms of the will. To effect this result, words of seeming
Finding as we do, not only by the well-established rules of construction, but by the clear and manifest intention of the testator, as expressed in the will, that the plaintiffs are the owners of the land in question, by virtue of the terms of the will of Richard Hinkle, a decree will be entered quieting their title as prayed for in the petition.
Decree accordingly.