192 Ind. 454 | Ind. | 1922
This was an action by the appellees to recover possession and quiet the title of certain real estate. The complaint alleged that Isaac N. Crawford' died testate the owner of said real estate, and by his will devised it to the appellees, in the manner as stated, subject to certain charges for the benefit of his widow during her life; that the widow duly made her election to take under the law instead of under the will, and took and held an undivided one-third of such real estate until her death; that she died leaving a will which was duly probated naming appellant Gamble as executor
There was a further allegation “that said defendant Adelia H. Griffin, and the said (widow) * * * and executor and her residuary legatees as grantee from her the said Adelia EL Griffin, to said widow, are asserting some * * * interest in said real estate through her as heir of the said Isaac N. Crawford, and the remaining defendants, other than Adelia EL Griffin, are asserting some * * * interest * * * as devisees under the last will” of said widow. Appellants treat this as an admission that whatever interest, if any, the daughter had in the real estate had vested in themselves under the will of the widow, and, while no facts are directly averred to that effect, we shall so treat it.
Appellants and each of them demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which demurrer was overruled, and appellants excepted. Appellants then filed an answer of four paragraphs, of which the first paragraph was afterward withdrawn. The court sustained a demurrer by each of the appellees to each of the remaining paragraphs of the answer, to which ruling the appellants excepted. Appellants refusing to
The question presented by the demurrer to the complaint is what interest, if any, persons who were not children of the testator took under a devise to them of real estate in fee simple, where the testator left a childless second wife and a daughter by a former marriage, and the will assumed to dispose of all the testator’s property, but the widow rejected the provision made for her therein and filed her written election to take under the law.
The statutes to which a construction must be given in order to answer this question read as follows: “If a man die intestate leaving surviving a second or other subsequent wife without children by him, but leaving a child or children or their descendants alive, by a previous wife, such surviving, childless, second or other subsequent wife, shall take only a life estate in one-third of the lands of her deceased husband, and the fee thereof shall at the death of such husband vest at once in such child or children, or the descendants of such as may be dead, subject only to the life estate of such widow.” §3019 Burns 1914, Acts 1901 p. 554.
“A surviving wife is entitled, except as * * * (relates to her rights against creditors) to one-third of all the real estate of which her husband may have been seized in fee simple at any time during the marriage, and in the conveyance of which she may not have joined, in due form of law, and also of all lands in which her husband had an equitable interest at the time of his death: Provided, That if the husband shall have left a will, the wife may elect to take under the will instead of this or the foregoing provisions.” §3029 Burns 1914, §2491 R. S. 1881.
And the act of 1907 provided, in substance, that a wife shall take only the provision made for her in her husband’s will unless she shall file her election in writing, duly signed and acknowledged, within the time allowed, stating that she “elects to take the interest in such estate that is given to * * * her under the laws * * * of the state of Indiana,” in which case she shall receive none of the provisions made for her by the will. §§3045, 3047 Burns 1914, Acts 1907 p. 73, §§1, 3.
We should hesitate to set aside the construction given to a statute by a court of last resort of this state which has stood as a rule of property affecting titles to real estate for seventeen years, even if we doubted the wisdom of giving it that construction in the first place. The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled.
The second paragraph of the answer alleged, in substance, that the will was executed without the knowledge or consent of the wife, that she did not join in its execution, and that the husband concealed its execution from her.
The third paragraph of the answer alleged that Adelia H. Griffin brought an action to contest the will of Isaac N. Crawford, and alleged in her complaint in that action that she was his daughter, that the will was unduly executed, that its execution was induced by undue influence, and that Isaac N. Crawford was of unsound mind; that the appellees and the widow were parties defendants in that action, and that appellees answered the complaint by a general denial, while the widow answered only that she had elected to take under the law and not under the will; that the cause was tried upon the issues joined on these answers and there was a finding for the defendants, including these appellees, that the testator was of sound mind, that the will was executed, but its execution was not procured by undue influence, and that the testator had been divorced from the mother of Adelia H. Griffin, and had thereafter married his said second wife. And it was alleged that a judgment was entered on such finding that the will was valid, that the probate thereof was confirmed, and that the second wife was “entitled to her full rights as the widow of said Crawford in his estate as provided by the laws of the state of Indiana.”
The fourth paragraph of the answer pleads the same facts as the third paragraph, with the further allegations that the widow believed appellees were in good faith denying that Mrs. Griffin was the testator’s daughter, and continued to rely on that belief until her death. But she did not join issue with appellees, nor even with Mrs. Griffin on that question, and filed an answer to the complaint of Mrs. Griffin amounting to an implied confession that Mrs. Griffin was the testator’s daughter, as she alleged; and it is not made to appear that the widow was ignorant of the real fact as to Mrs. Griffin’s rela
Neither paragraph of the answer stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of defense.
The judgment is affirmed.
Townsend, J., absent.