211 N.W. 254 | Iowa | 1926
The question presented is this: When a devisee dies in the lifetime of a testator, and is then indebted to the testator, may the executor retain the devise to apply on the indebtedness, or are the heirs of the predeceased devisee entitled to payment of the devise in full, without regard to such indebtedness? We use the words "devise," etc., in the statutory sense. Section 11860, Code of 1924. Section 11861, Code of 1924, reads:
"If a devisee die before the testator, his heirs shall inherit the property devised to him, unless from the terms of the will a contrary intent is manifest."
The will before us directed the executor to convert the residuary estate into cash, and to distribute the proceeds among the widow, the surviving children, and the grandchildren of a deceased child in the proportions named, one of the designated shares to a son, Paul Mikkelsen. Paul died intestate, before testator, owing him $9,000. His share amounts to $3,767.07. The executor filed a claim against Paul's estate, which, in the opinion of the executor, is insolvent. Paul left minor children; and their guardian, S.C. Pedersen, demands for them full payment of Paul's share of the fund to be distributed according to the will. The executor claims the right to retain the share, to apply on Paul's indebtedness.
It is unquestioned that, if Paul had survived the testator, the executor would have had the right of retention. Citizens' St.Bank v. Jess,
It is also true that a number of authorities hold, under similar statutes, that the substituted devisees take the devise free from indebtedness of the original devisee to the testator.Hemsley v. Hollingsworth,
We are of the opinion that these authorities give to the statute an effect which the testator, whose purpose should control, and who in most cases is wholly uneducated and uninformed concerning the technical rules and refinements of the laws regulating the testamentary disposition of property and the rules of descent, never intended. Except for the statute, the bequest would lapse, on the death of the devisee in the testator's lifetime. The purpose of the statute is, as stated in the Hulett case,
Testator had a number of children. His purpose evidently was to treat them and the children of those who had died before equallyper stirpes. It is to be assumed that the indebtedness of Paul was, at the time the will was made, a part of his estate which he intended to divide; or, if it had not then been created, the indebtedness was later created at the expense of the estate. It plainly was not the testator's intention to give to Paul any advantage over his other children. He took the note for the $10,000, and it was his intention *845
and assumption that the note would be paid, and that his other children would share equally with Paul in the part of his estate that was or should be represented by Paul's debt to him. Manifestly, it was not his purpose to give Paul $10,000 and in addition give him a share of the rest of his estate. In the will testator did not take into account the possibility that Paul might predecease him, and that, therefore, Paul's debt might not be paid, and that his other children would thereby be deprived of their share in that portion of his estate. There is no doubt that, if Paul had survived his father, though for only an instant, he would have taken the devise subject to the right of retainer, and that Paul's children would have obtained no greater rights in testator's estate than Paul had. Must the accident of Paul's death shortly before that of his father, and the effect of the statute resulting from judicial or legal reasoning, be held to give Paul's children that which the statute does not in terms give them, and which manifestly we think the testator cannot be assumed to have intended? In the case of a legacy by a testator standing in loco parentis, a subsequent benefit by way of payment or contract is usually presumed to be an ademption or satisfaction, on the theory that double portions to a child are not intended. In re Estate of Youngerman,
"To hold that W.T. Close should not only have the notes, but an additional one thousand dollars as well, would be taking from the other children to benefit him. Evidently, this was not the testator's intention. But, whether this be true or not, the rule seems to be well settled that, if a legacy be given by a parent, or one standing in loco parentis, and the testator afterwards make an advancement or gift of money or property ejusdem generis to the same beneficiary, the presumption will arise that the gift was intended in satisfaction of, or substitution for, the prior legacy; and, unless this presumption be rebutted, an ademption, in full or pro tanto, as the gift is equal to or less than the prior benefit, will occur. Richardson v. Eveland, 126 Ill. Sup. 37 (18 N.E. Rep. 308; 1 L.R.A. 203); 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence, Sections 554-557; Story, Equity Jurisprudence, Sections 1111, 1112; Richards v. Humphreys, 15 Pick. 133; Beach, Modern Equity, Sections 1047, 1050."
See, also, 40 Cyc. 1915. *846
The law respecting advancements is ordinarily applicable only to cases of intestacy, but the doctrine of ademption, though strictly speaking applying only to personal property or to legacies, is resorted to, to carry out the apparent or presumed intention of a testator that one to whom he stands in locoparentis may not receive a double portion of the estate. In reEstate of Hall,
In Executors of Denise v. Denise,
"The law of the land constitutes a part of every will, and the rights of every legatee must be defined, measured, and enforced by its rules. The law says a legatee indebted to his testator must pay his debt, or his legacy may be applied in discharge of his debt. That being the standard by which the rights of a legatee thus situated must be measured, I cannot regard it as true, either in fact or in logic, that he takes his legacy free from his debt; on the contrary, I think the fact is that his legacy is so absolutely subject to the payment of his debt that, if his debt happens to exceed his legacy, he cannot collect a penny of his legacy. * * * It [the statute] meant simply to put them [the grandchildren] in the place of their parent, in such a contingency, and to give them a right to take what their parent would have taken, if he had survived the testator. But it is quite manifest, I think, that it was not intended to raise grandchildren to a plane higher than that which their parent could ever have occupied, or to give them rights, as against the other beneficiaries under the will, which the person in whose place they *847 are substituted never would have been permitted to assert. The statute-made legatee is a mere substitute; he is thrust, by force of the statute, in the place made vacant by the death of the legatee named in the will, and is given what, but for his death, would have gone to the primary legatee. He takes the primary legatee's place, as a beneficiary under the will, and should, according to the ordinary rule prevailing in like cases, bear his burdens, and be subject to the equities which would have existed against him. The statute was designed simply to relieve from a hardship, and should not, by construction, be extended beyond the purpose of its enactment. It is in derogation of the right of testamentary disposition; it makes persons legatees not designated as such by the testator. It is true this is done on the theory, which is probably correct in the great majority of instances, that, if the testator had foreseen the condition of affairs actually existing at the time his will takes effect, he would have made the same persons legatees that the statute makes * * *."
In Baker v. Carpenter,
"But certainly we think it was not the purpose, and could never have been the intention, of the legislature by the enactment of this statute to secure to the grandchildren of the testator greater rights and privileges than their parent — the primary legatee — could have had; nor may we reasonably assume that it was the intention of the legislature to give to such grandchildren rights against other beneficiaries under the will which the person in whose place they stand, and for whom they are substituted, never would himself have been permitted to assert. Yet such result must inevitably follow if the statute under consideration is to have the construction and interpretation contended for by the plaintiffs in error. The rule of construction is elementary, that statutes must always be construed so as to give effect to the intent and object of the legislature. The statute now under review, as we have seen, was designed to relieve from a hardship, and should, therefore, be so read and interpreted as to cure the mischief it was intended to remedy; but its meaning and effect must not be enlarged or extended by construction beyond the purpose of its enactment."
The withholding of the legatee's indebtedness in paying *848
the bequest is not a matter of set-off. As said in Webb v.Fuller,
"It is an equitable right of its own nature, and not at all dependent upon any statute. It is the plain moral, as well as legal, duty of the debtor to pay his debt to the estate. He has had the value from the estate. He ought, in morals and law, to restore it. * * * The right of a legatee or an heir in the estate of a decedent is not self-evident nor equitable. He has paid no value for it, — has not earned it. It is a matter of grace."
As said in In re Estate of Lietman, 149 Mo. 112, 120 (50 S.W. 307, 309):
"* * * it rests upon wholesome principles of right and justice, which can be administered in probate courts, without the aid of a court of conscience."
See, also, 24 Corpus Juris 489.
The legacy does not operate at the time of the death of the testator as payment, so as to stop interest. Bowen v. Evans,
The statute is that the devisee's "heirs shall inherit the property devised to him." We think it would be unduly extending this statute to say that the heirs of the devisee should inherit more than was devised to him, should he die first, as would be the result of sustaining the judgment below.
The judgment is — Reversed.
De GRAFF, C.J., and EVANS and ALBERT, JJ., concur.