287 Mass. 573 | Mass. | 1934
This is an appeal from a decree denying a petition by the husband of the testatrix praying that the executor be ordered to sell certain real estate for the purpose of paying the petitioner his statutory interest in the estate. The husband filed, within six months after the probate of the will, a waiver in writing of the provisions made in it for him. The question to be decided is whether by his conduct prior to and after the filing of the waiver he elected to ratify the will and to accept its provisions for his benefit.
' The trial judge reported the material facts. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 215, § 11. In substance they are these: The testatrix died on January 5, 1933, leaving next of kin but no children. The executor was appointed on February 9, 1933. By the will there was devised to the petitioner real estate in Florida and in Georgia, and a life estate in the house and land where the testatrix lived with him in Boston and ran a lodging house. The remainder after his life estate was devised to third persons. All her furniture was bequeathed to her husband. After her death the petitioner continued, up to the time of the hearing, to. occupy the premises devised to him for life, to run the lodging house, and to receive the rents and profits from the lodgers. On May 25, 1933, he applied for and received a license to conduct the premises as a lodging house. His waiver was filed on June 23, 1933, stating that he also elected to take his statutory share in her estate. On August 3, 1933, the present petition was filed alleging that the inventory of the estate showed personal property valued at $4,824.05 and two parcels of real estate in this Commonwealth of a total value of $15,500; that the petitioner was entitled to take
The evidence is not reported. Therefore the case is to be considered on the pleadings, the material facts reported, and the decree entered. If the decree is supported by the facts reported and is within the scope of the petition, it must be affirmed; otherwise, reversed. Brodrick v. O’Connor, 271 Mass. 240, 243.
It is provided by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 191, § 15, so far as material to the facts of the case at bar, that the “surviving husband ... of a deceased person . . . within six months after the probate of the will of such deceased, may file in the registry of probate a writing signed by him . . . waiving any provisions that may have been made in it for him . . . and he . . . shall thereupon take the same portion of the property of the deceased, real and personal, that he . . . would have taken if the deceased had died intestate; except that if he . . . would thus take real and personal property to an amount exceeding ten thousand dollars in value, he . . . shall receive in addition to that amount only the income during his . . . life of the excess of his . . . share . . . above that amount, the personal property to be held in trust and the real property vested in him . . . for life, from the death of the deceased .... If the real and personal property of the deceased which the surviving husband . . . takes under the foregoing provisions exceeds ten thousand dollars in value,” it shall be paid out of personal estate, otherwise from sale or mortgage of real estate.
In the case at bar there was no unreasonable delay in filing the waiver. Well within the period allowed by § 15, the petitioner placed upon the public records his positive and unmistakable expression of intent to take his share in her estate allowed under the provisions of the statute and not under the will. The petitioner during the time from the allowance of the will until the filing of the waiver continued to live in the home previously occupied by his wife and himself and to operate it as a lodging house as she had done during her life. He did not alter his mode of life. He took no affirmative step disclosing a decision about his relations to the estate of his wife before filing the waiver. As the surviving husband he was entitled to occupy this real estate in any event, whether under the will or under the statute. The personal property amounted to less than $5,000. It does not appear who owned the furniture in the
Decree reversed.