180 Ind. 484 | Ind. | 1913
This is a proceeding instituted by appellant to have tiled a certain public drain located in Hancock County. Appellees filed a remonstrance to appellant’s petition and on the issues thus joined the cause was tried by the' Hancock Circuit Court. From a finding and judgment that appellees’ remonstrance was sufficient and that appellant ’s petition should be dismissed, this appeal is taken.
Appellees have filed a motion to dismiss this appeal on the ground that certain owners of lands which are affeeted by the drain in question have not been joined as appellees. While it is true that such owners were, in
The sole question presented by the errors assigned is the sufficiency of the two-thirds remonstrance to appellant’s petition. Among the parties named in said petition as owners of land affected by the drain were John Manche and John M. Ashcraft. The trial court found that they were not the owners of the land described in the petition, but had only an interest in the proceeds to be derived from the sale of said land and were, therefore, not to be counted in determining the sufficiency of appellee’s remonstrance. It appears from the evidence that under the will of one John Ashcraft, who, at the time of his death, was the owner of said described real estate, his widow was to have a life estate in the same and at her death the land was to be sold and the proceeds divided among his children. Subsequent to his death and prior to the institution of this proceeding John Manche and John M. Ashcraft became the owners of a seven-tenths interest in the proceeds to be derived from the sale of said land upon the death of the life tenant. The question now is, Are they “landowners” within the meaning of the drainage statute f
John Ashcraft gave positive directions in his will that the real estate in question should be sold on the death of his widow and the proceeds of such sale divided among their children. Appellees contend that under such conditions an equitable conversion of the real estate took place at the death of the testator and the interests taken by his children under the will assumed the character of personal property from that date. This doctrine of equitable conversion finds support in the following eases: Comer v. Light (1911), 175
This doctrine, however, is not a fixed rule of law, but proceeds upon equitable principles, and its application will depend somewhat upon the circumstances under which it is invoked. As is said in Comer v. Light, supra, 373, it “is interposed for the purpose of carrying out the intention of testators so far as that can be done within the rules of law, and generally for the purposes of equality, and doing equity between heirs or next of kin, where no other rights intervene, but it has never been understood that a testator can change realty into personalty, or vice versa, by the mere declaration that it shall be one or the other. ’ ’ The rule of equitable conversion is applicable as between the testator and the specific beneficiary to determine the character of the estate which the latter is ultimately to receive under the will and, in the absence of any expressed contrary intention on the part of the testator, the share of a beneficiary who dies before the termination of the life estate will generally pass as that character of property which he would have received upon the death of the life tenant. Rumsey v. Durham, supra; Nelson v. Nelson, supra; 9 Cyc. 851, and eases cited.
But it is obvious that during the interim between the death of the testator and the time fixed for the actual conversion of the land into money, the title to said land must vest in some one. It is neither in abeyance nor in the life tenant and must, therefore, pass to either the executor or the legatee or else descend to the heirs of the testator, since an heir can not be cut off by will except by a devise of the estate, expressly or by implication, to some one else. Bowen v. Swander (1899), 121 Ind. 164, 22 N. E. 725, and cases cited; Doe v. Lanius (1852), 3 Ind. 441. Whether the title vests in the executor, depends on the language used
The presumption against intestacy is sufficient to lead to the conclusion that the testator did not intend that the legal title to his land should remain undisposed of and the necessary implication is that such title passes under the will. Since it can vest in neither the life tenant nor the executor, unless such intention is expressed, it is obvious that it must pass to the holder of the beneficial interest. The decisions of the several states are not in accord on this question, but the conclusion reached has been adopted as the rule in this State. The beneficiary is considered as the remainderman and his interest in the real property, which approaches a chattel real in character and possesses some, though not all, of the elements of a qualified fee, is liable to attachment and sale under execution, or it may be conveyed by him to another, the purchaser thereby taking the beneficiary’s share in the proceeds and taking title to the property as against all persons but the life tenant and the right of the executor to sell said property when the contingency arises. Indiana R. Co. v. Morgan (1904), 162 Ind. 331, 70 N. E. 368; Ballenger v. Drook (1885), 101 Ind. 172; Simonds v. Harris (1884), 92 Ind. 505; Wilson’s Executor v. Rudd (1862), 19 Ind. 101; Nelson v. Nelson, supra.
Since, in the case at bar, John Manche and John M. Ash-craft are to be considered as remaindermen, they are landowners within the meaning of the drainage law and are to be counted in determining the sufficiency of a remonstrance filed thereunder. Appellant also contends that a township is a landowner within the meaning of the drainage statute and that the trustee of Sugar Creek Township must be counted in determining the sufficiency of the remonstrance in question for the reason that a certain highway in such township will be benefited by the improvement. This position is well taken. §§6142, 6143 Burns 1908, Acts 1907 p. 508; Zumbro v. Parnin (1895), 141 Ind. 430, 40 N. E. 1085.
The trial court found that there were but seven property owners to be counted in determining the sufficiency of appellees’ remonstrance. Since John Manche, John M. Ashcraft and the trustee of Sugar Creek Township must be added to these, as appellant contends, it follows that said remonstrance is insufficient since it contains but six signatures, or less than two-thirds of the total number of landowners to be counted.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the trial court to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.