85 Neb. 66 | Neb. | 1909
William Loosing was born in Germany, but had resided in Washington county, Nebraska, 45 years next preceding his deatli, which occurred in November, 1905, and will be
“(2) My will is that my beloved wife, Hannah Loosing, shall have the use and disposition of all my personal property, also the income as long as she lives off of the following described land:
“One hundred sixty acres in Nance county, Nebraska, all the land I own there. The east half of the northwest quarter (E NW |-) and the west half of the west half of the northeast quarter (W \ W \ NE in section twelve (12), township seventeen (17), range nine (9), Washington county, Nebraska, and the north half of the northwest quarter of section one (N ¿ NW ¿), township seventeen, excepting thirteen rods along the east side of this (N * NW i 1-17-9).
“Also the south half of the southwest quarter, and lot numbered two, all in section thirty-six (36), excepting thirteen rods along the east side of this (S \ SW ^ and lot 2) of said section thirty-six, township eighteen (18), range nine (9), Washington county, Nebraska, also all village lots as follows: Lots three and four in block 24, and lots three and four in block thirty-one, village of Arlington, Nebraska.
“I want my wife to dispose or distribute this property*69 which I have not devised, as she sees fit, or deems best in her judgment.
“(3) I bequeath to my son, William H. Loosing, the east half of the northeast quarter, and the eást half of the west half of the northeast quarter (E NE £ and E ^ W -l NE ¿), all in section twelve (12), township seventeen, range nine, Washington county, Nebraska.
“(4) I bequeath to my son, Fred Loosing, the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter section thirty-one, township eighteen, range ten, the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section six, township seventeen, range ten, Washington county, Nebraska, and the north half of the northeast quarter of section one, township seventeen, range nine, and thirteen rods along the east side of the north half of the northwest quarter of said section one, township seventeen, range nine, and the south half of the southeast quarter and all of that portion of lot two in the north half of the southeast quarter, and thirteen rods along the east side of the south half of the southwest quarter, and thirteen rods along the east side of lot two in the south half of the southwest quarter, all in section thirty-six, township eighteen, range nine, Washington county, Nebraska. This my son Fred Loosing is to pay to my daughter Caroline Ruwe, six thousand dollars to be paid to her in four yearly payments of fifteen hundred dollars each.
“(5) I bequeath to my, daughter, Louise Loosing, the home place where I now live, with the following described lands: The east half of the northwest quarter, and the west half of the west half of the northeast quarter, all in section twelve, township seventeen, range nine, Washington county, Nebraska.
“This daughter is not to have possession of this property until after the death of my wife. I want it distinctly understood that the property I have herein bequeathed to my two sons and one daughter that they shall not have the right to dispose or mortgage same, but it shall be handed down to their children.
*70 “The remaining children which I have not mentioned in this will, I will leave it to my wife, to give them as she sees fit out of the property I left for her to dispose of. I want William H. Loosing and Louise Loosing to pay to my daughter Caroline Ruwe one thousand dollars each as soon as they get possession of the property.”
The widow and children for a time were opposed to the 1904 will and conferred with a view to defeating it. At the same time the children were formulating a plan for the division of their father’s estate regardless of the will, and called to their assistance two neighbors, G-eissleman and Vogt, who seem to be honest, well-meaning farmer folk. The will had been deposited with the county judge, and he, in conformity with law, had given notice of a time and place for hearing evidence as to its execution. The estate is considerable, valued at about $100,000. William FT: Loosing, Mrs. Thompson and Mrs. Moravec, who was then Mrs. Kruger, filed objections to the probate of the will. On the 26th of February, 1906, William, Louise and Fred Loosing and James Thompson, husband of Rosina Thompson, came to the widow’s home, some of them before noon and others thereafter, with Messrs. Vogt and Geissleman. Mrs. Loosing in the meantime had consulted with at least two attorneys, and had been advised by one counselor that her interest under the will in certain real estate was a fee, and by the other that she would receive a life estate only therein. Mrs. Loosing cannot read English, speaks said language indifferently, and may be termed an illiterate woman. The testimony concerning what waft said at the February, 1906, conference is conflicting. The widow and Iiouise each testified that the other children insisted that their mother should agree to a division of the estate; that the will should not control, and told her that, if she did not agree with them, they would be unkind to her; that she would be sent to the asylum should she attempt to testify in court; and that her character, the reputation of her daughter Louise, and that of the family would be ruined if the objections to the probate of the will
1. A careful consideration of the evidence fails to con
While cases are not lacking to sustain the proposition that a power of sale added to a life estate in real property vests the donee with an estate in fee simple, we think the weight of authority is to the contrary. 1 Sugden, Powers, ch. 3; 4 Kent, Commentaries (Rev. ed.), pp. *319, *536; Fairman v. Beal, 14 Ill. 244; Walker v. Pritchard, 121 Ill. 221; Ducker v. Burnham, 146 Ill. 9; Burleigh v. Clough, 52 N. H. 267; Mansfield v. Shelton, 67 Conn. 390; Little v. Giles, 25 Neb. 313. The New York decisions are controlled by statute, and are not, for that reason, authority upon the general proposition in other jurisdictions. The testator did not specifically designate in his will the methods to be pursued by his widow in executing the power vested in her by him, and she therefore is at liberty
2. A superficial examination of the will may suggest that the precatory words referring to Mrs. Thompson and Mrs. Moravec, being the children not named in the will, did not clothe them with any rights because they are not given a definite interest in any part of their father’s estate, and the widow’s discretion in the disposition of the aforesaid remainder seems absolute. It will be observed, however, that the testator recites in his will that he is disposing of all of his possessions of every kind and character, and that he does not make a gift over to any one other than his daughters Rosina and Lena in the event that the widow fails to make an appointment under the will. We must also consider that the testator and his wife’s illegitimate son August parted in anger, and were never, so far as the record discloses, reconciled, and that August, in 1890, by threatening to sue his stepfather, collected from him about $1,300 for services rendered. The record is barren of any evidence to furnish a reason for the father’s discrimination against his daughters Lena and Rosina, but, taking all of the facts into consideration, we feel justified in holding that the testator did not intend that any of his estate should go to strangers to his blood; that the power vested in the widow was created for the benefit of Mrs. Thompson and Mrs. Moravec, but that the donee is given a discretion in making the division between her daughters. Should the widow fail to act, no court could exercise the discretion lodged with her, and, in the event of her demise and failure to make an appointment, the daughters Avould take the real estate in equal shares. Davy v. Hooper, 2 Vern. (Eng.) 665; Penny v. Turner, 10 Jur. pt. 1 (Eng.) 768; Longmore v. Broom, 7 Ves. Jr. (Eng.) 124; Re White's Trust, Johns. Ch. (Eng.) 656; Salusbury v. Denton, 3 Jur. (n. s.) pt. 1 (Eng.) 740;
3. It is argued that the testator intended that William, Fred and Louise should have a life estate only in the land devised to them, and without the power to incumber or alienate, remainder to the surviving children of each devisee, and, failing such children, remainder to the surviving heirs at law of the testator or their heirs by right of representation. The intent of a testator must control, and will be ascertained from the language of the will aided somewhat by a consideration of the facts and circumstances surrounding the testator as reflected from the evidence, but that intent will not be inferred in flat contradiction to, and in violation of, well-established rules of law. We are committed to the principle that, if a testator in his will devises an estate in fee simple, a subsequent clause attempting to devise over any part of that estate is void. Spencer v. Scovil, 70 Neb. 87. We are satisfied with the principle stated in the cited case. The difficulty arises in applying the rule to the facts in the particular case. The rule does not of necessity apply merely for the reason that the first clause considered by itself might be construed as conveying a fee simple. The later clause, or clauses, may be read in connection with the first one for the purpose of advising the court whether it actually did transfer the fee, and if it does not in itself clearly and unequivocally do so, and by a comparison thereof with the remaining parts of the instrument the court is convinced that the testator did not in fact intend to vest the greater title in the first taker, the instrument will be construed accordingly. In other words, quoting Mr. Justice Strong in Sheets' Estate, 52 Pa. St. 257: “Subsequent provisions will not avail to take from an estate previously given qualities that the law7 regards as inseparable from it, as, for example, alienability; but they are operative to define the estate given, and to show7 that what without them might
This being true, Avhat force must be accorded the statement that the devisees shall not mortgage or dispose of the
Plaintiffs also urge that family settlements should be upheld, and the contract between the widow and children of the deceased specifically enforced. While family settlements are at times desirable, litigants claiming title to an estate by virtue of such an agreement and against an aged, infirm and illiterate widow bear the burden of proving that the defendant understood the contract, and was not deceived by her active and aggressive children. In re Estate of Panko, 83 Neb. 145. So far as the widow is concerned, she may or may not receive as much under the contract as under the will, but the contract deprives her of the control of part of the land devised to her by her husband. Those responsible for the settlement Avere con
The judgment of the district court, therefore, is set aside, a decree will be entered in this court in conformity with this opinion, and taxing all of .the costs in the district court and in this court to plaintiffs and Fred Loos- ' ing..
Judgment accordingly.