This is a proceeding to construe the joint will of John and Elizabeth M. Ruhland. By this will a forty-acre farm in Plymouth county was devised. In paragraphs eleven and twelve, John’s wife Elizabeth was devised a life estate in the forty acres. The disposition of the remainder interest forms the basis for this law suit.
Petitioner, Elizabeth M. Meylor, daughter of testatоrs John and Elizabeth, claims *418 that she succeeded to the title upon the failure of the preceding remainder estate in her brother, Francis. The heirs of Francis claim the remainder arguing that the remainder to Francis did not depend on his surviving the life tenant. The trial court held that the remainder interest to Francis was a vestеd remainder subject to complete divestment. Elizabeth M. Meylor, petitioner, has appealed.
John Ruhland died in 1959; his son Francis died in 1971. John’s wife, Elizabeth Ruhland, died in 1986. This proceeding for will construction is brought in the John Ruhland estate.
Paragraph eleven of the will provided: I John Ruhland hereby devise unto my wife, Elizabeth M. Ruhland, if she survive me, a life estate in all my real property during her lifetime, she to have the use, possession, rents and profits therefrom as long as she lives and be charged with the payment of the taxes.
Paragraph twenty of the will provided: I John Ruhland do hereby devise the remainder interests in the following described real estate, to wit; the northwest quarter (N.W.V-i) of the northwest quarter (N.W-¼) of section thirty-five (35) in township ninety-one (91) north range forty-five (45), west of the 5th p.m., in Plymouth County, Iowa unto my son, Francis L. Ruhland providing he pay to my daughter, Elizabeth M. Meylor the sum of nine thousand ($9000) dollars within two years after the death of my wife, if she survive me, at the time of my death if my wife shall die first. In case my son Francis L. Ruhland shall fail to pay said nine thousand dollars to my said daughter within two years after said date of death of the survivor of us, then and in that case I devise the aforesaid real estate unto my daughter, Elizabeth M. Meylor absolutely and in fee simple, subject only to the life estate of my wife.
Other paragraphs of the will left property tо the testator’s other four children, all of whom survived the life tenant. No legal question is presented to us regarding property left to them. The heirs of Francis L. Ruhland tendered the sum of $9000 to Elizabeth M. Meylor after the death of Elizabeth M. Ruhland, which has been rejected pending the outcome of these proceedings.
In support of her position, Elizabeth makes three main arguments. First, that the payment of $9000 was a condition precedent as opposed to merely a charge or lien on the real estate, thus making the remainder a contingent remainder which was destroyed on the death of Francis before the termination of thе life estate. Second, the language of the will demonstrates that the right to make payment was “personal” to Francis, to be performed by Francis only, thus imposing a condition precedent of survival. Third, the scheme of distribution shows the testator’s intent that the property goes to Elizabeth M. Meylor rather than to the hеirs of Francis. In response the heirs of Francis claim that the remainder to him was vested at the death of John Ruhland. They also assert that it is immaterial whether the remainder is contingent or vested because a contingent remainder has long been recognized as inheritable and devisable. They also claim that the will does not evidence an intent that only children of the testator shall take to the exclusion of heirs of the children.
The law of future interests, while ostensibly one of the least transient areas of law, has still undergone change. On whether intent of the testator is controlling one noted text writer has said:
One thing is clear: that no amount of intent that the legal consequences of a vested remainder will attach to an interest can make it a vested remainder, if certain requisites are absent. Nor will a remainder be contingent merely because a testator has said it is not to vest until a subsequent period. The test is not simply a matter of the intеnt to bring about the legal consequences of a vested or of a contingent remainder, as the case may be. It is true, the courts frequently say that the difference between a vested and contingent interest is a matter of intent. But, when that statement is made, it means, or should mean, that a remainder is vested or contingent depending on the existence or absence of an intent that *419 there be no condition precedent attached to the limitation.
Simes
&
Smith,
The Law of Future Interests
2d ed. 11140 at 125-26 (1936). In modern law, there is a dislike for contingent interests because they are thought to restrict alienability. As a result interests are construed as vested rather than contingent whenever possible.
See Fulton v. Fulton,
Yet in
Henkel v. Auchstetter,
The favoritism for the vesting of remainders came about in order to nullify the many burdensome technicalities of the feudal system with respect to contingent remainders. Many of the reasons which generated the favoritism have long been nonexistent. It is no longer an important rule of construction, and should not be. As said by Justice Evans in Fulton v. Fulton,179 Iowa 948 , 966,162 N.W. 253 , 258, L.R.A.1918 E1080: “The dominant rule of construction with us is that the intent of the testator, as it is fairly gathered from the will, must prevail.”
The “divide and pay-over rule,” which held that a testamentary direction rendered a remainder contingent, was the basis for Iowa law for many years. That rule was eliminated by
Atchison v. Francis,
The “divide and pay-over rule” is an artificial concept which sheds no light upon the basic questiоn of expressed tes-tatorial intent. In this jurisdiction its use has resulted in frequent confusion and in an incorrect result in the first division of In re Estate of Phearman,211 Iowa 1137 ,232 N.W. 826 ,82 A.L.R. 674 , and possibly in some other cases. We overrule the doctrine of the first division of the Phearman case and hold the “divide and pay-over rule” should not be given weight in determining the existence of a requirement of survival to the date of distribution.
At common law a contingent remainder failed if the contingent remainderman did not live until the condition precedent had occurred. The principle was stated in
Schau v. Cecil,
Although for a time it was uncertain whether Iowa law embraced the “New York Rule,” it is now clеar that the common-law explanation of the difference between contingent and vested remainders has been the basis for our law.
Clarken v. Brown,
In a vested remainder “the estate is invariably fixed to remain to certain determinate persons.” A remainder is contingent “where the estate in remainder is limited to take effect either to a dubious or uncertain person or upon a dubious or uncertain event.”
Id.
at 1000-01,
In light of the foregoing, the emphasis in case analysis should be placed upon determining what language in the dispositive *420 instrument will be construed as imposing а condition of survival. Two primary factors are involved. The first relates to the form of the particular limitation; the second to the construction of the language used therein. An adequate analysis requires taking fact situations and analyzing them separately.
In
Lytle v. Guilliams,
I will to Harry Roberts all the personal property of my estate that may be remaining at the death of my wife, and all the real property above mentioned; and that out of the property above mentioned is to be pаid to Cora Slinker, Two Thousand Seven Hundred ($2700) dollars, and to Myrtle Lytle, Two Thousand Seven Hundred ($2700) dollars.
Id.
at 524,
In
Lytle
the salient fact was the premature death of the charged legatees. In
Sick v. Rock,
In
Schrader
the testator willed a life intеrest in all his real estate to his wife. On the death of his wife his son George was to become the absolute owner of described real estate on the condition that “before George Schrader shall become the sole, absolute and unqualified owner of said real premises that he shall pay to my well-beloved son, Henry Schrader, the sum of five hundred dollars.”
Schrader,
Other language has been found to be insufficient to indicate an intent that a devise be deemed contingent. In
Clarken v. Brown,
By contrast, our court found a personal option in
In re Estate of Lemke,
In analyzing the language used by the testator in the case at bar, to discover what result was intended we see a number of different legal forms used. Bequests are made to various charities and persons. Life estates are given by the testators, John and Elizabeth Ruhland, to each other by paragraphs eleven and twelve. An outright devise in fee simple subject only to a life estate is made to son Arthur Ruhland in paragraph thirteen. No alternate devise is made in case Arthur failed to survive the life tenant. Similar devises are made to son Benedict, son Anthony and son Francis. In paragraph eighteen Frаncis L. Ruhland is directed to pay $1500 to the estate of the survivor of John and Elizabeth to be divided equally among the six children including Francis. Paragraph twenty-six directed the sale of a twenty-acre tract with the further direction that Francis “shall have an option to buy” the real estate for $6000. In ease Francis elects not tо purchase the twenty acres, the executors are directed to sell it and divide the proceeds among the six children including Francis.
From this assemblage of a variety of legal forms it is obvious that these testators chose very specific methods of disposing of their property to accomplish the purрose intended. Distinctions were made and used between a devise in fee simple, an option, a payment, and a charge. Gifts over were sometimes made, sometimes not. The significance of this attaches to the fact that nowhere in paragraph twenty is a proviso stated that Francis must survive the life tenаnt in order to obtain title to the remainder. Nor is any clear implication made that survivorship is required. We think that had the testator John Ruhland intended to make survivorship a condition precedent he would have done so by using appropriate and unmistakable legal language.
Petitioner argues that testator’s use оf the words “he pay,” “my son Francis L. Ruhland shall fail to pay” and “Francis L. Ruhland shall make payments of nine thousand dollars” show an intent to make survival a condition precedent and that the election be made personally by Francis. She also claims support from our cases *422 that have cited a failure to provide an alternate devisee as an indication of intent to vest the remainder. In the case at bar, petitioner is the alternate devisee under paragraph twenty in case of a refusal to pay the $9000 provided, rather than in case of the death of the first taker.
Although we acknowledge the merit of these points in support of petitioner’s argument we do not find them of sufficient vitality to persuade. We believe that viewing the language used in the entire will in light of our authorities cited leads to the conclusion that survivorship was not intended. Accordingly, we hold that paragraph twenty created a vested remainder in Francis L. Ruhland subject to divestment in the event $9000 is not paid to Elizabeth M. Meylor.
AFFIRMED.
