46 Iowa 487 | Iowa | 1877
In Young’s Appeal, 39 Pa. St., 119, it is said: “The principle of the common law of revocation of wills, by the subsequent birth of issue, is stated thus: ‘If the testator’s circumstances be so altered that new moral testamentary duties have accrued to him subsequent to the date of the will, such as may be presumed to produce a change of intention, this will amount to an implied revocation. Now, it matters not whether it be said that this principle was derived from the Eoman law, or from our human instincts of justice.- Certainly it is now a legitimate element of our common law, and we would not have received it but for those instincts. The Eomans received it before us, because they were before us, and because they, too, were human.’ ”. Whilst we have found no adjudicated case
The Revised Statutes of 1843 contain these further provisions in relation to wills:
“Section 19. When any testator shall omit to provide in his will for any of his children, or for the issue of any deceased child, they shall take the same share of his estate, both real and personal, that they would have been entitled to if he had
Section 20. When any child of a testator, born after his father’s death, shall have no provision made for him by his father in his will, or otherwise, he shall take the same share of his father’s estate, both real and personal, that he would have been entitled to if his lather had died intestate.
Section 21. When any portion is assigned to a posthumous child, or to a child, or the issue of a child, omitted in the will of his parent, as mentioned in the two preceding sections, the same shall be -taken equally from all the devisees and legatees in proportion to the value of what they shall receive respectively under the will, unless in consequence of a specific devise, or bequest, or of some after provisions in the will, a different apportionment among the devisees and legatees shall he found necessary, in order to give effect to the intention of the testator as to that part of his estate which shall pass by his will.”
The Code of 1851 repealed all previous laws on the subject of wills, and eliminated all of the law contained in the sections above quoted, except so much as saves to a posthumous child, unprovided for by the will, the share of the estate he would have been entitled to had no will been made. It is claimed that the effect of this repeal is to deprive children born after the execution of the will, and before the death of the testator, of any portion of the estate. It is to be observed, however, that these sections provide for a partial, instead of a total revocation of the will, under the circumstances named. The effect of their repeal is to restore the total revocation of the common law.
The demurrer, we think, was properly sustained.
Affirmed.