ELIZABETH OVERFIELD, Appellant, v. GEORGE OVERFIELD ET AL.
Division One
September 4, 1930
30 S. W. (2d) 1073
SEDDON, C. Action for the ascertainment and determination of title to 140 acres of real estate in Scotland County, Missouri, described as the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 9; the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter, and the east three-eighths of the southwest quarter of section 16, all in township 66, range 11, west of the fifth principal meridian.
Plaintiff (appellant), Elizabeth Overfield, is the widow of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., who died testate in the month of July, 1868. Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., at the time of his death, was the owner in fee simple of the above described lands, comprising 140 acres in area, upon which lands he and his wife, the plaintiff herein, resided with their minor children, at and prior to the time of the death of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr. The defendants (respondents) are the children, and the heirs and devisees of deceased children, of said Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., who was the common source of title.
The petition is conventional in form, and alleges that plaintiff is the absolute owner of the fee simple title in and to the described lands; that the defendants claim and assert some right, title, claim, or interest therein; wherefore, plaintiff prays that the titles, estates and interests of the plaintiff and the defendants, respectively, in and to said real estate be ascertained, determined, defined and adjudged by the court.
Certain of the defendants filed separate answers, alleging, in substance, that defendants are the owners, in fee simple, of undivided interests in and to the described lands, subject, however, to the life estate of plaintiff therein, and that plaintiff, by her acts and conduct in the administration of the estate of her deceased husband, had elected to take and accept the provisions in her behalf made by the will of her deceased husband, under the provisions of which will plaintiff was entitled to a life estate only in the described lands.
Plaintiff, by her reply to the separate answers of defendants, alleges that the provisions in her behalf made by the will of her deceased husband were less in amount and value than the amount and value of property, real and personal, allowed to plaintiff, as the widow of the said Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., by the homestead and administration laws of Missouri in force and effect at the time of the death of her husband, Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., and alleges that the described lands, constituting the statutory homestead of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., passed to, and vested in, plaintiff and became her absolute property in fee simple, and that plaintiff is the absolute and sole owner thereof, and that defendants, or any of them, have no right, title, or interest therein.
The evidence discloses that the lands in controversy comprise two separate and segregated tracts, forty acres thereof being situate in Section 9, Township 66, Range 11, and the remaining 100 acres thereof being situate in Section 16, Township 66, Range 11. The 40-acre tract is some three-fourths of a mile distant from the 100-acre tract. At the time of the death of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., there was a small log house upon the 100-acre tract, which constituted the dwelling house of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., his wife and minor children. The record before us contains the following express admission, made upon the trial of the action: “It is further admitted that the 40 acres of land described in the petition was (were) used in connection (with, and) as part of the whole 140 acres of land.”
The evidence further shows that plaintiff, as the nominated executrix of the will of her deceased husband, Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., caused the will to be probated in the County Court of Scotland County; took charge of the personal property of decedent for the purpose of paying the debts against decedent‘s estate; and filed in the County Court of Scotland County an inventory of the estate, setting forth the real and personal property belonging to decedent
The uncontroverted evidence tends to show that the pecuniary value of the real estate of decedent, in the year 1868, was $5 to $10 per acre, and therefore the value of decedent‘s real estate, at the time of his death, did not exceed $1400. The uncontroverted evidence further tends to show that the pecuniary value of the personal estate of decedent, at the time of his death, in the year 1868, after deducting the unsecured debts against decedent‘s estate, was approximately $343.
It further appears from the uncontroverted evidence herein that plaintiff has remained in continuous occupancy and possession of the 140 acres of land in controversy, constituting the statutory homestead of her deceased husband, residing thereon and using the same until the commencement of the instant action, and that plaintiff has erected certain valuable improvements thereon, consisting of a dwelling house, a barn, poultry and other out-buildings.
The defendants proffered no evidence of the pecuniary value of the real and personal property belonging to Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., at the date of his death in July, 1868. The defendants proffered in evidence, as tending to show an election by plaintiff to take under the will of her deceased husband, the following statement, filed by plaintiff, as executrix of the estate of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., on February 14, 1871, in the County Court of Scotland County: “Elizabeth Overfield, executrix, would respectfully represent to the court that she is the widow of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., deceased, and that under his last will and testament she is the sole devisee of the personal property and the sole devisee of all the real estate of which he died seized, for her natural life; that she is paying
Evidence was adduced by defendants to the effect that plaintiff had stated, on one or more occasions, that the land in controversy “was willed to her for her lifetime, and then it went to his (her deceased husband‘s) heirs;” and that plaintiff “had never claimed any other interest in the land.” It is uncontroverted that all of the children of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., had attained their majority long prior to the commencement of the instant action.
The trial court, without the aid of a jury, entered a judgment, finding and declaring plaintiff to be vested with a life estate in the 140 acres of land in controversy, and declaring certain of the defendants to be vested with undivided interests in fee simple in and to said land, subject, however, to the life estate of plaintiff therein. After unavailing motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, the plaintiff was allowed an appeal to this court. This court takes jurisdiction of the appeal because the action is one “involving title to real estate.” [
Plaintiff-appellant, Elizabeth Overfield, assigns as error the entry of the judgment nisi, insistently asserting that the judgment below is wholly unsupported by the evidence, and is against both the law and the evidence. Appellant contends, upon this appeal, that the uncontroverted evidence establishes the facts to be: (a) that the 140 acres of land in controversy constituted the statutory homestead of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr.; and (b) that the pecuniary value of the real and personal property belonging to Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., at the time of his death, in the month of July, 1868, was less (and not greater) than the pecuniary value of the estate, real and personal, which plaintiff, as the widow of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., was entitled to take as her own property, absolutely, under the homestead and administration statutes of Missouri in force and effect at the time of the death of her husband in the year 1868; wherefore, appellant insists that there was no property, real or personal, on which the will of her deceased husband might operate, as against the appellant widow‘s absolute statutory rights, and that there was no consideration to support an election by her, and hence the reason upon which the application of the doctrine of election rests must fail in the instant case.
The appellant has filed herein an able brief, fully presenting her contentions, and citing numerous controlling decisions of this court in support thereof. The respondents (defendants below) have not filed in this court a brief and argument against the contentions of
The Homestead Statute in force and effect in the year 1868, at the death of Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., defined the homestead of the head of a family as “consisting of a dwelling house and appurtenances, and the land used in connection therewith,” and provided that “such homestead, in the country, shall not include more than one hundred and sixty acres of land, or exceed the total value of fifteen hundred dollars.” [
Construing the Homestead Statute, supra, this court has repeatedly and uniformly ruled that, where the husband died, while such statute was in force and effect, seized of a fee simple title in the homestead, his widow, by virtue of the statute, took, and became vested with, an absolute title in fee simple in the homestead, upon the death of the husband. [Skouten v. Wood, 57 Mo. 380, 383; Register v. Hensley, 70 Mo. 189, 194; Burgess v. Bowles, 99 Mo. 543, 547; Van Syckel v. Beam, 110 Mo. 589, 592; Weatherford v. King, 119 Mo. 51, 55; Mills v. Mills, 141 Mo. 195, 198; Lewis v. Barnes, 272 Mo. 377, 393.]
Moreover, our court has uniformly ruled that such statute, in defining the character and extent of the homestead, does not require the lands (constituting the homestead) to be contiguous or physically connected, but only requires that they be used in connection with the dwelling house and its appurtenances. [Perkins v. Quigley, 62 Mo. 498, 503; Meyer Bros. Drug Co. v. Bybee, 179 Mo. 354, 369; Adams v. Adams, 183 Mo. 396, 402; Haggard v. Haggard (Mo. Sup.), 233 S. W. 18, 19.] It was expressly admitted upon the trial of the instant action that the 140 acres of land in controversy was all of the real property that was owned by Franklin T. Overfield, Sr., at the time of his death, in July, 1868, “upon which
The Administration Statute (
The record herein indisputably discloses that the personal property belonging to plaintiff‘s husband at the time of his death was less in amount and value than the personal property allowed to the plaintiff widow, as her absolute property, under and by virtue of
Speaking to an almost identical state of facts, this court held, in Burgess v. Bowles, 99 Mo. 543, 547 et seq.: “For the purposes of
In the recent case of In re Goessling v. Goessling, 287 Mo. 663, 679, 230 S. W. 613, 618, this court, en banc, said: “The doctrine of election can have no application or relevancy, where, as in this case, the property received [under and by virtue of the provisions of the deceased husband‘s will] is less than the widow is entitled to under the statute without reference to any will. [Burgess v. Bowles, 99 Mo. 548; Ball v. Ball, 165 Mo. 327.]”
Under the uncontroverted evidential facts, as disclosed by the record in the instant case, the provisions made for plaintiff by her husband‘s will were not greater in amount and value than the absolute statutory rights allowed and given to plaintiff by the home-
It follows, therefore, that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and that the cause should be remanded to the circuit court with directions to enter a judgment declaring plaintiff, Elizabeth Overfield, to be the sole and absolute owner, in fee simple, of the 140 acres of land described in the petition, and declaring that defendants, or any of them, have no right, title, interest or estate in and to said 140 acres of land. It is so ordered. Lindsay and Ellison, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion by SEDDON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
