193 S.W.2d 323 | Ark. | 1946
The question presented by this appeal is: Were the appellants, Barbara Ann Taylor, Eleanor Sue Taylor and William Knox Taylor, minor children of Thurman B. Taylor, deceased, pretermitted in the will of their father, so as to render said will ineffective as to them?
Thurman B. Taylor, a resident of Ashley county Arkansas, died on December 24, 1940, leaving him surviving his widow, Mrs. Ella J. Taylor, one of the appellees, and three children, the above named appellants.
The following instrument was duly admitted to probate as the last will and testament of said Thurman B. Taylor:
"In the name of God, Amen: I Thurman Taylor of Hamburg, Ark., being of sound mind and disposing memory, but knowing the uncertainty of human life, hereby revoking any and all wills heretofore made by me.
"First: I desire that all my just debts be paid. I desire to leave all my possessions to my wife, Mrs. Ella J. Taylor. *984
"I desire that Ella J. Taylor and ............. act as my executor without bond, and full power to sell and dispose of it in his (its) judgment it is necessary for the payment of debts, or to the advantage of the estate, or of the heirs.
"Thurman B. Taylor. (SEAL)
"Signed, sealed, and published, and declared by said Thurman B. Taylor the testator, as and for his last will and testament; and we, at his request, and in his presence, and in the presence of each other have hereby subscribed our names as witnesses thereto this 8 day of May, 1933.
"Roy E. Bell
"A. S. Dees."
At the time of his death Mr. Taylor owned the west half of lot three, block three, and lot eight as shown by Bunn's Survey of the town of Hamburg, Arkansas. Acting under the power given her by the will of her husband, as was admitted in the trial below, in order to obtain money to educate the children of testator and also to discharge his debts, appellee, Ella J. Taylor, sold and by deed conveyed this property to appellee, Mrs. H. D. Cammack, for a consideration of $7,000, which is stipulated to be a fair price therefor.
The instant suit was brought on behalf of appellants by M. F. Taylor, as their next friend, and in the complaint it is alleged that since these children were not mentioned in the will of Thurman B. Taylor, deceased, they were entitled to inherit his property as pretermitted children under the provisions of 14525 of Pope's Digest. The prayer of the complaint was that the said deed executed by Mrs. Taylor to Mrs. Cammack be canceled.
It is the contention of appellees that by the use of the word "heirs" in the will the testator described and referred to his children, the appellants, and that since this constituted a mention of them they were not pretermitted. The lower court sustained this contention, held that the conveyance from Mrs. Taylor to Mrs. Cammack was valid, and dismissed the complaint. This appeal followed. *985
The purpose of the statute (14525, Pope's Digest), providing an inheritance for pretermitted children, is not to require a testator to make some devise or bequest to each of his children, but rather to insure that there should be no unintentional disherison of a child by the testator. The object of such statutes is not to secure equality of distribution or to compel a testator to make a substantial provision for his children, but is rather to guard and provide against testamentary thoughtlessness. . . ." 26 C.J.S. 1047; Culp v. Culp,
The word "heirs," in its technical sense, is not synonymous with the word "children," but Mr. Taylor, at the time he executed the will and at the time of his death, had no heirs other than these three children; and we think that it is reasonable to assume that when he used the word "heirs" he used it in the non-technical sense, and meant thereby his children. "The word `heirs' in its strict and technical sense applies to persons appointed by law to succeed to the estate in case of intestacy; but it is frequently used to designate those persons who answer this description at the death of the testator." Crutcher v. Joyce,
In the Petition of Minot,
Virtually the same question posed in this case was decided in the case of Powell v. Hayes,
The lower court correctly construed the will and its decree is in all things affirmed.