146 Wis. 202 | Wis. | 1911
No finding was made by the jury and none was requested in reference to the execution and delivery of the lease under which Anna Lass claims. We must presume in support of the judgment that the court found that the lease was duly executed and delivered. The evidence is sufficient to support such a finding.
The final order of distribution in the county court contained the following: “To Frank Triba there is hereby assigned, transferred, and set over all the real estate above described, for and during the period of his natural life,” etc. Anna Lass was the executrix named in the will of her mother and acted as such and was a party before the court in the probate proceedings. The plaintiff contends that the final order of distribution conveys to him a full unincumbered life estate in the real estate of his mother and that Anna Lass is concluded by that decree, being a party to the proceeding, and that if she intended to set up’ any claim to a leasehold interest she should have litigated such claim in the county court and insisted that the life estate devised to the plaintiff be assigned to him subject to her lease.
The title to the real estate owned by the deceased at the time of her death immediately vested in the devisees named in the will, subject to the rights of her creditors to have their
The county court had the power to construe the will and determine what distribution was intended by it, and it may be conceded for the purpose of this appeal that its judgment until reversed would be binding on all persons in interest who were parties to the proceeding and properly before the court. Appeal of Schœffner, 41 Wis. 260; Estate of Schœffner, 45 Wis. 614; Estate of Eastman, 24 Wis. 556; Glover v. Reid, 80 Mich. 228, 45 N. W. 91; Greenwood v. Murray, 26 Minn. 259, 2 N. W. 945; Perkins v. Owen, 123 Wis. 238, 101 N. W. 415; Estate of Leavens, 65 Wis. 440, 27 N. W. 324. At the time of the death of the testatrix her property was incumbered by and subject to the leasehold interest of Anna Lass. The decree of the county court could only determine the respective interests of the parties in such title as the decedent had at the time of her death. It could not adjust equities between the devisees and persons who had acquired rights in the property from the testatrix during her lifetime. Gillett v. Treganza, 13 Wis. 472, 478; Cary, Probate Law (3d ed.) § 630. It follows from what has been said that the county court had no jurisdiction to adjudicate the rights of Anna Lass under her lease and therefore the judgment could not affect such rights. It is but fair to say that the court probably had no intention of doing anything further than to make such a distribution of the property as the will-called for, although the language of the decree is quite broad and is susceptible of the construction contended for by the appellant. The defendant paid the rent stipulated for in this lease to her brother for a period of about five and one-half years after the
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.