37 Ind. App. 639 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
By petition filed in the court below appellant sought an order against the executor of the estate of his deceased wife, requiring such executor to distribute to him one-third of the net proceeds of her personal estate.
The petition is in one paragraph, and is upon the theory that, as surviving husband, and having renounced the testamentary disposition of the property made by his wife, he is allowed by law one-third of her personal estate. Appellee answered appellant’s petition by confession and avoidance. A demurrer to this answer for want of facts was overruled, and issues thereon formed by reply in general denial. These issues were submitted to the court for trial, finding and judgment. Evidence was introduced and argument of- counsel heard, and on November II, 1904, the cause was submitted to the court for final decision, and the same taken under advisement. On December 5, and before any decision of .the court was' had, appellee asked and
We will consider the errors assigned in the order presented by the record.
(5) Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and this ruling is assigned as error. In the original motion many causes are noted, but we will consider only those here argued by appellant. Appellant insists that the decision of the court is contrary to the evidence and contrary to law. The evidence in this cause clearly establishes that at the time of the marriage of appellant with appellee’s decedent, each had a separate estate, personal and real. The same was kept separate and apart from the other and treated as separate estates during their entire married life. One witness testified that he had known the appellant about fifty years and had been on friendly terms with him during that time, and in a conversation relative to the property of himself and wife, and the right of one to the property of the other, and as to a contract or agreement between himself and wife, appellant said there was both an agreement and contract in black and white, and that both had signed, it. He said she should receive nothing and he should receive nothing, he had enough. Another witness testified to having heard the same conversation, and that Mr. Unger said: “That was all fixed in black and white; when she dies I get nothing of her property, and when I die she gets nothing of my property, I have enough.” The scrivener who prepared the will of decedent testified that appellant and his wife came to his office, and Mr. Unger told him that his wife wanted to make her will, and “he said, ‘I want her
Judgment reversed, with instructions to grant, a new trial, and the right to the parties to amend the pleadings if either of them so desires.