No. 958 | 6th Cir. | Nov 11, 1901

LURTON, Circuit Judge,

having made the foregoing statement of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

1. Diversity of citizenship exists and furnishes the ground for federal jurisdiction. The bill shows that eleven, installments of the annuity claimed are due and unpaid, so that the amount in controversy is more than $2,000, excluding interest and costs. That some of these installments may be barred by the Ohio statute of limitations, and that this fact may appear upon the face of the bill, does not aifect the fact that the amount sued for exceeds the sum necessary to give the circuit court jurisdiction. The determination of the question as to the application of the statute thus made involves the exercise of jurisdiction in respect of the merits of the case. The demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court is not well taken.

2. The defendants demur because Lizzie Keen and her children are not made parties defendant. Whether Lizzie Keen is now living, or has any children or representatives of children, does not appear. If, in the absence of any averment on the subject, we should assume that there are persons in being who would take in the contingency that George W. Rice shall die leaving at his death no child or representative of children, we are of opinion that, for the purpose of the relief sought, neither Lizzie Keen nor her children arc necessary parties. The liability of George W. Rice is individual, and not joint. He is charged with the payment of $250 annually to the widow of the testator during her life. Mrs. Keen is charged with the payment of a like sum. Neither is liable for the default of the other. The annuity payable by George W. Rice is charged upon the undivided one-half of the Clermont comity lands devised to him and his children. The bill only seeks to enforce the lien subject to which that particular undivided one-half was devised. For this purpose neither Mrs. Keen nor her children are necessary parties. Wriietlier the children of George W. Rice who are parties do not, as a class, sufficiently represent the persons substituted for them in the contingency that they shall all die leaving no issue before the falling in of the life estate, we need not decide.

3. The complainant seeks to have the interest devised to George W. Rice for life, and the remainder devised to his surviving children or their representatives, sold for the purpose of enforcing the lien declared by the will to secure the annuity payable by the said George W. Rice. This brings us to the only question seriously contested, and that is whether the payment of the annuity is charged as a lien only upon the life estate devised to George W. Rice or upon the remainder estate as well. The learned trial judge reached the conclusion that the annuity was a charge only on the life estate of George W. Rice, and not upon the remainder devised to his children. To this interpretation we find ourselves unable to agree. The annuity is payable, not during the life of George W. Rice or the continuance of his life estate, but is a sum to be paid “to my beloved wife, Minerva L Waterfield, during each and every year of her natural life.” How is this annuity to be secured? From what source is it. to come? The testator answers , this by making the devise of his Clermont county farm, “subject, however, to a *628charge and ^annuity of five hundred dollars to be paid by'said George W. Rice and Lizzie Keen in equal amounts; that is, $250 by each of them.” The annuity, therefore, is to continue during the natural life of the widow, and is to “be and remain a charge and lien upon said lands, houses, and real estate in this item mentioned.” The “lands, houses, and real estate in this item mentioned” are in the foregoing part of the item described “as all my lands, houses, and real estate held and owned by me in my own name, and as my undivided property and estate, lying, situate, and being in the county of Clermont and state of Ohio.” Now, did the testator mean that this lien and charge should rest upon the fee in the property described, or upon the mere estate which had just been carved out of the fee for the life of George W. Rice? There are a number of reasons which seem to lead to the conclusion that the testator intended that this annuity should be a charge upon the fee of his Clermont county lands. Primarily, we may assume that the testator’s intentions would be most nearly carried out by construing this charge as one resting upon the fee. The annuitant was his widow. The provisions made for the widow are presumptively in lieu of dower. The annuity is for the life of the widow, not the life tenant. It was possible that the widow might outlive the life tenant. In such case could the testator intend that her provision should cease or that it should depend upon the solvency of the estate of the life tenant, assuming that the liability of the devisee would continue after expiration of the life estate and of the annuitant’s lien? It is difficult to believe'that the testator intended that the charge or lien of this annuity should be of less duration than the life of the annuitant; for we may well assume that the comfort and maintenance of his widow was an object of prime importance. That he has employed the words “lands and real estate” as descriptive of the estate upon which the lien is to rest is in accord with what may be regarded as the intention of the testator concerning the secure payment of this annuity. A devise of “my land,” “plantation,” “real property,” or “real estate” will, under the well-settled rule in Ohio, convey the fee in the absence of words plainly showiiig an intent to devise a less estate. Winton v. Cornish, 5 Ohio, 478; Smith v. Berry, 8 Ohio, 365, 369; Thompson’s Lessee v. Hoop, 6 Ohio St. 480; Niles v. Gray, 12 Ohio St. 320, 329; Townsend’s Ex’rs v. Townsend, 25 Ohio St. 477; section 5970, Rev. St. Ohio. A like rule of construction exists in Kentucky. Mitchell v. Walker, 17 B. Mon. 61, 62. Unless, therefore, it plainly appears from the will that the testator intended to charge a less estate than the fee with a lien for the payment of this annuity, the usual and technical meaning of the words, “lands, houses, and real estate,” should be regarded as the sense in which the testator used them. The remainder estate is devised to the children of the life tenant living at the death of the latter, or to representatives or deceased children, who, the testator says, “shall take the fee.” These words do not operate to discharge the lien of this annuity should the widow survive the falling in of the life estate. The “fee” which they are to take will be no less a fee because subject to the charge in favor of this *629annuitant. The word “fee” is used to indicate the remainder of the estate, which, on termination of the particular estate, will constitute the fee. But appellees say the remainder estate should not be charged with this annuity, lest- thereby we defeat the intended bounty of the testator to the remainder-men. This result they say may come about by the accumulation of a burden upon the land greater than the value of the life estate through the failure of the life tenants to meet their obligations, or by the indulgence of the annuitant in demanding payment. Manifestly, such contingencies as these cannot affect the interpretation of this will as written, nor does their suggestion affect the conclusion we reach as to the purpose of the testator. That he should prefer his own widow over remote and uncertain remainder-men is an obvious presumption, and that he should secure the provision made for her, even at the risk of burdening the bounty intended for distant remainder-men, is quite in accord with natural impulse.

4. But it is said that the appellant does not aver that she had elected to take under the will in pursuance of section 5964, Rev. St. Ohio, and that she cannot, therefore, claim under the will. That statute applies only to domestic wills, and is inapplicable to the case of foreign widows, in so far as the act relates to the time and manner of making an election. Jennings v. Jennings, 21 Ohio St. 56, 77. But this will does not appear to be a domestic will. The bilí, avers that the will of the testator “was filed, proven, established, and admitted to probate as and for the last will and testament of William Waterfield,” and was so ordered and placed of record on the 8th day of August, 1888, in Renton county, Ky., “and that a dtily-certified copy thereof, according to the act "of congress, was admitted and ordered recorded in the office of the probate judge of Clermont county, Ohio.” From this averment we are authorized to infer that this will was recorded as a foreign will, which had been properly proven in the state ol the domicile of the testator. The complainant is not seeking to claim dower or any right hostile to the will, but is claiming under the will. We must presume upon the bill that she has in fact elected to take under the will, and has estopped herself to claim dower. Millikin v. Welliver, 37 Ohio St. 460.

5. The defendants demurred to the bill so far as it was sought to obtain relief either against them individually or against the land devised to them for or on account of installments of annuity accruing more than six years before the filing of the bill. In support of this demurrer, section 4981 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio is relied upon, as construed and applied by the supreme court of Ohio in Yearly v. Long, 40 Ohio St. 27. In Yearly v. Fong it appeared that a father devised land to his son, and required the son to pay to a daughter a legacy of $1,500, in installments of $100 each year. The daughter sought to enforce her legacy as a lien upon the land, and to her suit the statute of six years was pleaded. The court held that the legacy constituted only an equitable charge upon the land devised to the son, and that an action by the daughter to recover the unpaid installments was barred after the lapse of six *630years from the time her right of action accrued on said installments, respectively. So far as it is sought to obtain any personal decree against the life tenant, George W. Rice, for installments •due more than six years, the statute, as there construed, may be applicable. So far as the opinion in that case is supposed to conclude the right of complainant to enforce the charge and lien declared to secure the payment of unpaid installments, it is not in point. In Yearly v. Long the legacy was not made an express charge and lien upon the land devised. In the case at bar the will provides that this annuity “shall be and remain a charge and lien upon said lands, houses, and real estate in this item mentioned.” Thus the land devised to the defendants is charged with an express lien, which, under the law of Ohio, is not barred by the statute of six years, although the debt itself may be. Gary v. May, 16 Ohio, 66; Fisher’s Fx’r v. Mossman, 11 Ohio St. 42" court="Ohio" date_filed="1841-12-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/douglas-v-wallace-6752351?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6752351">11 Ohio St. 42; Kerr v. Lydecker, 51 Ohio St. 240, 37 N. E. 267, 23 L. R. A. 842.

The demurrer was too broad, and was properly overruled, inasmuch as the remedy in equity to enforce the express lien which exists to secure these installments is not barred by the statute of six years, or by any other-provision of the Ohio statute applicable to the facts in this case.

The decree must be reversed. The cause will be remanded, with direction to overrule the several demurrers, and that such other proceedings may be had not inconsistent with this opinion.

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