McKee v. Stuckey

VALLIANT, J.

Plaintiff, as the widow of Wil•liam ~W. McKee, sues to have her dower set off to her in certain land of which her husband died seized in fee. There were no children of her marriage, but her husband left children of a former marriage who were adults and did not live with them.

The plaintiff’s husband owned a house and lot, not exceeding two acres, of the value of $500, in the town of Lathrop, which was his homestead. Lathrop is a town of 1,400 inhabitants. He also owned eighty acres of land in Clinton county. He left a will by which he bequeathed to his wife $1,000, to be paid out of his personal estate, and devised to her the homestead in Lathrop for and during her natural life. The remainder in the homestead he devised to certain of his children. The •eighty acres he devised to certain of his children, but ■empowered the executors to sell it: ‘ and deliver the proceeds to the heirs as above named, after first paying the one thousand dollar legacy to my wife as herein-above named.”- The eighty acres were under a mortgage for $648, which had been executed by the plaintiff’s husband before his marriage with her. The executor sold the land to the defendant for $3,000 in cash, subject to the mortgage, which the defendant has since paid. Out of the proceeds of the sale the executor paid to the plaintiff the-$1,000 legacy, and paid the rest to the devisees. It does not appear from the record that there was any personal property out of which the legacy ■could have been paid.

The testator died March 3, 1898, the will was probated March 8, 1898, the land was sold by the executor to the defendant April 20, 1899. This suit was brought to the January term, 1900, of the Clinton' circuit court. The widow has occupied the homestead continuously since the death of her husband. She has never renounced the will.

*722The object of this suit is to obtain dower in the eighty acres.

On the above agreed facts the plaintiff asked the court to declare that if the Lathrop property was the homestead of her husband, no real estate passed by the will to her; that the homestead was hers by operation of law beyond the power of the husband to dispose of it by will or otherwise; and that the $1,000 bequest not being expressed to be in lieu of dower, she was not put to the election of choosing it or her dower but was entitled to both. The court refused the declarations, and rendered judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff appeals.

Revised Statutes 1899, sec. 2948, declares: “If any testator shall, by will, pass any real estate to his-wife, such devise shall be in lieu of dower out of the real estate of her husband whereof he died seized, or in which he had an interest at the time of his death, unless the testator, by his will, otherwise declared. ’ ’

But under section 2949 the widow may renounce the provision of the will within twelve months after its probate and take her dower instead of the devise.

Section 3620 provides that when the head of the family dies leaving a widow and minor children the homestead shall pass to them, “the children shall have the joint right of occupation with the widow until they shall arrive respectively at their majority and the widow shall have the right to occupy such homestead during her life or widowhood, and upon her death or re-marriage it shall pass to the heirs of her husband.”

Under the homestead statute the widow had the right to the use and occupation of the homestead during her life and widowhood, but on her re-marriage - her interest in it would cease. Under the will she has a life-estate in it even if she should marry again. The statute gave her a determinable life estate. The will gave her an absolute life estate. She had her election and *723chose to take what the will gave her and she is bound by her choice.

But the plaintiff has also had her full share of the eighty acres in question.

The thousand dollar legacy was, according to the first mention of it in the will, to be paid out of the testator ’s personal estate, but in the last clause of the will,, as if apprehensive that there might not be personalty sufficient to pay it, the testator authorized the executors to sell this land and pay his widow the $1,000 out of the proceeds before paying any part of it to his children to whom he had devised it. The power of sale was given to the executors primarily for the widow’s benefit and she has received the full benefit of the exercise of that power. The sale was not made to the defendant subject to the widow’s dower, but absolute except as to the mortgage which he was required to pay and has since paid. The widow can not receive the" proceeds of the sale made under a power given, in part at least, for her benefit, and then take back from the purchaser the property sold. That would not be fair dealing and the law would not countenance it.

The learned trial court took the correct view of this case.

The judgment is affirmed.

All concur, except Robinson, J., absent.