Birney v. Wilson
Birney v. Wilson
Opinion of the Court
The principal if not only question arising upon the record, is in regard to the true construction of the act regulating descents, etc., as amended April 17, 1857 (1 Swan & Critchfield’s Stat. 501-2), and its effect upon the real estate of Mary Palmer, deceased. Did it thereupon descend to her brothers and sisters, and their representatives, who are not' of the blood of Hiram Palmer, the devisor of the said Mary, or to the brothers and sisters of Hiram Palmer and their representatives, who are not of the blood of Mary Palmer, from whom the descent is cast ? The plaintiffs fall within the first, and the defendants within the last class.
This assumes, indeed, that Mary Palmer took a fee simple-under the will of her deceased husband, and we think ourselves warranted in that assumption. The second defense, it is true, alleges that she took only a life estate, but the defendants’ counsel does not claim it in his brief, and we are clear that under the terms of the will, and section 49 of the act relating to wills then in force (Swan’s Stat. of 1841, 999), the devise to her can not be so limited. The whole context of the will, the apparent intent to dispose of his entire estate, the bequests to his relatives, to some nominal, and to others beneficial legacies, the express creation of a life estate to Elizabeth Sampson, and the terms of the specific and residuary bequests of all his real and personal estate to his wife, charged with the payment of debts and legacies, would, even at common law, confer upon the wife all the estate Avhich Hiram Palmer had therein, and a fortiori, must this be the case under the section of the “ act relating to wills,” above referred to, which provides that — “ Every devise of lands,, tenements or hereditaments, in any will hereafter made, shall be construed to convey all the estate of the devisor therein, which he could lawfully devise, unless it shall clearly appear by the will that the devisor intended to convey a less estate.”
This statute, at all events, settles that Mary Palmer tools* the entire estate of which her husband died seized.
To whom, then, did the estate descend upomher decease?'
Was the estate of which Mrs. Palmer died seized, one which came to her by devise from any ancestor, within the meaning of the first section of said act?
The introductory part of said first section reads as follows : “ That when any person shall die intestate', having title or right to any real estate of inheritance in this State, which title shall have come to such intestate by descent or devise, or deed of gift from any ancestor, such estate shall descend and pass in parcenary to his or her kindred in the following course,” etc. The section then proceeds to regulate the course of descent, beginning with the nearest and extending to the remoter degrees of the common kindred of the intestate and the ancestor from whom the estate came, saving a life estate therein to the husband or wife, if living, in case there are no children or their legal representatives, and closes with casting the estate, on failure of brothers and sisters of the ancestor or their representatives, upon the brothers and sisters of the intestate and their representatives who may not be of the blood of the ancestor, and in default of such persons, upon the
In Brewster v. Benedict et al., 14 Ohio Rep. 385, it is said by Hitchcock, J., that “ by ancestor, we understand, in common parlance, one from whom an estate lineally descended, but the word must be taken in connection with the whole subject of the act or instrument in which it is used.”
But it is unnecessary for us to decide that the word ancestor in this section must be limited to a blood relative of the intestate, because giving to that word all the latitude claimed for it under the Ohio cases — that is, any one, whether blood relative or not, from whom the intestate might have inherited the estate, as heir under the statute, in the absence of other or nearer heirs — the descent from Mrs. Palmer would still have to be regulated by the second instead of the first section of the act of 1857. The estate devised to her was a fee simple, and not a mere life estate, and the estate vested in her on the death of her husband in 1856, while the act of 1853, regulating descents, was in force, and the last named act therefore determines how she took the estate, and the relation in which she stood to the devisor. . The first section of the act of 1857 limits estates descendible under it to estates of inheritance the title to which “ shall have come to such intes tate by devise,” etc., “ from any ancestor,” etc. — thereby evidently referring to the time of its acquisition by the intestate, and the relation in which the intestate then stood to the person from whom it was acquired, and not to a relation which the provisions of the act of 1857 might then and thereafter create.
The estate of which Hiram Palmer died seized in 1856, was acquired by him by purchase and not by descent, devise or deed of gift from any ancestor, and consequently the descent from him, had he died intestate, would have been cast under the second section of the law of March 14, 1853 (Swan’s Statutes of 1854, 321, 322), and under the provisions of that
The two previous sections of the statute had defined and limited the course of descents for all estates of inheritance from an intestate, and the order in which his descendants should take, commencing with the nearest, and extending, step by step, to his remotest kindred, and if the claimant thereto is not brought within one or the other of these sections, he can not, in any just or legal sense, be regarded as the heir oi of the kindred of the intestate; he is entirely without the line of descent, and the relation of ancestor and heir can not arise between him and the intestate. The estate is not to devolve upon the husband or wife under the third section, except upon the contingency that the intestate has no kindred whatever; and to suppose that the legislature intended the first section to apply to such a case, is an absurdity. Being dead and without any kindred when the descent was cast from him, there could not, at any time thereafter, be any kindred to which its provisions could be applied; and it is manifest, therefore, that the person from whom an estate is thus de
We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that the estate of inheritance vested in Mrs. Palmer by the will of her deceased husband, upon her death, intestate, descends to the plaintiffs and those united with them in interest, as “ her brothers and sisters, and their representatives,” under the third clause of the second section of the amended act regulating descents and distributions, of April 17, 1857.
Judgment for plaintiffs, quieting them in the title and possession of the lands specified in the petition.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.