Woods v. Shelton
Woods v. Shelton
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Complainant, Thomas Woods, suing as the special administrator of his deceased wife, Mrs. Alice Woods, brings the bill in 'this case against McKinney Shelton, the executor of the decedent, to recover certain chose/* in action, consisting of certificates of deposit in banks and promissory notes, the general estate of the decedent,
McKinney Shelton, as executor, answers, and says in defense that complainant waived his marital right to administer and reduce said assets to possession, and consented to the disposition of them made by his wife, which action, since the probate of the will, is binding upon him, and, further, that complainant elected to take under the will by accepting a devise made therein to him, and thereby consented to all its provisions, and cannot now be heard to attack any of them.
The facts disclosed in the record are as follows: Mrs. Alice Woods owned certain real estate, a lot, in Chattanooga, valued at $150, and had deposited in banks in that city about $2,000, and held notes on'different persons, in all about $250, all her general estate, none of which had been reduced to possession by her husband, Thomas Woods. A few days previous to her death, June 10, 1910, without the knowledge and consent of her husband, she made and published a will, devising the real estate to her husband, and her personal estate to her brothers and sisters; the largest legacy, $600, being given to her sister, Mrs. Little. In a day or two after her death, complainant was informed of the execution of the will, and called at the office of the county court clerk, where it had been filed, about June 14, and read it. It was probated in common form July .4. Previous to the probate, but after he had read the will and knew its contents, complainant delivered a passbook, evidencing a deposit in a bank, and some other papers belonging to
Tbe action of the county court in refusing to vacate tbe probate, and in appointing complainant special administrator for tbe purposes stated, was correct; and complainant may, as such special administrator, sue for
The law of Tennessee in regard to the power of a married woman to dispose of her personal estate by will is well settled. She has the absolute power to dispose of personal property held as a separate estate without the consent of her husband. It is otherwise as to her general estate. In order to make a valid will of it, the husband must consent to the particular will made. His consent may be written or verbal, and express or implied; but it must amount to a waiver of his marital right to the property disposed of. It may be given in the lifetime of the wife, or after her death, and after probate of the will it is irrevocable and binding upon him. Pritchard on Wills and Administration, sec. 84; Page on Wills, sec. 89; Van Winkle v. Schoonmaker, 15 N. J. Eq., 384; Kurtz v. Saylor, 20 Pa., 209; Cutter v. Butler, 25 N. H., 343, 57 Am. Dec., 331; George v. Bussing, 54 Ky. (15 B. Mon.), 558.
We are of the opinion that the complainant, by his action and conduct after the death of his wife, with full knowledge of the disposition she had made of her property, waived his marital rights and assented to her will, and that after the probate he could not withdraw his
We are also of the opinion that the action of complainant in accepting the devise of the real estate made to him was an assent to all the provisions of the will, and he cannot now controvert any of them. A beneficiary of a will must accept all its provisions, or reject them all. He cannot elect to take those which are in his favor, and reject those which are prejudicial to- him. Underhill on the Law of Wills, sec. 726; Jarman on-Wills, vol. 1, p. 415.
.The testatrix had the absolute right to devise the real estate given her husband, as he had no curtesy in it. The personal property which the testatrix devised, it is true, was not that of her husband; hut he had the right to administer upon her estate, reduce to possession and appropriate the property. When he accepted the devise of the real estate, he assented to the disposition made of the personal estate, and thus waived his right to administer upon and appropriate it. This is a clear case of election, and the complainant is hound by his action.
Thé decree of the chancellor, dismissing complainant’s hill, will he affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas Woods v. McKinney Shelton
- Status
- Published