Lands of Sydow
Lands of Sydow
Opinion of the Court
The widow claims that upon the sale of the homestead she became entitléd to an absolute life estate in the proceeds, and that the court erred in limiting her estate therein to their use only during her widowhood. The estate in the homestead that descends to the widow where the intestate leaves issue is of the quality of a life estate and differs from such estate only in that it may be terminated by remarriage as well as by death. Sub. (2), sec. 2271, Stats. 1913. It is a life estate on condition subsequent that she does not remarry. Ferguson v. Mason, 60 Wis. 377, 387, 19 N. W. 420. This qualified life estate cannot be changed to an absolute life estate by the sale of the homestead. The widow’s interest in the proceeds thereof remains the same as in the land itself, namely, the right to the use thereof during widowhood. Were it otherwise, the provision of the statute that it shall terminate upon remarriage could always be nullified by a sale.
In the present case the widow is twenty-two years of age. Counsel on both sides as well as the trial court confess themselves unable to determine the probable duration of her widowhood, and therefore the present value of her homestead estate could not be ascertained and awarded to her in gross. To us also widowhood is an uncharted sea whose shores the future veils from sight. How long before her barb will reach a haven we cannot venture even a guess, though we are -informed by the insurance department that in Europe there are tables determining the “expectancy” of widowhood at different ages, but that such tables are not in use in the United States. So the court properly held that
Upon the appeal of the minor it is claimed that the homestead is limited to the quantity and value prescribed in sec. 2983, Stats. 1913, to wit, not in excess of forty acres in area of agricultural lands, one quarter of an acre of village or city lots, or in either case of $5,000 in value, and that the court erred in allowing the widow the use for widowhood of the whole purchase price of $7,000.
Before ch. 269, Laws 1901, now sec. 2984a, Stats., was enacted, the court in Ford v. Ford, 70 Wis. 19, 52, 33 N. W. 188, held that though the term “homestead” as used in the will was construed to mean more than a quarter of an acre, the property being city lots, yet since the widow elected not to take under the will but under the law, she thereby limited- her homestead right to the statutory homestead of a quarter of an acre. The limitation of $5,000 in value did not then exist. Hence sec. 2984a, providing that “wherever the word ‘homestead’ is used in the Statutes of 1898 or in any law of this state or in this act, it shall be defined to be the estate or interest in the land as defined and set forth” in sec. 2983, Stats. 1913, was but a declaration of the rule announced in the Ford Case. The statutory definition of the term “homestead” applies as well to the descent of land as to exemptions. The widow, therefore, has a homestead right in only $5,000. If she elects to take her dower interest therein presently she can do so, as provided in the judgment entered. Its value at her age of twenty-two is $1,317.71. This amount she is entitled to presently if she so elects, and the balance of the $5,000, or $3,682.29, should be held as a trust fund the income of which should be paid her during her widowhood. If she does not elect to now
It follows that the widow takes nothing upon her appeal, and that upon the appeal of the minor the judgment is modified in accordance with the opinion, and as so modified is affirmed with costs to the minor.
By the Court. — Ordered accordingly.
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