Bulgrin v. Schlechte

Decision Date09 January 1911
Docket Number16,248
Citation129 N.W. 272,88 Neb. 278
PartiesALEXANDER A. M. BULGRIN ET AL., APPELLEES, v. ALMA SCHLECHTE, APPELLANT
CourtNebraska Supreme Court

APPEAL from the district court for York county: GEORGE F. CORCORAN JUDGE. Affirmed.

AFFIRMED.

C. F Stroman, for appellant.

A. B Taylor and A. G. Wray, contra.

FAWCETT, J. REESE, C. J., not sitting.

OPINION

FAWCETT, J.

The facts in this case, which the brief of defendant concedes "are not in dispute," are: Albert L. Bulgrin died intestate about October 25, 1889. At the time of his death he was the owner of and occupied as a homestead the southeast quarter of section 33, township 10 north, of range 1 west, of the sixth P. M., in York county, Nebraska. He left surviving four children, Alexander, Paul, Wanda and Robert, and his widow, Emma. In the settlement of his estate the probate court entered the following decree: "It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that said homestead of Albert L. Bulgrin, deceased, descend to Emma Bulgrin, the widow of Albert L. Bulgrin, deceased, in absolute title, subject to the incumbrance on the same, and that she pay to the other heirs their shares as follows": To the four children above named the sum of $ 330.25 each. These sums she never paid. Later on she married one Lewis Schlechte. Defendant was the issue of said second marriage. About October 11, 1899, Emma died, and in the settlement of her estate the county court entered the following decree: "The court finds that the deceased died seized of real estate as follows"- -describing the land as above set out. In that decree the county court also adjudged that the four children of Albert L. and Emma Bulgrin, and the defendant, Alma Schlechte, were the heirs of Emma, deceased, and that the five "are entitled to, and that the said property, both real and personal, descends to them equally, share and share alike." Plaintiffs brought this suit in the district court for York county to quiet their title as against the decrees entered by the county court. The court entered a decree in their favor as prayed, and defendant, by her guardian ad litem, appeals.

As stated in defendant's brief, "the matter resolves itself into a question of law." Defendant contends (a) That what is commonly known as the "Baker act" (laws 1889, ch. 57) was valid, and that the district court erred in holding the decrees of the county court, entered under the terms of the Baker...

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