Davidson v. Davis

Decision Date30 April 1885
Citation86 Mo. 440
PartiesDAVIDSON et al., Plaintiffs in Error, v. DAVIS et al
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

Error to Livingston Circuit Court.--HON. JAMES M. DAVIS, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

L. H. Waters for plaintiffs in error.

(1) As the law stood when the husband died the widow took an estate in fee-simple to the extent of a homestead, and on her death it went to her heirs, lineal and collateral. Skouton v. Wood, 57 Mo. 380; Gragg v. Gragg, 65 Mo. 346; Brown v. Brown, 68 Mo. 388. (2) It was an estate created by the statute and beyond the power of the husband to dispose of by will. Register v. Hensley, 70 Mo. 194; Bryant v. McCune, 49 Mo. 546; Hastings v. Myers, 21 Mo. 519; Reddish v. Walsh, 15 Mo. 537. (3) It vested by operation of law, and any disposition of it, except as authorized by law, was absolutely void. Howe v. McGiven, 25 Wis. 525; Brutten v. Fox, 100 Mass. 234; Cox v. Wilder, 2 Dill. C. C. 46; Hubbell v. Canady, 58 Ill. 425. (4) It was not necessary that the widow should have asserted her claim; it is sufficient if she did nothing to waive or defeat her right. Vogel v. Montgomery, 54 Mo. 584; Cox v. Wilder, 2 Dill. C. C. 46; Myers v. Ford, 22 Wis. 139. (5) Section 15, page 541, Wagner's Statutes, relates to dower in real estate only, and does not affect dower in personalty, nor can it be applied to the homestead. Halbert v. Halbert, 15 Mo. 453; Pemberton v. Pemberton, 29 Mo. 412. A devise, in order to defeat a widow's right to a homestead, must have been in lieu thereof, or utterly inconsistent therewith. Bates v. Bates, 97 Mass. 375; Gragg v. Gragg, 65 Mo. 396. And no provision in a will can defeat the homestead, unless the widow takes under such provision and is thereby concluded from claiming homestead. Meech v. Est. of Meech, 37 Vt. 414; Thompson on Homesteads, sec. 545. (6) The fact that she said to some of her neighbors that she was satisfied with the will was not an admission inconsistent with her claim to a homestead. No sale was made by the administrator until after her death, and no one pretends to have acted upon her statement. Taylor et al. v. Zebb, 14 Mo. 488; Valle v. Clemens, 18 Mo. 457; Wallace v. Truesday, 6 Pick. 456; Newman v. Hook, 37 Mo. 207; Rogers v. Marsh, 73 Mo. 67. (7) In California it has been held that acceptance of letters of administration by a widow who is residuary legatee does not amount to a waiver of homestead. Sulzberger v. Sulzberger, 50 Cal. 385. (8) This is a contest between the widow's heirs and the purchasers at the administrator's sale. The entire estate was sold to pay Rossen's debts, and the purchasers at that sale now insist that the provisions of Rossen's will, under which the widow got nothing, preclude her heirs from claiming a homestead. First Leading Cases in Equity, 536. (9) Plaintiffs are not concluded from claiming the homestead because some of them bid on some of the lands sold by the administrator, nor because they did not commence this suit until nearly two years after that sale. Four hundred acres of land were sold. There is not a word of proof that any of them bid on the lands embraced within the homestead.

C. H. Mansur and L. T. Collier for respondents.

(1) Charles Rossen died in July, 1874, and the law, as it then existed and was in force, must control in this case. Register v. Hensley, 70 Mo. 189; Brown v. Brown, 68 Mo. 390. (2) Mrs. Mahala Rossen was bound to renounce the provisions of the will of her deceased husband, Charles Rossen, made in her favor, before she could lawfully claim a homestead in the lands of which he died seized, and having failed to elect, to repudiate the will and its provisions made in her behalf, and to file her renunciation thereof, she in law elected to take under the will, and there is no homestead right in the plaintiff. (3) The right of election being personal, it is not transmissible by descent. Welch v. Anderson, 28 Mo. 299; Sherman v. Newton, 6 Gray, 307.

HENRY, C. J.

Plaintiffs instituted this suit in the Livingston circuit court, asking to have a homestead set apart to them as heirs of Mahala Rossin, who, they allege, died seized of the same. The defendant had a judgment, and plaintiffs have brought the case here on writ of error.

Charles Rossin, the husband of Mahala, died in 1874, having by will devised to his said wife eighty acres of land in fee, and a life estate in one hundred acres additional, and bequeathed to her all his personal estate. To others he devised other tracts of land which, with that devised to his wife, constituted his farm. His wife he appointed executrix of his will, which was probated in 1874. Mrs. Rossn qualified as executrix immediately after the probate of the will, but died in 1875, about one year after the death of her husband, having continued her residence on the premises in controversy, where she and her husband had lived for many years, They were childless, and the plaintiffs are Mrs. Rossin's heirs at law. After her death, Albert Stephens was appointed administrator de bonis non of her husband's estate, and, pursuant to an order of the probate court of Livingston county, made in July, 1877, sold said land for payment of debts, and John T. Moss purchased, and received the administrator's deed for the same. The order of sale and sale were regular in all respects, and there is no controversy as to their validity, if Mrs. Rossin had no homestead right in the premises. The law in force when Charles Rossin died gave a widow a fee in a homestead, and such was Mrs. Rossin's estate, if she had a homestead right at all.

The defendants claim under Moss. After the death of her husband, Mrs. Rossin qualified and acted as executrix of his last will, and was administering the estate under the will when she died. She repeatedly expressed herself as satisfied with the provisions of the will. She took all of the personal estate of the testator under the will, a provision different from and greater than that made for her...

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    ...for his widow and bequeaths all the rest of his property elsewhere, the widow must elect. Pemberton v. Pemberton, 29 Mo. 413; Davidson v. Davis, 86 Mo. 444; Stoepler v. Silberberg, 220 Mo. 270; Wood v. Trust Co., 265 Mo. 526; Mosely v. Bogey, 272 Mo. 326; Lindsley v. Patterson, 177 S.W. (Mo......
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