Court Opinion

ID: 4896260
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:57:58.379857+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:34.230965
License: Public Domain

Henry, Associate Justice.
Mrs. Annie E. Pierce, surviving widow of John T. Pierce, applied to the County Court for an order setting apart to her and her two minor children, a son and a daughter, the exempt property belonging to the estate of herself and her deceased husband, and for allowances for a year’s support, and in lieu of exempt-property not existing in kind.
The administrator opposed the application. On appeal to the District Court the cause was tried by the judge, who filed his conclusions of fact, from which it substantially appears that the deceased was at the time of his death a practicing lawyer, owning as part of the community estate of himself and his surviving wife a law office and law library; that he died insolvent, leaving two minor children, a son and a daughter, who owned no property; that the surviving widow owned a separate estate of the value of several thousand dollars, including the residence in which the family lived at the time of the death of the husband; that the deceased occupied the law office up to the date of his death; that, at the date of the death of the husband, in addition to the law office, residence, and library, he owned a pair of mules, a wagon, household and kitchen furniture, and implements of husbandry, but none of the other property exempted by law from forced sale; that it required forty dollars per month for the daughter, and thirty dollars per month for the son, for food, clothing, education, and other incidental expenses, for the twelve months next succeeding the death of their father.
The court’s conclusions of law, in pursuance of which a decree was rendered, were as follows: That the following exempt property be set. apart for the benefit of the widow and her minor children:
All household and kitchen furniture, and all implements of husbandry.
All the books belonging to the law and family libraries, and all portraits and pictures.
Two mules and a wagon and forty dollars for their rent, collected by the administrator.
The land on which the law office was situated, and the rent received for it by the administrator; that the widow was not entitled to any allowance for a year’s support, and that four hundred and eighty dollars be allowed for year’s support of the daughter, and three hundred and sixty dollars for that of the son, and that four hundred and twenty dollars be allowed the widow and children in lieu of exempt property not belonging to the estate.
From this decree the administrator prosecutes this appeal, and urges the following objections:
1. The court erred in finding as a fact that the deceased husband was a practicing lawyer at the time of his death, and in its conclusion of law that his law office and law library were exempt from forced sale.
2. The court erred in finding that the son did not have any separate *529estate, because the evidence shows that he was manumitted by his father and was earning when his father died seventy-five dollars per month, all of which was his property, amounting to forty-five dollars per month more than was necessary for his support. (The evidence shows that before his death the father, by writing, released to his son all right to control him as well as all claim to wages earned by him.)
3. The allowance to the daughter was excessive.
4. The mules and wagon being of the value of two hundred and twenty dollars, the allowance of four hundred and twenty dollars in lieu of exempt property not on hand in kind was excessive.
The law makes it the duty of the court to set apart to the widow and minor children of the deceased, when they do not have property adequate to their maintenance in their own rights, sufficient for their support for one year from the time of death of the testator or intestate.
ISTo allowance was made to the widow, because she owned separate property adequate to her maintenance. Neither the son nor daughter owning such property, an allowance was properly made to each of them, the amount of which, as fixed by the court, we can not say is unsupported by the evidence. The fact that the son was earning wages for his personal services and allowed to appropriate them to his own use did not deprive him of the right to demand and take the allowance that the law gave him out of his deceased father’s estate.
The mules and wagon being on hand in kind were required to be turned over to the widow and children without regard to their value. The other descriptions of personal property, except one year’s supply of provisions, not being found among the effects of the deceased, it was the duty of the court to make to the widow and children an allowance in lieu thereof not to exceed five hundred dollars. In estimating the five hundred dollars of value the court properly declined to include the articles of exempt property existing and turned over in kind.
If the decedent abandoned permanently his profession before his death the exemption of his law office and law library thereby ceased. There is some evidence in the record tending to show that he had done so, but there is some to the contrary.
The court’s finding that he had not abandoned his profession is sufficiently supported by the evidence, and we do not feel either inclined or at liberty to disturb it.
The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Delivered October 18, 1889.