Court Opinion

ID: 7095863
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:10:55.567973+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:14.815127
License: Public Domain

Cole, J.
1. Will, I. By the answer and cross-petition and the demurrers and motions connected therewith, the question of the true construction of the will of William H. Huston, deceased, is presented. This question, however, was decided by this court in the case of Huston v. Huston, 29 Iowa, 347, and it was there held, that by the concluding sentence of the devise to this defendant, Jonathan B. Huston (set out in the above. statement), he took his devise with the liability to pay all the debts of the estate, and that this burden was not limited to the value of the home place and the judgment. It is true that the court then regarded the question as a very close one, and the construction was adopted, not without doubt as to its correctness— one member of the court did not concur in, nor did he dissent from that construction. Two members of the present court were not then on this bench, but they concur, as does the whole court, in the construction there given as being the most reasonable one, for that it gives some force and meaning to all the language used. In the rulings made by the circuit court upon the motions and demurrers now assigned as' error, *670the construction of the will heretofore given by this court was followed and adhered to. They are therefore affirmed.
g_declara.tions of testator. II. The defendant offered to prove by several witnesses the parol declarations of the testator respecting the bequest to plaintiff being in satisfaction of the debts sued on . an(j ajg0 respecting the devise to defendant, and as to his intention that defendant should have the most of his property, etc. These were excluded, and properly so. The will must speak for itself. Certain questions were also asked respecting the residence of the testator and his health for years prior to his decease; the amount of his estate and the amount of his debts, etc. These were also properly excluded. For, while the situation and circumstances surrounding a testator' may properly be given in evidence in aid of the interpretation of his will, yet those offered in this case were quite immaterial for that purpose, as to the clause in question.
8by deMoI-’to by III. It was also claimed by counsel for defendant and denied by the court below, that the devise to plaintiff by the testator of two small parcels of land, a shot-gun, dictionary and a judgment in the testator’s favor of $125 against one William Jackson, was a satisfaction or discharge of the indebtedness sued on. The modern doctrine appears to be that the presumption of satisfaction of a debt, by legacy given, is not to be extended; and the presumption was never applied except where the legacy was at least of an equal amount and of the same character as the debt. Chancey’s case, 1 P. Wms. 408, and notes to it in 2 Lead. Cas. in Eq. (3d Am. ed.) 564, et seq.; Eaton v. Burton, 2 Hill, 576; Cloud v. Clinkenbeard, 8 B. Monr. 397. See also 2 Redf. on Wills (2d ed.) 184-193, and cases cited; (1st ed., pp. 514-525). Here, there is neither equality in amount, nor similarity in character.
i statute ow limitations. IY. The defendant also pleaded and -relied upon the statute of limitations. There is and can be no question that as against the testator, if alive, or' as against his executor th.e note given June 10, 1860, is barred by the statute, this action having been commenced July 25, 1871. *671But it is claimed by plaintiff and denied by defendant, that since the defendant accepted the devise to him in April, 1867, a fact which is conceded, that the debt was not then barred as against W. H. Huston, and that by the acceptance of the devise the defendant then made an implied promise to pay the debt, and that promise is not barred. The respective counsel argue the question, but neither of them refer to any authority directly deciding the question. We have seen no case in point.
It appears to us that the promise implied by the acceptance of the devise is, that he will pay all the debts of the testator which are enforceable against his estate, whether they are less or more than the value of the portion of the estate devised to him, and that in order to collect the debt from such a devisee, it must be such a debt as could at the time be enforced against the estate; and that any defense available by an executor against the debt may be used by the devisee. In this respect, the liability of such a devisee is different from that of a person who makes a promise to pay a specific debt for another. But, even in this last case, the promise must be in writing, as also must a promise be in writing in order to be sufficient, under our statute, to defeat the bar by limitation. Notwithstanding the devise, its acceptance by the devisee and his liability thereby, the estate still remains liable to the creditor, and it seems to us that the creditor cannot hold his cause of action until it is barred'as against the estate,-his principal debtor, and then enforce it against the devisee, who. stands to the creditor only as a surety, though as to the estate he may be principal. The circuit court held otherwise, and so instructed the jury. For this error the judgment is
Reversed.