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Estates and Trusts

Michigan Law Review

1941

Wife

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Law

Wills - Joint And Mutual Wills - Contracts To Bequeath And Devise - Statute Of Frauds, Charles J. O'Laughlin Dec 1941

Wills - Joint And Mutual Wills - Contracts To Bequeath And Devise - Statute Of Frauds, Charles J. O'Laughlin

Michigan Law Review

The husband and wife made joint and mutual wills, each giving to the survivor a life interest in his or her separate property with the remainder to their foster daughter, the plaintiff. The wife died first, but the husband destroyed the entire will, and took possession of all the wife's property. The husband then died intestate, and plaintiff brought suit against the heirs to enforce the dispositions made by the joint and mutual will. Plaintiff introduced evidence to show that the will was the product of a contract, and therefore irrevocable. Defendant objected on the grounds that the agreement was …


Wills - Joint And Mutual Wills - Contracts To Bequeath And Devise - Statute Of Frauds, Charles J. O' Laughlin Nov 1941

Wills - Joint And Mutual Wills - Contracts To Bequeath And Devise - Statute Of Frauds, Charles J. O' Laughlin

Michigan Law Review

Husband and wife made joint and mutual wills, each giving to the survivor a life interest in his or her separate property with the remainder to their foster daughter, the plaintiff. The wife died first, but the husband destroyed the entire will, and took possession of all the wife's property. The husband then died intestate, and plaintiff brought suit against the heirs to enforce the dispositions made by the joint and mutual will. Plaintiff introduced evidence to show that the will was the product of a contract, and therefore irrevocable. Defendant objected on the ground that the agreement was not …


Wills - Provisions For Construction Of The Will By Umpire Named By Testator, Alfred I. Rothman May 1941

Wills - Provisions For Construction Of The Will By Umpire Named By Testator, Alfred I. Rothman

Michigan Law Review

Testatrix created a trust and bequeathed one-fifth of the income to her son W and to S, his wife, with a proviso that if S survived her husband such income should not be paid to her in case she remarried. S divorced Wand remarried. Under a clause in the will giving them the power to determine with finality any question as to the construction or administration of the will, the executors and trustees construed the will to mean that S was not to receive any further share of the income, that testatrix would consider the divorce and remarriage during …


Contracts - Consideration - Moral Obligation To Pay For Services Rendered In Past, Michigan Law Review Apr 1941

Contracts - Consideration - Moral Obligation To Pay For Services Rendered In Past, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

After decedent's wife died, claimants, her mother and sister, at the request of the decedent, broke up their home and came to live with him, to keep house for him and to care for his children. These services continued for ten years, at which time the decedent gave claimants his promissory notes aggregating $2,000. They entered these notes as claims against his estate. Held, the claimants' services, even if rendered gratuitously, were performed at the decedent's request and raised a moral obligation which was sufficient consideration for the notes. In re Schoenkerman's Estate, (Wis. 1940) 294 N. W. …


Trusts - Confidential Relationship - Imposition Of Constructive Trust On Transferee Of Land On Oral Promise To Reconvey, Michigan Law Review Apr 1941

Trusts - Confidential Relationship - Imposition Of Constructive Trust On Transferee Of Land On Oral Promise To Reconvey, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

Plaintiff was induced to transfer his half interest in realty to his mother, because of her and his sister's fear that the income from the land, to which the mother was entitled during her life, might be tied up by the son's wife with whom he was having marital difficulties. There was no written evidence of the trust, but the mother had promised that she would act as trustee until the marital difficulties were settled, and then reconvey. Thereafter she conveyed to the sister, who, with knowledge of the agreement, refused to reconvey. Held, because of the confidential relationship …