DocketNumber: 5-83-31
Citation Numbers: 470 N.E.2d 492, 14 Ohio App. 3d 235, 14 Ohio B. 264, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 11559
Judges: Cole, Miller, Guernsey
Filed Date: 6/21/1984
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an appeal, filed by the co-executors of the Estate of Howard W. Johnson, from a judgment of the Probate Division, Court of Common Pleas of Hancock County. *Page 236
The transcript of proceedings in this case was stricken from the files by this court. Therefore, our consideration of facts is limited to those disclosed by the remainder of the record, and specifically to the facts used by the trial court in rendering the decision appealed from.
This cause was initiated by a motion, filed by the surviving spouse of Howard W. Johnson, seeking, inter alia, an order from the court below requiring the co-executors of Johnson's estate to either allow her to have possession of the marital residence and property pursuant to R.C.
The court below in its decision, rendered on May 25, 1983, stated that the fact that the surviving spouse was under a restraining order at the time of Johnson's death, prohibiting her from being at the marital residence, and that she had not lived in the residence for a period of approximately eight months prior to Johnson's death, did not bar her rights under the statute.
The lower court also ordered that the surviving spouse be paid the sum of three thousand dollars as and for the fair value of the mansion house for a period of one year.
In the instant appeal, one assignment of error is asserted by the co-executors of the Johnson estate, to wit:
"The Lower Court erred in granting plaintiff's Motion which requested that the plaintiff be allowed to remain in the mansion house or be paid an allowance in lieu thereof."
Appellants contend that the only logical conclusion that follows from the fact that the surviving spouse was not living in the mansion house at the time of Johnson's death is that the surviving spouse did not possess the rights under R.C.
Appellants rely entirely on the case of In re Estate of Lonz
(1940),
"Section 10509-79, General Code, granting to the surviving spouse of a deceased consort the right to remain in the mansion house for one year free of charge does not entitle a husband living separate and apart from his wife for twenty-five years to the occupancy of the mansion house for one year after the wife's death, where the husband never occupied the property after his separation from his wife and she continued to remain therein until her death." (G.C. 10509-79 is the predecessor to R.C.
In making its decision, the court in Lonz, supra, at 469, stated that:
"* * * The statutory words are ``may remain.' Within the purview of the statute, one can not remain on premises where he has not theretofore been or which he has voluntarily or by compulsion of law abandoned."
R.C.
"A surviving spouse may remain in the mansion house of the deceased consort free of charge for one year, except that such real estate may be sold within that time for payment of debts of the decedent, in which event such surviving spouse shall be compensated from the estate to the extent of the fair rental value for the unexpired term, such compensation to have the same priority in payment of debts of estates as the allowance made to the surviving spouse or children."
Appellants do not contend, in this case, that the marital residence here involved is not, in the words of the statute, "the mansion house of the deceased consort."
Notwithstanding the often quoted definition of "mansion house" contained in Scobey v. Fair (1942),
"* * * the parcel of land on which the house is situated and, at the option of the surviving spouse, the household goods contained within the house and the lots or farm land adjacent to the house and used in conjunction with it as the home of thedecedent." (Emphasis added.)
R.C.
Next, we note that it is clear that appellee in this case was, at the time of Johnson's death, his surviving spouse. There had been no divorce of the parties.
Therefore, the only remaining issue concerns the use of the word "remain" in R.C.
We do not agree.
The Lonz court interpreted the statutory words "may remain" very narrowly, i.e., defining the word "remain" to mean only a continuation of a prior state.
There are many instances when one can remain someplace, in the common sense of that word, when they were not theretofore at that place. Indeed, Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1971) 1919, includes, under the word "remain," the following definition: "to stay in the same place or with the same person or group."
A person can plan on taking a trip to Florida, for example, in the near future and "remain" there for two weeks. Similarly, a person can check into a hospital to stay or "remain" there for ten days. That these examples involve definite time frames of "remaining" is also pertinent in the instant case.
R.C.
It is our conclusion that "remain" as used in this statute is used solely to define a duration of time in futuro, and does not limit application to one who was a resident at the time of the decedent's death. One can remain where one has never before been. The word simply defines the duration of stay, not the residence of the occupant.
It was stated in Scobey, supra, at 53, that:
"* * * The purpose of the statute was to preserve the home for the surviving spouse for the period of one year; * * *." (See, also, Dorfmeier v. Dorfmeier [Ohio P.C. 1954], 123 N.E.2d 681.)
We agree that the legislature intended to protect the surviving spouse when it enacted R.C.
This being our interpretation of the language of R.C.
Judgment affirmed.
MILLER, P.J., and GUERNSEY, J., concur.