47 Ky. 478 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1848
delivered the opinion of the Court.
ject the trust estate to the payment of a store account of the complainants, for goods furnished to the cestui que trust, at the request of Mrs. Campbell, on the credit of the trust fund, and on the faith of her promise that it was, and should be bound for them. The adult defendants did not answer. The correctness of the account, the suitableness of the articles to the wants and Tins bill was filed by Brannin & Co. against Eliza T. Campbell and her husband and children, and Ii. Allen, the trustee of Mrs. Campbell and her children, to sub-
The will which creates the trust, devises one fifth part of the testator’s estate to trustees, for the sole use and benefit of his daughter, Eliza T. Campbell, and her ■children which she now has and which she may hereafter ¡have, during her lifetime, and after her death, for her said children and their heirs, forever^ The primary ■object of this devise, was to secure to Mrs. Campbell ■and her family of children, a comfortable support out of •the trust estate during her life. The estate was devised •to trustees to secure its proper application and management, and to keep it from being disposed of by the husband and from subjection to his debts. In the absence of any interferance by the trustees, and on their failure to appropriate the estate or its profits, to the support of the family/we have no doubt that Mrs. Campbell, as the principal beneficiary and on the ground of necessity and of presumed authority from the trustees, might obtain , the necessary supplies for herself and the family of which she had charge, upon the credit of the trust estate, and with the effect of charging, not only her own interest therein, but the interest of her children also, for whose support as well as her own, the supplies might be necessary. / And as the goods in the present case were suitable and necessary, and were procured by and for Mrs. Campbell under the circumstances just stated, and upon the credit of the estate, and on her pledge of its liability, we think this amounts to a-charge upon the
The will does not, in our opinion, admit of a construction which would separate the interest of Mrs. Campell from that of her children, or which would authorize any compulsory separation or partition of the estate, unless in some case of flagant abuse or urgent necessity. A proper charge against Mrs. Campbell, incurred for the support of the family, is no more a charge upon her interest in the estate than upon that of her children. If a charge upon the estate at all, it is a charge upon the interests of all.
Jt is true, the principal fund should, as far as practicable, remain unimpaired for the benefit of the family
The note of T. Campbell, the husband of the beneficiary, which seems to have been taken at one time for so much of the account as was then due, is no bar to the relief sought by the bill, inasmuch as it was not taken in discharge or satisfaction of the debt. And although it tends to the inference that the account was raised upon his credit, yet as that inference is repelled by the proof, it can only be regarded as additional or collateral security, and not as a merger of the demand.
The answer of the guardian ad litem for the infant defendants, merely calling for proof, is not regarded as raising any question as to the statute of limitations, or as presenting any special matter in bar. The Court was not bound to apply the statue for their benefit, when it had not been relied on, and the complainants had not been called on to show any matter in avoidance of its application.
The objection that the Court should not have decreed payment by the trustee upon his failure to answer, without having appointed some person to defend for him, when the complainants had in their amended bill alledged his incompetency, from mental alienation, to discharge the duties of the trust, is not made in the regular assignment of errors, and could not on that account be properly regarded as a ground of reversal. But we remark, that although the suggestion of the complainants is unanswered, it does not place the trustee in the atti
Without noticing particularly, other and minor objections deemed untenable, the decree is affirmed.