119 Ky. 582 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
This action involves a construction of the following item of the will of John B. Carpenter, deceased: “(6) I direct the share of my son E. A. Carpenter to be paid into the hands of a trustee to be appointed by the Hart county court, to be used for his benefit and to keep him from want, but that it be not paid into his hands.” The Avill of the father was admitted to probate, and the appellee, Truax Sturgeon, appointed trustee by the Hart county court. Afterward the cestui que trust instituted this action in the Hart circuit court against his trustee, setting up in his petition the foregoing item from his father’s Avill, and alleging, substantially, that for three or four years before his father’s death he (plaintiff) had suffered greatly from paralysis, and was unable to labor for his support and that his father, “probably thinking or believing that his mind was impaired or would become impaired by reason of the paralysis, Avhich this plain
This action is based upon the opinion of this court in the case of Webster v. Bush, Trustee, 39 S. W., 411, 42 S. W., 1124, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 565, which involved the construction of a clause in a Avill in all respects similar in principle to that at bar, in which it Avas held that where a testator devised an estate in trust for his daughter, under the supposition that she was of feeble mind, the court was authorized, upon an allegation that the physical incapacity had ceased to exist, to try this question, and, if it Avas established by the evidence, to discharge the trust. In that case Judge DuRelle delivered a dissenting opinion, which contains an admirable exposition of the law, and from which we adopt the following: “With the wisdom or unwisdom of the clause above quoted from the will this court has nothing to do, except in so far as it might shed light on the intention of the testator if ambiguity existed. There was no ambiguity. The testator had the absolute and unconditional right to place upon the devise to his daughter the limitations which he imposed, and no court has a right to assign to him a motive for these limitations, and, by denying the existence of a reason for that
The question involved in the case at bar is not to be confused with the principle that a dry or simple trust will be vacated by the chancellor upon the request of the cestui que trust. A dry or simple trust is one as to which the trustee has no duties to perform, and the cestui que trust has the entire management of the estate. It is a simple separation of the.equitable and legal estates, which can be united' at the option of the cestui que trust. Woolley v. Preston, 82 Ky., 415. Nor is it to be confounded with those trusts which are created upon a declared condition which has passed away; the reason ceasing, the trust also ceasing. Such, for instance, a trust established for the benefit of a married woman, and she becomes discovert. In that case the trust will cease to exist when the declared disability ceases. Thomas v. Harkness, 13 Bush, 23. The case at bar presents an active trust, where the trustee has the sole management and control of the estate, and the question involved is whether evidence aliunde can be introduced to establish for a testator a motive for his action when he has expressed
It seems to us a safer rule to leave intact this trust — the result of loving foresight reaching into 'the future to shield the object of its solicitude after the heart which it inspired has ceased to beat — than to subject it to the vicissitude of a judicial inquiry based upon the careless opinions of witnesses as to the sufficient restoration of the beneficiary’s mind to warrant the nullification of the will of the donor.
The judgment dismissing the petition is affirmed.