88 Ky. 651 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion oe the court.
This action in equity was instituted by the executors! and trustees created by the last will of Thomas L.. Jefferson,, deceased, against the Citizens’ National Bank,, and involves the rights and powers of the executors and trustees under that instrument.
It is evident that the executors are now holding the property as trustees for the devisees, and not as the representatives of the testator.
By the first clause of the will of the testator he-appoints the appellees, Thomas L. Jefferson, Jr., and Henry Jefferson, his executors, and then proceeds to-devise to them all of his property real and personal of every description, for the uses and trusts declared in his will.
The testator, owning a large and valuable estate, made-various specific devises, and directed the manner in which those bequests were to be satisfied, and vested the power m his executors to sell and convey, for the purposes of reinvestment, the real estate devised to his daughters for life, but gave no direction as to the control and management of the personalty devised to them and placed under the control of the executors named as trustees-for his daughters. He left surviving him two-daughters, Mrs. Balmforth and Lillie Jefferson, and directed by the-twenty-first clause of the will that after all the sums specifically devised shall have been paid as directed, “his- “ executors should cause the remainder of his personal- “ estate to be equally divided between his five children*
These appellees having undertaken the execution of the trust, and a large amount of personalty having come into their possession under the twenty-first clause of the will for the two daughters of the testator, the income of which they are entitled to for life, have from time to time found it necessary to invest and reinvest this personalty in order to furnish a profitable income to them (the daughters), and at times to prevent the investment from being lost.
The trustees have the express power conferred on them by the will to sell and reinvest the proceeds of the real ■estate by the written direction or consent of the two daughters, but as to the exercise of such a power, when
The trustees having collected the personal assets of the testator, and ascertained the amount the two daughters-were entitled to, it became their duty, within a reasonble time, to make such investments of this personalty as-
In Luxon v. Wilgus, 7 Bush, 205, the devise was to the nephew of the testator in trust “to manage, invest and pay over to his brother Jarret, and to his “ children from time to time, as he for the best interest " of him or them from time to time shall deem most ben-
We find the doctrine laid down in many of the text-books, that where the fund is once invested in what is regarded as safe securities, that no change can be made without the advice and direction of the
Judgment afiirmed.