130 Ky. 125 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Mrs. Susan Mallone died intestate, leaving surviving her three children — the appellant Annie Lee Crain, wife of L. P. Crain, and J. C. and W. S. Mallone. This action was brought to settle her estate and distribute the proceeds between her children. J. O. Mallone was a person of unsound mind, and the guardian ad litem appointed to defend for him sought, to charge Mrs. Crain and Y7. S. M/allone with advancements made to them by Mrs. Mallone. Mrs. Crain and W. S. Mallone admitted in a pleading that they had received from their mother advancements
Ky. St. 1903, section 1407, provides that: “Any real or personal property or money, given or devised by a parent or grandparent to a descendant, shall be charged to the descendant of those claiming through him in the division and distribution of the undevised estate of the parent or grandparent ; and such party shall receive nothing further therefrom until the other descendants are made proportionately equal with him, according to his descendible and distribu
Nor are the views herein expressed in conflict with the opinion in Central Kentucky Asylum v. Knighton, 113 Ky. 156, 23 Ky. Law* Rep. 2380, 67 S. W. 366. In that ease the court was considering, the meaning' and effect of a statutory provision authorizing the State, under certain conditions, to recover from the parent the board of the child while an inmate of an asylum; and it was said that the statute only applied to infants,. and not an adult child. It is true the court in the course of the opinion said: “Being entitled to the services of the child until of age, there is some reason for holding the parent to. a legal liability when the necessities of the child require that he should be supplied with food and clothing. • But when of full age, the parent being entitled to no control over the child, and having no right to his custody or services, no such legal obligation exists and none can be created by statute unless by consent of the parent. He may contract to support the child, and it would be binding, but not otherwise.” This rule might be invoked in this case if it was sought by strangers to charge Mrs. Mallone with care and attention to her son — a question, however, it is not necessary to decide in this case. But the fact that the parent might, not be liable to third persons for the support of adult children is a long, step from proving that the parent may himself charge them under facts like the ones shown by this record. It does not follow from the proposition that the parent may be exempt from liability at the hands of third persons that he
Looking at the question as it is presented by the record, we cannot find any authority, statutory or otherwise, that would warrant us in holding that J. C. Mallone should be charged as an advancement with his maintenance; and the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.