100 Ky. 393 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court:
The will of E. J. King was presented to the county court of Whitley county at the January term, 1894, of said court, and some of the heirs of said King resisted its probate, and during the pendency of the contest the county court appointed the appellee curator of said estate, who executed bond and qualified as such curator, and as such took possession of the personal effects of the decedent. At the April term, 1894, the court,, on the trial of the question will or no will, adjudged the said paper to be the true last will and testament of the decedent, and thereupon ordered the same to-record, and from this order admitting said will to record some of the contestants prayed an appeal to the Whitley Circuit Court, but took no appeal until after the appointment of the curator, and at a special term, April, 1894, the appellant, Sharp, was appointed, by said court administrator, with the will annexed, of the estate of said King.
The appellee filed answer to this petition, in which he alleges that “the order of the Whitley County Court, admitting the will of E. J. King to record, was appealed from by Nan E. Laforce, H. Cutleff; * * that the appeal was taken from the order probating said will to the Whitley Circuit Court, and the same has been filed in the circuit court; that the appeal was taken and record filed in the circuit court within twelve months after the said will was probated by the county court.”
Defendant says that the Whitley County Court has no right or authority to appoint the plaintiff administrator, with the will annexed, of the estate of E. J. King; that the said appointment by the Whitley County Court is void.
To this answer appellant filed a reply, in which he denied that the Whitley County Court had no authority to appoint appellant administrator, with the will annexed; denies the appointment by the Whitley County Court was void, or that the Whitley County Court had no jurisdiction to appoint an administrator, etc., and further says that said Sharp Avas appointed administrator of the estate of E. J. King long before any appeal was taken to the Whitley Circuit Court from
On this state of the pleadings the court adjudged the law was for the defendant, and dismissed plaintiff’s petition, rendering judgment for defendant for costs, and from this'judgment appellant has appealed to this court and asks a reversal.
By section 3901 of the Kentucky Statutes, during the contest about the probate of a will or when the court, for any valid cause, shall be delayed in granting-letters testamentary or administrative, it may appoint a curator to collect and preserve the estate of the decedent until probate of the will be granted, etc.
The will of King having been admitted to record it was then the duty of the county court to permit the executor named in the will to qualify as executor; and should the person named in the will as executor decline to qualify, then the court should appoint some suitable person as administrator, with the will annexed.
The county court of Whitley had the jurisdiction and authority to appoint an administrator of said King’s ■ estate, and the appeal to the circuit from the orders of the county court admitting said will to record, did not have the effect to suspend his powers and duties as administrator of said estate.
The appeal from the orders of the county court, admitting to record the will of E. J. King, did not have the effect to suspend appellant’s powers as administrator, and was not an appeal from the orders of the Whitley County Court appointing appellant administrator. The orders appointing an administrator by the county court may be appealed to the circuit court by ány one who is interested, but to suspend the powers of the appointee a supersedeas bond must be given.
But we are referred to section 4851, in which appellee contends that the mere fact of an appeal to the circuit court would have the effect to supersede the appointment of the administrator. We are of the opinion that the only effect of said appeal is to prevent a division, distribution and final settlement of the estate, and are strengthened in this view by the proviso to said section authorizing the circuit court in which proceedings may be had thereafter, pending an appeal, to make an order restraining the further distribution and division of the estate, which shows the meaning of the Legislature; and, if taken as a legislative interpretation of
We think the court erred in its judgment. We are of opinion that upon the pleadings the appellant was entitled to judgment for the recovery of the property ■belonging to the estate of decedent.
Wherefore, the judgment of the lower court is reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.