186 Ky. 320 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
In 1883 T. D. Knox died testate, the owner of two farms and some personal property situated in Boyle county. He left surviving him a widow and six children. By his will, made in 1867, he gave his property to his wife for life with remainder to his children. In October, 1883, he made a codicil, among other things, saying: “My property, both real and personal be equally divided between my children and my wife to have a child’s part in case she should marry, the lands to be divided by commissioners and the portions of any of the children, that one not twenty years old, not to be sold until they are of age, each child’s part to come bach to the other children if they should die without bodily heirs. This codicil to have no force nor effect during the life of my wife or while she remains my widow, but at her death or marriage to become of full force.’"
The widow died in 1918, never having remarried. The six children surviving are parties to this action, which was instituted by Fannie Knox, Emma D. Knox and Virginia K. Kimble against James R. Knox, Mary K. Stephens, Wallace S. Knox and Bettie D. Knox, to have a construction of the will of their father, T. D. Knox, and fco compel James R. Knox to accept a deed of conveyance, and to pay the purchase price named therein, made by Fannie Knox, Emma D. Knox and Virginia K. Kimble, the lands conveyed being the undivided interests of the three daughters named as plaintiffs in certain of the lands of T. D. Knox, which passed under the will. On May 24, 1918, only a few days .after the death of their mother, the life tenant, the three daughters named entered into a written contract with their brother, James R. Knox, to convey to him all their interest in a 248-acre tract of land left by their father. A short time thereafter these plaintiffs prepared and tendered a proper deed to the defendant, James R. Knox, conveying to him three-sixths undivided interest in fee simple in and to the 248-acre tract of land mentioned, but he declined to accept
It is a well recognized rule that when there are two or more periods fixed in an instrument for the happening of a contingency upon which an unlimited estate in land will devolve, that one will be selected which will first vest the fee simple title and give the devisee or grantee an absolute estate. Harvey v. Bell, 118 Ky. 522; Orem v. Campbell, 175 Ky. 210. Applying this rule to the language of the codicil, we must hold that the testator intended, and his language plainly means, that at the death of one of his children childless his part to “come back to the other children” if the death happened during the minority of the child dying, and not at any future time after he attained his majority, as contended by Wallace S. Knox. He insists that the children who are now much above the age of twenty-one years, can not sell or convey their interests in the landed estate of their father, except subject to the contingent interest of the other children, to take effect on the death of the child conveying without bodily heirs because of the alleged limitation contained in the codicil, although there is no residuary estate. This contention is against the settled policy of law which seeks to fix an absolute estate in land in the devisee or grantee at the earliest possible moment rather than to defer it and continue the uncertainty for an indefinite time, as contended by Wallace S. Knox.
The provision in the testamentary paper that the portions of land allotted to the children in case of the death or remarriage of the widow “not to be sold until they (the children) are of age,” only related to the minority of the children, and did not and was not intended to prevent the children from selling their lands after they or either of them arrived at the age of twenty-one years. The rule is that where a thing is granted or forbidden before or after a given time the presumption is that the thing granted or forbidden may be done or performed at any time not within the prohibition, and applying this rule, the children were empowered to sell and transfer their several interests at any time after they became of age, always subject to the right of the life tenant, up to the time of her death.
The testator gave his lands absolutely to his six children after the death of their mother, the life tenant.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.