185 Ky. 140 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Mary W. McBrayer died testate and a resident of Anderson county on July 19, 1915. Her will, which was executed on November 22,1911, is as follows:
“I, Mary W. McBrayer of Lawrenceburg, Anderson county, Kentucky, do make this my last will and testament, hereby revoking all other wills made by me.
“To Percy T. Whilden — son of Mary Moore Whilden —I will one-third interest in my homestead in Lawrence-burg, Kentucky, to be left in trust of Charles M. Dedman until he reaches the age of twenty-one.
“To Wallace M- Bartlett and McBrayer Moore, I will equal shares in my homestead — with furniture, library .and pictures, my silver I give to McBrayer Moore.
*141 “To my brother, J. W. Wallace of Roanoke, Mo., I give one thousand dollars, and I wish my niece, Sallie H. McKee, to have one thousand dollars. I hold of my nephew, Chas. M. Dedman of Harrodsburg, Ky., for fifty-four hundred dollars, dated April 19th, 1892.
“On this note he has been paying an annual interest of six per cent. — my nephew has not only paid the interest due on this note, but on July 7, 1910, he paid me fifteen hundred dollars on the principal of said note, and will probably pay other sums as my needs may require. I therefore devise to Chas. M. Dedman the sum of fifty-four hundred dollars, but this devise is to be credited by whatever part, if any, of the aforesaid note which may remain unpaid at my death. ’ ’
Percy T. Whilden, Wallace M. Bartlett and McBrayer Moore, the devisees of the homestead, were not related to the testatrix, but were the descendants of her deceased husband. A few months prior to her death, the testatrix sold her homestead to Mrs. Wallace M. Bartlett, one of the devisees, for the sum of $12,000, of which $4,000 was paid in cash, and a note executed for the balance. After the death of the testatrix, the note was paid to the administrator with the will annexed.
In this action to settle the'estate of the testatrix, the devisees, Percy T. Whilden, Wallace M. Bartlett and Mc-Brayer Moore claimed that they were entitled to the proceeds of the note given in part payment for the homestead. Their claim was contested by J. W. Wallace and Sallie H. McKee, the heirs of the testatrix. On final hearing the chancellor adjudged that the devise of the homestead was revoked or adeemed by the sale thereof made by the testatrix during her lifetime. The devisees appeal.
Formerly a sale by a testator, after making his will, of either land or personal property thereby devised or bequeathed, was a revocation of the devise or an ademption of the legacy. It was not a question of intention. The ademption was effected upon the principle that the subject was annihilated or its condition so changed that nothing remained to which the terms of the will could apply. Wickliffe’s Ex’r v. Preston, et. ux., 4 Met. 178; Durham’s Adm’r v. Clay, 142 Ky. 96, 134 S. W. 153. ¡Since the adoption of the Revised Statutes, however, the rule is otherwise as to devises and bequests to an heir of the testator, no ademption being effected by a subsequent sale of the property devised or bequeathed, unless the
Judgment affirmed.