60 S.W.2d 931 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1933
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *336 Reversing.
Vernon Ferguson on the 2d day of June, 1923, was an infant, fifteen years of age, residing in Pike county, Ky. C.F. McCoy by proper orders of the county court was appointed and qualified as his guardian. John M. Ferguson, a resident of Pike county, Ky., died testate, leaving surviving him several children, including Vernon Ferguson, Sr. An action was instituted to partition the land owned by John M. Ferguson among the devisees named in his will. Vernon Ferguson, Sr., was allotted 110 acres, and accordingly a deed was executed and delivered to him on the 19th day of April, 1899. Vernon Ferguson, Sr., died intestate, leaving Vernon Ferguson, Jr., surviving him as his only child and heir at law, but left surviving him a widow, Florence Cox Ferguson, who married C.F. McCoy, the present guardian of Vernon Ferguson, Jr. There were born to Florence Ferguson McCoy and C.F. McCoy four children, Ernest, Clyde, Zelma, and Eugene McCoy, who, of course, are half brothers and sisters of Vernon Ferguson, Jr.
Condemnation proceedings were instituted in the United States District Court of the Eastern District of Kentucky to condemn a portion of the 110 acres which descended to Vernon Ferguson, Jr. The land was sold under a judgment of the court, the purchaser paying therefor $15,000, which was paid to C.F. McCoy as guardian for Vernon Ferguson, Jr., on the 2d day of June, 1923. Vernon Ferguson, Jr., married Vadna Ferguson, then died intestate, without issue, still an infant, in the year 1927, leaving her surviving him as his widow. Ernest, Clyde, Zelma, and Eugene McCoy, his half brothers and sisters, and J.M. Ferguson, his grandfather, are his only heirs at law. C.F. McCoy as guardian of Vernon Ferguson, Jr., made settlements with the county court of Pike county, of his accounts as guardian. After the death of Vernon Ferguson, Jr., his grandfather, J.M. Ferguson, filed this action *337 against C.F. McCoy, guardian, to surcharge these settlements, and to require an accounting and the payment of the $15,000 to him, insisting that the money was the proceeds of land arising from a sale in the condemnation proceedings, and that same were real estate under the statutes of descent and distribution of Kentucky, and that under section 1401, Ky. Stats., as grandfather, he was entitled thereto, Vernon Ferguson, Jr., having acquired during infancy, the land by descent from his father, and departed this life before the age of maturity. A judgment was rendered in accordance with the prayer of the petition. On appeal to this court it was reversed because of defect of parties. On its return to the circuit court, Vadna Ferguson, Ernest, Clyde, Zelma, and Eugene McCoy, by appropriate pleadings, were made parties. Vadna Ferguson as widow asserted her rights to the $15,000 as personalty and asked that if it be determined by the court that the $15,000 was not personalty, then she was entitled to dower therein as the widow of Vernon Ferguson, Jr., under section 2132, Ky. Stats. She also, by proper allegations, sought to surcharge the settlements of C.F. McCoy as guardian of Vernon Ferguson, Jr. Ernest, Clyde, Zelma, and Eugene McCoy asserted that the $15,000 was personal property under the statute of descent and distribution and that they and the widow were entitled to the whole of it. Section 1395 and 1403, Ky. Stats. The circuit court on the pleadings and the evidence allowed C.F. McCoy credits totaling $1,235, charged him with $13,765, and decreed that the same having been realized from the sale of land by the United States government in the condemnation proceedings, and Vernon Ferguson having died in infancy, without issue, the residue of the $15,000 was real estate within the meaning of sections 1393 and 1401, Ky. Stats.; that Vadna Ferguson was entitled to 24.3 per cent., or $1,998.35, as of September 8, 1929, as her dower therein, and that J.M. Ferguson, the grandfather of Vernon Ferguson, was entitled to the residue, or 75.7 per cent., amounting to $6,225.32 as of September 8, 1927, with interest. A judgment was so entered against C.F. McCoy as guardian and the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company as surety on his bond. At the time of the rendition of the judgment there were, in the hands of McCoy as guardian on deposit in the Pikeville National Bank, $4,041.33, and a note of T.M. Berry, etc., of $1,500, secured by a mortgage. *338 This cash and note were directed by the judgment to be paid and delivered in part satisfaction of the $13,765 with which the guardian was charged. Relief was denied the half brothers and sisters of Vernon Ferguson, Jr. The parties are here presenting the same contentions they respectively made in the circuit court.
A judicial sale of the land was a conversion of the real estate into personalty. The proceeds in the hands of the guardian, from the moment he received them until the death of the ward, were, and continued to be, personal property as between him and his ward, within the meaning of section 2015, Ky. Stats., et seq. At the death of the ward, only for the purpose of descent and distribution, the proceeds are regarded by the law as real estate. Until his death, they were personal property in the hands of his guardian, and controlled by section 2027 and including section 2043, Ky. Stats., and the construction thereof as has been given them in many cases by this court.
Subsection 6 of section 494 of the Civil Code of Practice provides that real estate owned by persons under disability, such as infancy, unsound mind, or an adult married woman, when sold under the provisions of chapter 14 of the Civil Code of Practice, when such owner shall die without issue, without having received the proceeds, the person who would have been entitled to the property, if it had not been sold, shall be entitled to the proceeds, or the property in which they have been invested. Weisiger v. McDonald,
In McClain v. McClain,
In Haggard v. Rout's Heirs, 6 B. Mon. 247, a testator directed his executrix to sell a particular tract of land and invest the proceeds in other lands. He left surviving him four children, one of whom died in infancy leaving no issue, and for the purpose of disposition, it was held that the proceeds retained the character of real estate notwithstanding the conversion, and passed by descent and distribution to the surviving brothers and sisters.
In Weisiger v. McDonald, supra, on petition of the guardian the infant's land was sold for reinvestment. Before the money derived from the sale was invested, and while it was in the hands of the guardian, the infant died. It was held that the fund realized from the sale of the land stands in place of the land and is governed by the same law. This pronouncement was reiterated in McDonald v. Weisiger, 100 S.W. 832, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 1224. In Williamson v. Williamson,
In Farris v. Bingham,
In Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 3, sec. 1167, the rule is thus stated:
"Where land is taken or purchased under compulsory *340 powers conferred by statute and the owner is sui juris the conversion is effected; but if the owner is an infant or a lunatic or the land is in settlement, the purchase money remains land; there is no conversion. Where the land is sold by an order of court for any purpose it is a fixed principle upon which the court always proceeds that the character of the property shall be changed only so far as may be necessary to accomplish the particular purpose." Story's Equity, vol. 2, sec. 1101.
The rule rests upon the principle that during disability, neither a married woman, infant, nor lunatic can exercise the right of election to take their respective interest as money, and therefore the proceeds will be held in their unconverted character as realty until such election can be legally made. McLean v. Leitch,
The commissioner's report, including the depositions of C.F. McCoy, was filed in the clerk's office on the 27th day of July, 1928. The record discloses that exceptions were filed by C.F. McCoy to certain depositions taken in behalf of the plaintiff on the ground they were not attested or certified by any officer authorized to take depositions, but no exceptions were filed to the depositions of C.F. McCoy. In order to avail themselves of subsee. 2 of section 606, it was required of J.M. Ferguson and Vadna Ferguson to file written exceptions, in the trial court, to his testimony, and to follow up their exceptions by having the court to pass upon the same. Having failed to file written exceptions to his testimony, their right to do so must now be regarded as waived. Black v. Noel's Adm'x,
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed on the original and also on the cross appeal of Vadna Ferguson, with directions to ascertain the credits and the amounts thereof to which the guardian is entitled as we have indicated and for proceedings consistent with this opinion.