120 Ky. 251 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion by
Reversing.
Tiie will of W. F. Norton, Jr., contains the following devise:
“I give to my nearest kin on earth, my two double cousins, Mary Morton and G-abrielle Morton, my house (the family home) 817 Fourth street between. Broadway and York, Louisville, Ky., and every thing of ever)' nature contained therein, and also my two stores in Paducah, Ky. — one occupied by the Hart Hardware Company, and one by Friedman, Kieler & Company, the income from said two stores which is payable monthly, to he used in the first place, in paying all taxes on said two stores and all taxes on the family home, above named, in Louisville, Ky. and the remainder of such income to go toward the maintenance of said aforesaid family home. In case it should he found out that the income from said two Paducah stores, after paying all the taxes named above there should not-be left sufficient money to properly maintain the family home, then in that case under the advice of the executors named in my will said two valuable Paducah stores can be sold for the best possible price, for cash, and the proceeds of such sale must be deposited in the Fidelity Trust and Safety Vault Company, as a fund to be used only for the mainte*255 nance of tlie family home, 817 Fourth street, Louisville, Ky., which family home must neyer be mortgaged or sold. (My suite in said home consisting of my room, my mother’s room and bath room, must be kept intact and never be used or occupied by any one.) lir the event of the death of either one of the two cousins, named above, the interest of that one to belong to the other of the two cousins. If Gabriel Morton should be the last to die, then the said family'home to be the property of his daughter, Gabrielle Morton, for her own use, and absolutely free from the use of her husband, if then married or to be married thereafter; then on the other band, if Mary Morton should be the last to die, then the family home to be the property of her half sister, Aldine N. Morton, in her own right and absolutely free and clear of the use of 'any husband she might then have, or ever to have thereafter.”
This action was instituted by Mary Morton, one of the devisees under the will of "W. F. Norton, Jr., against her co-devisees, Gabriel Morton, Aldine Morton, and Gabrielle Morton, the latter being an infant under 14 years of age, to obtain a construction of the above clause and a sale of the real estate devised. The Fidelity Trust Company, statutory guardian, of Gabrielle Morton, was also made a defendant. It was averred in the petition that by the devise in question, the property therein named' vested absolutely in fee simple in Mary Morton and Gabriel Morton upon the death of W. F. Norton, Jr., and that neither Aldine Morton nor the infant, Gabrielle Morton, had any interest whatever in any of the property devised. This Anew of the matter was based on the theory that the provisions of the devise as to how the property should go in the event of the death of Mary Morton or Gabriel Morton, or both of them, ought to be construed
From the averments of the answer of Gabriel Morton and that of the Fidelity Trust Company, guardian of Gabrielle Morton, it appears that Gabriel Morton, though denying that his daughter had any. interest in the property in question, in order to avoid any complication arising from the assertion of such interest in her behalf by the guardian, proposed to the latter that, if her claim to the entire property was released, and it was allowed to be- sold as the property of Mary Morton and himself exclusively, he would give to Gabrielle Morton one-lialf of his half of the proceeds of the sale, and, in any event, not less than $25,000, which sum was to go into the hands of her guardian for investment on her account and for her benefit. The compromise thus proposed was accepted by the guardian upon the supposed authority conferred by sec. 2030, Ky. St. 1903, which provides that a guardian '“with leave of the court, may compound a debt or demand, or settle or compromise any controversy concerning the lands of his ward, when the interests of the ward will be subserved thereby.” This-compromise the guardian presented to the court in its answer.
Numerous cases have been decided by this court in which it was held that, where an estate is given by will, which may be defeated upon the happening of a contingency, and there is no other period apparent or intended, in which the event shall occur, it shall refer to an event happening within the lifetime of the .testator. (Wren v. Hynes, 20 Metc. 129; Wills v. Wills, 85 Ky., 486, 9 Ky. Law Rep., 76, 3 S. W., 900; Crozier v. Cundall, 99 Ky., 202, 18 Ky. Law Rep., 116, 35 S. W. 546; and Carpenter v. Hazelrigg, 103 Ky., 538, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 231, 45 S. W., 666.) But this rule does not obtain when the will shows on its face that the event to which the contingency refers is, in contemplation of the testator, to occur after his own death. (Hart v. Thompson, 3 B. Mon., 488; Moore v. Moore, 12 B. Mon., 660; McKay v. Merrifield, 14 B. Mon., 322; Harris v. Berry, 72 Bush., 114; Montgomery v. Montgomery, 11 Ky. Law Rep., 88, 11 S. W., 780; Varble, Jr., v. Phillips, 14 Ky. Law Rep., 364, 20 S. W., 306; Harvey v. Bell, &c., 26 Ky. Law Rep., 381, 81 S. W., 671.) If the words of survivorship contained in the clause of the will under consideration be construed as referring to the period of the testator’s death, then, since both Mary Morton and Gabriel Morton survived the testator, the result would, of course, be to vest in them the title to all the property in fee simple, which
¡The nest question to be considered is, should the
In arriving at the conclusions herein expressed ,we are not unmindful of the benefits that would doubtless result to the infant appellant from the sale of the property in question and compromise agreed upon by the father and guardian, but to allow such a disposition of the property devised would be to utterly disregard the wishes and purpose of the testator, and, in effect, set aside his will without the form of a contest. As, in our opinion, the sale of the property should not be permitted, it is unnecessary to determine whether the statutory guardian of appellant had authority to effect the compromise made in'her behalf.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a dismissal of the petition.