15 S.W.2d 513 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1929
Affirming.
The parties to this appeal are the children and the administrator with the will annexed of F.C. Parepoint, who died in 1925. The suit was brought to obtain a construction of his will, the material portion of which is as follows:
"I desire that all my honest and just debts be paid as soon as convenient. I give all my personal property and all real estate to my wife, Linnie E. Parepoint, during her lifetime to hold to have possession and control while she lives. And at her death all of my property to be divided among my children equally, namely, Charles F. Parepoint, Sudie L. Gardner, Malinda B. Lowry, Kate E. Mastins and Elizabeth H. Lee. But if any one of my children should die before my wife, Linnie E. Parepoint, or afterwards, having no bodily heirs their part is to be divided equally among brothers and sisters if living, if not equally among their bodily heirs."
Appellants assert that the testator devised an absolute estate to his children, subject only to the life estate of his widow, and that the following sentence which undertook to restrict the devise is a limitation over, and hence is void under numerous opinions of this court. Such decisions are rested upon the theory that, having *641
granted an absolute estate, there was nothing left upon which a restriction or devise over might operate. "But," as stated in Reed, etc., v. Williams, etc.,
In Ewering v. Ewering, etc.,
There is a clearly expressed purpose to give a life estate to the widow and a defeasible fee in the remainder to the testator's five children. The term was defined and illustrated in Cooper's Adm'r v. Clark,
"A defeasible fee is created when the devise is to one with a proviso that it shall be defeated on the happening of a named contingency as where the devise is to A., and if he should die without issue then to B. In such case A. takes a fee subject to be defeated on his death without issue. The devise to B. will never take effect if A. die leaving issue, for the estate becomes absolute in A. and his heirs, his issue taking by descent from A. and not under the will. Ramsey v. Wills,
85 Ky. 492 (3 S.W. 900 , 9 Ky. Law Rep. 76)."
The appellants say if the children did not acquire this bounty in fee, as above suggested, then that the time fixed for the defeasance is the death of the life tenant; that is, if a child should die without bodily heirs before the widow, that one's share would become the property *642
of the remaining brothers and sisters or the children of such who predeceased the one dying without issue; but if such a one should survive the widow, he would become immediately vested with the absolute fee-simple title in his proportional share of the estate. In the absence of a provision in a will indicating a contrary purpose, it is held that where an estate is devised to one for life with remainder in fee to another unless he should die without leaving children, the period to which the qualification refers, and the time of defeasance, is the termination of the life estate. Goodman v. Carpenter,
In Walton v. Bohannon,
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the chancellor properly interpreted this will.
Counsel for appellants asked the court to allow them a fee chargeable to the estate inasmuch as the administrator *643
had declined to bring the suit and their services had inured to the benefit of all the parties. The lower court refused to allow such a fee, and in their brief counsel are asking a review of that order by this court. It is sufficient to say that the attorneys are not parties to this appeal, and this court is without authority to review the order. Mainous v. Brown Shoe Co., etc.,
The judgment is affirmed.