120 Ky. 557 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion by
Affirming.
On the 8th of September, 1898, Jacob A. Penn was the owner of two valuable tracts of land in Scott county, ICy., and something near $3,000 worth of personal estate. On that date he made and executed his will, and, after making several .special bequests, the testator, in the fifth clause of his will, used the following language: “I will to my wife, Sallie A. Penn, all the balance of my personal property of every description. I also will to my said wife for her life all real estate of which I die possessed; at the death of my said wife, should she survive me, it in my will that all of said real estate shall be sold and the proceeds thereof distributed in the following manner: To the children of my two sisters, Charlotte McLeod and Mary Ellen Russell, both of Montgomery county, Ind.,” etc.
On the 13th day of November, ,1899, the testator added the following codicil: “It appearing that the personal property bequeathed absolutely by me to my wife, together with the income from my other real estate, will be ample to meet my wife’s needs, I desire and direct that place on which I now reside, containing about 275 acres, be sold as soon'as practicable after my death and the proceeds at once divided
On the 30th day of July, 1901, after the date of the will and the codicil, Jacob A. Penn leased the farm other than the home place to one Alex. Lawless, for the term of three years, for the price of $800 per year, Lawless executing his three promissory notes to Jacob A. Penn, due March 1, 1903, March 1, 1904, and March 1, 1905, respectively. Jacob A. Penn died in the month of June, 1902, and his will was probated July 21, 1902, and the appellant, Field McLeod, qualified as his executor. McLeod took possession of these n'otes. The widow, Sallie A. Penn, departed this life testate on the 16th tof September, 1902, and the appellee, Frank Kearney, was appointed and qualified as her executor. It further appears from the agreed state of facts that at the time of the death of Jacob A. Penn there were taxes assessed against the real and personal estate, which were unpaid, amounting to $326.50.
The questions to he determined by this court are these: Who is entitled to the Lawless rent notes or their proceeds under the will of Jacob A. Penn? Whose duty is it to pay the $326.50 taxes for 1902, and shall it he paid out of tire personal estate only, or proportioned so as to charge the real estate with part of the taxes, and, if so, what part? Whose duty is it to pay the taxes for the year 1903 on the real estate or farm devised toi Sallie A. Penn for life, she. having died on September 16, 1902? We will consider these questions in the reverse order from that stated.
Mrs. Penn was devised the farm, other than the home place, for life. Under our statutes it was her duty to pay the taxes and keep the property free from lien, so that it might pass to the remaindermen
As to the second question — that is, who should pay the taxes for 1902 for $326.50 — we are of the' opinion, from an inspection of the will of the testator, that they should be paid out of his personal estate. By his will he directed that all of his funeral expenses and debts be paid as soon as practicable after his death out of his personal estate, and he then gave all the balance of his personal estate of every description to his wife, Sallie A. Penn. While taxes are not, strictly speaking, debts (which has been decided by this court in the case of Jones v. Gibson, 82 Ky., 561, 6 Ky. Law Rep., 528), yet they are obligations or liabilities, and we are convinced that the testator used the word “debts” intending to include all obligations and liabilities against his estate of every character.
On the first question — as to who was entitled to the Lawless rent notes — the executor of Jacob A. Penn claims that the widow was entitled to that proportion of the rent which had accrued up to the date of her death, to wit, September 16, 1902, and that the rents accruing after that time follow the reversion, and go to the niece and nephews, the beneficiaries in remainder, and contend that the case is governed by sec. 3865 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903, which is as follows: “When a person who has a freehold, or an uncertain interest in land, shall rent
Appellant’s contention in this case would be correct if the will did not otherwise direct. The rule in construing wills is to the effect that they shall be construed as speaking at the date of the death of the testator. These Lawless notes were payable to the testator, and were his personal property, and they passed, with his other personal estate, to his widow, under the positive provisions of his will. If the testator, prior to his death, had sold these notes to a third party for their full value, and h'ad deposited the cash received .for them in the bank, under the provisions of the will the widow would certainly have taken this cash as a part of the personal estate, and it could not reasonably be contended that the purchaser of the notes could not have collected the whole of the' notes. H|e could not have been stopped in the collection of them at the date of the death of the testator or his widow.. Under the privisions of the will of Jacob' A. Penn he passed these notes to his wife as effectively as he could have passed them to a third party by a sale thereof.
The judgment of the lower court being in conformity with the views herein expressed, it is therefore affirmled. Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.