93 Ky. 609 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
The testator, J. W. George, died in Eayette county in the year 1887. He left a will that was executed in January, 1886, and a codicil annexed in January, 1887. He held a note on his brother-in-law, J. M. Roche, for twenty-five hundred dollars, dated on the 21st of January, 1884, and made payable at the banking house of D. A. Sayre & Co., at Lexington. This note is not specially mentioned in his will, but would pass under the general devise made to his wife and children, if not otherwise disposed of. He accumulated a very large estate, and shortly before his death seems to have been desirous of making some provision for his sister, the wife of the obligor in the note for twenty-five hundred dollars, and endeavored to vest in her by parol the right to this note to be held by her for her separate use. Whether or not he accomplished this purpose is the question involved un this appeal. The executor of the will instituted this action on the note against Roche, and his wife asserted her title to it by reason of an alleged trust created by her brother for her benefit shortly before his death’. That a trust may be created by parol in personal property is not questioned, and the main contention is that the intention of the testator to create a trust •was never made complete.
The party in whom the trust was confided was his son Joseph, who was made one of the executors, but never qualified, or rather was made executor in the event those named failed to act as such. The testator expressed
In the case of Barkley v. Lane’s Ex’ors, reported in 6 Bush, 587, this court held: The authorities are all agreed that to fasten a trust on property by parol declaration it is only necessary that the language used clearly and éxplicitly manifest the owner’s purpose to transfer the right, and point out with certainty both the subject of the trust and the person who is to take the beneficial interest. This same rule is referred to in Southerland v. Southerland’s Adm’r, reported in 5 Bush, 591, where a trust was created in favor of the wife upon testimony not as strong as in this case, but still it was clear, undoubted and explicit. In the recent case of Williamson v. Yager, 91 Ky., 282, the authorities' were reviewed and this court said, in seeking to enforce a trust of this character, “the donee must show that nothing has been left undone by the donor necessary to create the trust, and if nothing is required of the court but to give effect to the trust as executed, it will be carried into effect although the-possession of the property was not changed.” Other authorities might be cited, but those referred to sustain the judgment of the Superior Court sustaining the trust, and reversing the judgment -below denying to the wife of the obligor the relief sought. It is argued with much force by counsel for the executor that the facts of this case show only an intention to give, and to establish a trust upon such testimony would be a dangerous precedent, by reason of the facility with which this character of testimony may be obtained. If the views of counsel are to prevail' then no case can well be made out creating a trust by
Reversed and remanded for proceedings’consistent with ‘ this opinion.