113 Ky. 41 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1902
Opinion of the court jby
Reversing.
Andreas Vogt was twice married. He had by his first Wife three children, Amelia Schaefer, Sophia Frederick, and John Vogt; by his second wife, Catherine, he had also three children, Andreas Vogt, Jr., Albert Vogt and Katie Vogt. Tn 18S6 his second wife procured a divorce from him, and in ■settlement of her claims for alimony and dower he executed his note to A. A. Stoll, as trustee for her and her infant children, for the sum of $5,000, due eight years after date, with annual interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent., which was secured by a mortgage on a tract of 60% acres of land- lying in Jefferson county. On the day following
It was a rule of the common law that a sale by the testator, subsequent to the making of his will, of land or chattels devised by it, was an ademption or extinguishment of it as a legacy, so that the legatee’s right or claim to it was lost. To change this rule of the common law, section 2068 and 4835 of the Kentucky Statutes were enacted. Section 2068 is as follows: “The conversion, in whole or in part, of money or property, or the proceeds of property devised to one of the testator’s heirs into other property or thing, with or without the assent of the testator, shall not be an
A Ye therefore conclude that the judgment of the trial ’court can not be sustained upon the theory advanced in the opinion. But counsel for appellees contend that after the death of her father the appellant was put to an equitable election either to take under the will or against'it, and that, as she elected to receive her part of the personal property advanced by the seventh clause of the will, she bound the land previously conveyed to her by her father for the payment of one-tliird of the mortgage, as provided for in the sixth clause of the will. The law is well settled in this State that a person can not claim both under and against a will, and the acceptance by the devisee under a will of a legacy is, by operation of law, an abandonment of all claim to other property devised by the will. But we are amable to perceive how this doctrine can have any application to the case at bar. It is true that appellant accepted her part of the personal estate devised by the third clause of the will, but she claims the land, not under the will, but
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instruction to dismiss the. cross proceedings by appellees in so far as they attempt to subject the real estate of appellant to the payment of any part of the mortgage debt due to Stoll as trustee.