192 Ky. 98 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1921
Opinion of the Court bt
— Affirming.
J. D. Sbutt, a resident of Kenton county, died in 1895, testate. IJe left no children, but was survived by Ms wife, Sarah A. Shutt, to whom by his will he devised Ms entire estate, real and personal, for life, with remainder, at her death to certain named blood relations of the testator, the second clause of the will providing
The fourth clause of the will provides for the disposition of the estate after the widow’s death; and the fifth clause appoints the widow executrix of the will without bond.
After the probate of the will the widow, without formally qualifying as executrix, took possession of the testator’s entire estate and remained in possession and control thereof until her death in February, 1918, intestate. After her death the appellant, R. H. Gray, was appointed and duly qualified as the administrator of her estate; and about the same time the appellee, E. S. Lee, was appointed and duly qualified as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of the estate of J. D. Shutt, deceased. After the widow’s death, but before the appointment of either administrator, this action was brought by certain remaindermen under the will of J. D. Shutt against the others having a like interest, to obtain a sale of the real estate devised by his will, to which the administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of hia estate and the administrator of the estate of Sarah A. Shutt wele by amended petitions later made defendants. Thereafter by additional pleadings, filed by the remaindermen and cross pleadings between the administrators, final distribution among the remaindermen of the J. D. Shutt estate was sought and to that end an accounting and final settlement demanded of the administrator of Sarah A. Shutt respecting the moneys and securities received by her under J. D. Shutt’s will as life tenant. It was, admitted, however, that appellee as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of the estate of J. D. Shutt had already received of appellant as administrator
. The pleadings found in the record were so frequently amended and are so unusually voluminous that we will not undertake to set them forth in detail, so, to avoid confusion, we will only refer to such of them as affect the questions actually presented for decision. It appears from the record that from the time Sarah A. Shutt as executrix and life tenant took charge of the estate devised by the will of J. D. Shutt down to the time of her death, she collected and used for her own benefit, as was her right, the rents and income from the devised estate and within that time made with the county court nine settlements of her accounts as executrix, in the eighth of which she charged the estate with all taxes and repairs and reported no receipts from rents ór income, and by that settlement it was made to appear that the estate was indebted to her for taxles and repairs paid for and on the property devised, about $21,000.00. In the meantime she had received in 1899 from the First National Bank $5,-600.00 for fifty-six of one hundred and twelve shares of its capital stock that came to her as life tenant under her husband’s will, with which sum she was not charged in any of the settlements. It also appears from the several settlements that Mrs. Shutt intermingled her own accounts with those of the estate, and, as was later made to appear, had charged the estate of the testator with numerous illegal disbursements.
In 1916 she had a controversy with one of the remaindermen, in which the latter made complaint as to numerous alleged illegal .charges made in her settlements against the devised estate. The controversy resulted in her making the ninth and final settlement, which disallowed the disbursements for taxes and repairs amounting to about $21,000.00, with which she had been credited by the eighth settlement. By his answer in this action for an accounting the appellant denied all items against the
The answer likewise pleaded a counterclaim, aggregating $38,466.00, of the following items alleged to be due the decedent’s estate from that of her husband: $22,021.-38 for moneys claimled to have been expended by the life tenant, in repairs on the devised real property and for taxes on same and the personal property, as shown by her first eight settlements; $5,330.00, it was claimed should be allowed her estate for services rendered by her as executrix of J. D. Shutt’s will; $3,114.67, claimed to have been paid by her in taxes on the entire estate and repairs and insurance on the real property from May 6, 1915, to the date of her death, and alleged not to have been allowed in any of the settlements she had made; $8,000.00 for money it was alleged she advanced her husband, J. D. Shutt, in 1868 to purchase the homestead to which he admittedly took the title and in which they lived until his death, and which after his death was “used and occupied as her home continuously for twenty-threie years and until her death February 4, 19Í8, at all times claiming her interest and property therein to the extent of the sum of $8,000.00.” The above items of alleged indebtedness were consecutively set up in separate paragraphs, numbered one to six, inclusive. To each of these paragraphs the appellee filed a general demurrer, each of 'which the circuit court sustained. Appellant excepted to these rulings and failed to plead further as to the matters set up in paragraphs two, four and six, but amended paragraphs three and five by alleging that the expenditures for insurance, taxes and repairs claimed in paragraphs three and fivle were necessary for the protection of the devised estate.. The averments of the amended answer were 'Controverted by reply, which, in addition, alleged that the repairs made by the life tenant were not permanent, and that the several expenditures charged therefor and for insurance and taxes, if made by her as claimed, were and arei not chargeable to the es
After the taking of proof and upon submission of the case the chancellor held that appellee was entitled to recover of appellant $5,600.00, one of the items sued for in the petition, but allowed as credits thereon the items of $983.93 and $24.40 asserted by the appellant’s counterclaim, which credits reduced the recovery of appellee to $4,591.67', and the costs of the action. All other1 demands claimed in the appellee’s petition and asserted by the appellant’s ‘counterclaim wtere rejected and dismissed. The latter complains of the judgment entered in conformity with the above rulings1 of the circuit court, and has appealed.
Appellant’s counsel, with apparent seriousness, insists that the judgment of the court below should be reversed because the appellee as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of the estate of J.,D. Shutt was without authority to bring or maintain this action, and that such right was in the persons to whom Shutt’s will devised the remainder in his estate. It may be conceded that the right of action was in the remaindermen and that the appellee as such administrator was not even a necessary party to the action; but objection to his right to maintain the action or to any defect of parties plaintiff should have been made by appellant in the court below by a special demurrer questioning his legal capacity to sue, or showing the lack of other necessary parties, as provided by Civil Code, section 92, subsec-, tion 4. The objection can not first be made in the Court
However, the waiver referred to need not here he considered for the remaindermen under the will of J. D. Shutt were parties plaintiff or defendant to the action, were all before the court and all made beneficiaries of the judgment, and such of them as were the original plaintiffs in bringing the action made appellant and appellee parties, each in his fiduciary capacity. The judgment is as follows:
“It is adjudged that plaintiff E. S. Lee as administrator of the estate of J. D. Shutt and plaintiff and defendant heirs of J. D. Shutt recover of defendant R. H. Cray as administrator of the: estate o'f Sarah A. Shutt the sum of $4,616.07, to which may be credited by $24.40 in favor of said defendant, leaving a judgment against said defendant in the1 sum of $4,591.67 which may be paid E. S. Lee as administrator aforesaid for distribution. ’ ’
While in terms the judgment declares the amount recovered may be paid to the appellee, the fact that it directs its distribution by him among the devisees in remainder under J. D. Shutt’s will shows them to be the only beneficiaries and makes of him a mere receiver of the court. Appellant may therefore pay the amount of the judgment to appellee for the remaindermen or to the latter in person, or he may pay it into court and ask that it be distributed under its further orders.
In addition to what has already been said of the want of merit in appellant’s belated objection to the appellee’s right to maintain the action, it may be remarked that the devisees in remainder under J. D. Shutt’s will, though parties to the action and tecqpres'sly made beneficiaries o'f the judgment appealed from, have not been made parties to the appeal; therefore the appellant can not be granted any relief by this court against them. In Charlton v. Smith, 33 R. 647, respecting this question we said: “The statute requires the appellant to endorse on the record the names of the appellant and appellees. Persons who are not named in the statement as appellees are not parties to the appeal and no relief can be given against them.” Board Councilmen v. Farmers Bank, 22 R. 1738; Chinn v. Curtis, 24 R. 1566.
Sarah A. Shutt was given by the third clause of her husband’s will, both as executrix and life tenant of the estate devised, power to1 sell any bonds, stocks, lands or other property belonging to the devised estate, but with the proviso that she should “ reinvest the proceeds in such other bonds, stocks or property as may seem advantageous,” the use and income of the property acquired by .such reinvestments to be enjoyed by her for life as provided by the will regarding the property sold. The power thus conferred to sell the property devised has coupled with it the duty to reinvest the proceeds in such other like property as might be advantageous to the estate. So if the power to sell the bank stock was exercised by the life tenant, whether as such or as executrix, the duty to reinvest the proceeds as directed by the will of her husband was imperative and should have been obeyed. It was disobeyed, however, and the money received by her for the bank stock illegally converted to her own or some other use.
We agree with the circuit court that appellant can not rely upon the statute o'f limitations to defeat the recovery by the remaindermen of the money received by his decedent for the bank stock in question. As the money she received for the bank stock was a part of the corpus of the estate, neither her1 failure to reinvest it as directed by her husband’s will nor her failure to charge herself with it in any of her various settlements had the effect to change its status. But she was nevertheless
There are a number of cases which hold that remaindermen may sue in equity before the expiration of the life estate to quiet their title to the property as against an adverse claimant, or to be placed in a condition to make it available when the time shall arrive when they will be entitled to the possession and use of the estate. Simmons, etc., v. McKey, etc., 5 Bush 25; Duncan, etc., v. King’s Admr., 163 Ky. 577; Keller v. Stanley, 86 Ky. 245; Penn v. Rhodes, 124 Ky. 798. These cases, however, also hold respecting the recovery of possession of the property that the statutes of limitation do not begin to run against remaindermen until the expiration of the life estate; which is necessarily so, because the possession of a life tenant or of one holding under the latter can not, during the continuance of the life estate, be adverse to the remaindermen. The several cases cited are conclusive of the question that the statute of limitations is not a bar to the recovery by the remaindermen of the proceeds
The judgment of the circuit court does not charge the ©state of Sarah A. Shutt with interest on the $5,600.00 for which she sold the bank stock, for the reason, doubtless, that she owned under the will of her husband a life estate therein,, as she had owned such estate in the bank stock and was, as provided by the will, entitled by way of income therefrom during her life to whatever interest it earned or might have earned from the time it was received by her. The judgment is likewise silent regarding the court’s reasons for allowing the credits .of $983.93 and $24.40 it gives the estate of the appellant’s decedent, but it elsiewhere appears from the record that the first of these items was1 the amount of cash she had on deposit in bank at the time of her death, and which, as we have previously stated,, was paid by appellant to the remaindermen with the delivery to them of certain securities belonging to the estate devised her for life by the will of J. D. Shutt; and this deposit, we assume, was treated by the court as income derived from the estate devised her for life by the will, and to which the remaindermen were not under the will entitled. The $24.40' credit was the amount of a premium admittedly paid by the decedent, Sarah A. Shutt, for insurance obtained on a part of the devised real 'estate after she made what is designated in the pleadings as her ninth or final settlement. It should here be remarked that the court below was evidently of the opinion that all premiums for insurance paid by Mrs. Shutt during her life tenancy on the' real estate devised by the will of J. D. Shutt were chargeable to the estate, hence such insurance premiums as were credited to her in the ninth and several prior settlements were permitted to stand. But as neither the appellee nor remainder-men have taken a cross appeal from the judgment of the court the question as to whether or not it should have relieved the devised estate of those charges for insurance is not before us for determination.
While it does not appear from any order to that effect when or how the control of the estate devised by the will of J. D. Slrutt by Sarah A. Shutt ended as executrix or began as life tenant, or, indeed, that there was ever any formal transfer of it from her custody as executrix to her possession as life tenant, she was in possession of the entire estate for at least twenty years, and while her settlements were made as executrix, her control of the estate -during that time was- more in keeping with her character of life tenant than as executrix — in fact it was managed and enjoyed by her under the rights and powers conferred upon her as life-tenant by her husband’s will — we are unable to see from anything appearing in the record why she could not finally have settled all her accounts as executrix fifteen years before her death. In view of these facts we must assume that a suf
The item of $5,330.00, claimed in the- fourth paragraph for services alleged to have been performed by appellant’s decedent as executrix of the will of J. D. Shutt, might well have been disallowed on the single ground that it was unsupported by evidence. It was actually rejected by the court, however, because the executrix had been fully paid out of the estate devised by the will of J. D. Shutt for all services rendered or required of her in a fiduciary capacity. The fact that she was life tenant of the estate devised as well as executrix of the will gave her no right to additional compensation as. executrix. On the contrary, a life tenant charged by law with the custody of income producing property constituting the life estate is entitled to no compensation for the management thereof. But a life tenant who is also executrix is in the latter capacity .entitled to an allowance for collecting and disbursing funds sufficient to discharge the debts against the estate, but such an allowance Kentucky Statutes, section 3883, does not permit to exceed 5 per cent, of thtei amount collected and disbursed; and in the last settlement made by appellant’s decedent as executrix of J. D. Shutt’s will, which recapitulates the charges and credits of all previous ones, it is stated that she disbursed altogether in discharging the debts against his estate $10,310.67, as compensation for which she was allowed to retain out of the assets of thlei estate $419.57, or practically four per cent, of the amount that passed through her hands. This compensation was fixed by the county court, and as there was no evidence that the services of the executrix wtere difficult or of such unusual character as to require an additional allowance, and no showing of an abuse by that court of its discretion in fixing the allowance as was done, the circuit court properly refused to disturb it.
The claim of $8,000.00 attempted to be asserted against the remaindermen by appellant in the sixth paragraph of his counterclaim for money alleged to have been advanced by his decedent to her husband, J. D. Shutt, for the purchaste of a home for them., was also properly disallowed by the circuit court. Its staleness, to say nothing of the insufficiency of the allegations of the paragraph to state a cause of action therefor, justified its
There is an implied condition that he who accepts a benefit under a will shall adopt the whole, conforming to all its provisions and renouncing every right inconsistent with it.”
Manifestly, application to the claim in question of the principle declared by the rule, supra, authorized the ruling of the circuit court sustaining the appellee’s demurrer to the sixth paragraph of the counterclaim.
As our consideration of the record before us l'eads to the conclusion that the rights of the parties were, on the whole, equitably determined by the court below, the judgment is affirmed.