97 Ky. 201 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question made on this appeal involves the interest of Roger W. Jones and his assignee in his father, Roger Jones’ estate, and involves a construction of the will of the father which has once before been in this court for consideration, and the record then made being part of this same suit is now considered in this case. That portion of the will of Roger Jones pertaining to the controversy reads as follows:
“I will and devise all my property of every kind and description, real, personal, and mixed, unto hay beloved wife, Lucy M. Jones, in trust, to be by her managed and controlled during her natural life, for the joint benefit of herself and my six children (naming them) with power in my wife to give immediate title and possession of such portion of any of said property as she may think fit, to any one or all of said children, at such time or times as she may think fit. Provided, the portion given to any one of said children shall in no event exceed in value one-sixth of my entire estate; and at the death of my said wife, I desire that each of my six children have an equal share of my entire estate, taking into consideration the value of what any one may have received from my said wife by virtue of the power herein conferred upon her.
“Should any one of my children to whom a portion of my property shall have been given in the exercise of the power conferred upon my said wife, die before the age of twenty-one years, and wfithout issue, I will that the property so given to him or her shall revert to my said wife to be held and controlled by her in the manner and subject to the restrictions and limitations and power under which it was*203 held before it was so given. At the death of my wife the said property to be divided equally among my surviving children as herein provided.”
Under this will, on former appeal, this court held that the Wife, Lucy M. Jones, took a life estate in the whole of said property with right to use and enjoy the rents and profits of the realty. By a further clause, “the decedent appointed his wife the sole executrix of his estate without bond.”
This will was written in 1889. The testator died some time in the summer of 1890 and his will was duly probated by' the county court in Clark county, the same being the county of his residence, on the 25th of August, 1890. Previous to the time of the testator’s death, he became surety for his son, Roger W. Jones, to the Clark County National Bank in the sum of six thousand dollars or more. In April, 1891, two of the heirs and devisees of decedent, Roger Jones, filed their suit in the Clark Circuit Court against Mrs. Lucy M. Jones, the widow and executrix of said estate, the other heirs and devisees, and the Clark County National Bank, setting up the fact hereinbefore recited, of the liability of the estate to the bank for some six thousand dollars for and as the-surety of his son, Roger W. Jones; setting out some other debts and praying for a settlement of the estate and for an equitable adjustment of the same with reference to the several heirs; setting out also that the estate was liable as the surety of another heir, Thomas Jones, for some $2,400, and alleging the insolvency of the personal estate to pay its liabilities, but affirming the liability of the several interests of Thomas Jones and Roger W. Jones to be first sold to pay the several sums for which decedent’s estate was liable, and praying for all other general and proper relief.
In that judgment we think the court below in error. Without reciting again the clauses in the will of Roger Jones, deceased, it will be observed that he groups his whole property, real, personal and mixed, together, and speaks of it and devises it as one estate, not leaving it severable as real estate, and personal estate, which, under our statutes, in case of an intestate, would go, the realty to the heir-at-law, and the personalty to the legal representative for adminis
It further is manifest by the several provisions of the will that the leading intent and purpose in the mind of the testator was to declare and to preserve, in any contingency, perfect equality between his several children; and that while authorizing the wife to pass the immediate title and possession of any part of the estate to any one or more of his several children, yet providing that' in no event should the amount so given off or set apart by his wife exceed in value one-sixth paid of his estate. And again, providing that, after the death of his wife, this same equality should be maintained in the distribution between his children, and specially saying “that this division should be by taking into consideration the value of whatever estate any one (of my children) may have received from my wife, by virtue of this power, herein conferred upon her.” Equality being the leading idea in the mind of the testator, and making each heir in the final distribution of his estate account for whatever his wife may have given off to each, we deem it immaterial whether this advancement to any one heir was made voluntarily by the wife under or by virtue of this power, or whether she was compelled under the law and by the decree in this case to pay the debts of any one of the heirs (as Roger W. Jones) to the full interest of such heir in the estate. When that is once reached in either mode, then the will of the testator prohibits any further interest being given, and, by necessary implication, being taken by law for any purpose, under any title or claim against Roger W. Jones. The limit has been reached when he receives, either voluntarily or when his creditors exhaust, his one-sixth interest in the estate of his father. Having imposed this legal obligation on his father’s estate by obtaining his signature to his debts as his security, which debts he leaves
This we regard as the true equitable rule, and this court so announced in the case of Brown’s Adm’r v. Mattingly, 91 Ky., 275; and we would be gratified could it always be enforced in settlement and distribution of every decedent’s estate, though we recognize the fact that the courts in Kentucky sometimes find themselve's embarrassed by the provisions of the Kentucky Statutes, sec. 2087, being but a re-enactment of former statutes, wherein it is provided “that when the heir or devisee shall alien, before suit brought, the estate descended or devised, he shall be liable for the value thereof, with legal interest, from the time of alienation, to the creditors of the decedent or testator; but the estate so aliened shall not be liable to the creditors in the hands of a bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration, unless suit is instituted within six months after the estate is devised or descended to subject the same.”
The objection's to allowing anything to pass in this case by the assignment of Roger IV. Jones to his assignee, as against an equity in his father’s estate, under this statute are, first, that suit was already filed and was pending for the settlement of his father’s estate, involving the subjection of his one-sixth interest in said estate to the relief of the other heirs of said estate. And, secondly, neither an assignee nor the creditors under á deed of assignment are bona fide purchasers for a valuable consideration. They have at most an equity, and in this casé manifestly inferior to the equity
And this cause is remanded to said court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.