Reversing.
Ruth Shawler Harned died in October, 1931, leaving her will, which was duly probated and by the terms of which she devised to her son, Elzy T. Harned, appellant herein, about 370 acres of land in Nelson county, Ky. The third clause of the will, the only part in question herein, reads as follows:
"I give and devise to my son Elzy Harned the following described land which he is to hold in trust for his children, The James Daugherty place containing about 93 acres also the Jack Waters land containing about 247 acres minus a small tract conveyed to Elzy by his Father's Will, also about 30 acres included in my boundary and known as the Lovelace land. This land was all devised to me by my husband, L.L. Harned. My son Elzy is renting this land from me and cultivating it at the present time. My son Elzy is to hold this land during his natural life for the sole use of his wife and children. Same is to be held used and controlled by my son during his life for the support and maintenance of his family. Only the rents, profits and issues of the property herein described is to be so used. His children after becoming 21 years of age shall be entitled to demand and receive only such part of the said rents, profits and issues as my son as trustee may in his discretion pay or expend for the benefit of such child over 21 years of age. For his services in managing said land and administering said trust he is to receive the rents, issues and profits of said estate and shall not be held accountable therefor by any of the beneficiaries. Should any of his children die during infancy without issue living then his or her share in *Page 239 this devise is to pass to the remaining children of my said son.
"At the death of my son Elzy said trust shall cease and said land pass to his children living and to the heirs of any that may be dead.
"For this land held in trust by my son Elzy he is to be charged $900.00 in the distribution of my estate. My son Elzy is not to be charged with any notes he may have made to his father during his lifetime but is to be charged in the distribution of my estate with any notes he may have made to me, after his father's death. He is not to be charged with any past rent."
The sole question to be determined in this appeal is whether or not the will above quoted vested the appellant with the life estate in the lands devised, or whether it created a trust for the use and benefit of appellant's wife and children.
It is insisted for appellee that the will created a life estate in the land devised, and it instituted this suit seeking to subject the alleged life estate to the payment of a judgment which it held against appellant. Upon a trial of the case in the lower court the chancellor held that by the terms of the will appellant was vested with the life estate with the remainder to his children and adjudged that the life estate be subjected to the payment of appellee's judgment. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
In support of appellee's position that the will vested the appellant with the life estate, it is argued that the sentence in the will which reads, "For his services in managing said land and in administering said trust, he is to receive the rents, issues and profits of said trust estate and shall not be held accountable therefor by any of the beneficiaries," takes away all of the trust which the will might apparently attempt to create and leaves no cestui que trust or other beneficiaries, and cites and relies on as authority the case of Sandford's Adm'r v. Sandford,
"Clearly the life estate was expressly created and if the succeeding words 'and to her heirs and assigns forever' are to be given their technical meaning and held to have created an estate in fee, then manifestly there is irreconcilable conflict between the two provisions which cannot be harmonized."
The case of Shawler v. Hart's Adm'x,
It is our conclusion that the appellant's rights in the trust estate are not superior to those of he cestui que trust, but are secondary thereto, and his rights go no farther than to act as trustee and receive, as compensation for his services, a home on the farm and support out of the rents, issues, and profits, set apart primarily for the benefit of his wife and children but in *Page 242 which he may share as a member of the family. It follows, therefore, that he is not entitled to any accumulation of rents, issues, and profits or any separable part thereof, and if there be a surplus, same should be held in trust by him for the benefit of the cestui que trust. He has no severable right or interest in the rents, issues, and profits that his creditors may subject to the payment of his debts.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for judgment in accordance with this opinion.
