Armstrong v. Crutchfield's Exors.

150 S.W. 835, 150 Ky. 641, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 962
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 835 (Armstrong v. Crutchfield's Exors.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Crutchfield's Exors., 150 S.W. 835, 150 Ky. 641, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 962 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Nunn —

Reversing.

The proper construction of the will of B. F. Crutch-field, which was probated in Boone County in 1855, constitutes the sole question upon the appeal in the first styled case. His widow lived until 1910, and when she died the right to the possession of the property devised by the third clause of his will passed to the devisees named therein. The second and third clauses of the will are as follows:

“2nd. I also bequeath to my wife, Susan, Fifteen Thousand Dollars, to be invested in good interest paying stocks or loaned on Bond and mortgage in a secure manner, and the interest to be regularly paid to her during her life and at her death I wish her to will or dispose of one-half of all the property and money left her as she may desire or think fit; the other half

“3rd. I wish equally divided between my niece Jane Crutchfield, James Davenport (son of my nephew Jas. Davenport, Dec’d.), John Savier and Betty Savier (son and daughter of my sister Agnes), Ben Crutch-field (son of my brother Richard) and the children of D. A. Russell by his wife Susan,” &c.

The parties concede that there is nothing and we cannot find anything in the will to show or indicate [643]*643whether the testator intended for them to take per capita or per stirpes. This court has invariably construed the term “equally divided between,” when used in a will, as providing for a per capita distribution, when there is no other language in the will showing a different intention. See the cases of Wells, &c. v. Newton, &c., 4 Bush, 158; Brown’s Exor. v. Brown’s Devisees, 6 Bush, 648; Purnell, &c. v. Culbertson, 12 Bush, 369; McFatridge, &c. v. Holtzclaw, 94 Ky., 352; Hughes, &c. v. Hughes &c., 118 Ky., 751; Potts v. Shirley, &c., 90 S. W., 590, and Kaufman, &c. v. Anderson, 31 Ky. L. R., 888. In Purnell v. Culbertson, supra, the language of the will construed was as follows:

“At her death I wish the real estate and such of the .personal property as my wife may not have disposed of divided equally between my nephew, Julian Culbertson, of this county, Mattie Ervine, Etene Case and the children (two) of Thomas D. Purnell, nieces and nephews of mine, and residing in and about Natches, Miss.”

In that ease, the lower court determined that the children of Thomas Purnell should receive jointly only a share equal to a share of either of the others; that is, they should take per stirpes. This court took a different view, and cited many authorities in support of its construction, from one of which it quoted with approval, the following:

“It is said that the words ‘equally to be divided,’ when used in a will, mean a division per .capita and not per stirpes, whether the devisees be children and grandchildren, brothers or sisters, nephews or nieces, or strangers in blood to the testator.”

It is also said in that opinion:

“So it is plain the testator did not intend to follow the laws of descent and distribution in the division of his estate among these collateral kindred, nor did he intend to give to each class of children what their ancestor would have been legally entitled to had he been living; but, on the contrary, we are of opinion that the testator intended that his entire estate at the death of his wife should go to the devisees named, to be equally divided between them per capita, share and share alike.”

In Hughes v. Hughes, &c., supra, the provisions of the will construed provided that all of the remainder of the testator’s estate should be divided equally among [644]*644the children of Barney and James Hughes, both of whom were dead at the date of the execution of the will. James Hughes’ family consisted of four children, two sons and two daughters, one of whom, Francis Hughes, had no interest undér the provision, as he had been expressly excluded. The family of Barney Hughes consisted of a wife and six children, and they contend for that construction of the will which compels a division of the property per capita, while the children of James contend for a division per stirpes. This court said in substance that whatever might be the rule of construction in other States, it was not an open question in this jurisdiction; then cited and commented upon other cases and reached the conclusion that one-half of the estate devised under that clause of the will should be divided per capita between the children of both brothers; that is, three-ninths to the children of James and six-ninths to the children of Barney.

Appellants cite the cases of Lachland’s Heirs v. Downing’s Exor., 11 B. Monroe, 32, and Bethel, &c. v. Major, &c., 24 Ky. L. R., 398 (68 S. W., 631), as authorizing the construction given by the lower court to clause three of Crutchfield’s will. In the first case cited the clause of the will construed was as follows:

“All the residue of my estate whether real, personal or mixed, hot herein otherwise disposed of, I desire may be equally divided after my death between my brother John Downing, my two sisters, Elizabeth Cameron and Nancy Gribson and the children of sister Nelly Lachland, to them and their children forever, it being my desire that the portions allotted.to my brother John and my two sisters and the children of my deceased sister Nelly Lachland shall be made as nearly equal as possible, both in kind and amount.”

The court determined in that case that the children of Nelly Lachland, collectively and not individually, took an equal share; that is, a one-fourth part of the. •residue devised under the clause of the will copied, and that John Downing, Elizabeth Cameron and Nancy 'G-ibson each took a fourth part. In other words, it was determined that the children of Nelly Lachland took per stirpes; and in arriving at this conclusion, the court considered the whole will and concluded, from its tenor, that such was the purpose of the testator, saying:

[645]*645“But where the testator shows such solicitude to effectuate that justice which consists in equality of distribution among those who were equally the objects of his bounty and affection, we should deem it proper, and indeed necessary, in the absence of any peculiar fact or expression of a contrary tendency, to presume the testator’s feelings and benevolence flowed in the usual channels, and to construe all ambiguous expressions in conformity with this presumption: 'Then, as no reason appears why the testator who is so particular in desiring equality between his living brothers and sisters, should place the children of a deceased sister each .upon an equality with the living brethren we should expect and require some clear and unequivocal indication of such an intention in order to establish its existence.”

Thus we see that if there had been nothing in the will to indicate the intention of the testator, other than the words ‘ equally divided between, ’ ’ the result would have been different.

The other case, Bethel, &c. v. Major, &c., supra, construed the will under consideration in that case, as a whole, and the court reached the conclusion that the will devised the property to the children of Mary Bethel as a class. That case does not conflict with the authorities cited.

In the case at bar there is nothing in the will to indicate that Crutchfield devised the property to the children of D. A. Russell as a class..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 835, 150 Ky. 641, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-crutchfields-exors-kyctapp-1912.