Attorney General v. Wallace's Devisees

46 Ky. 611, 7 B. Mon. 611, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 1, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 46 Ky. 611 (Attorney General v. Wallace's Devisees) 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
Attorney General v. Wallace's Devisees, 46 Ky. 611, 7 B. Mon. 611, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 87 (Ky. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

Judge Breck

delivered the opinion of the Court. —

Chief Justice Marshall did not sit in this case.

The will of Thomas Wallace, who died in the county of Fleming in 1840, having a large estate, contains the fellowing provisions:

“I dc hereby will and bequeath ail my estate, real and personal, of every description and kind whatever, except the sums hereafter willed to other persons, to my beloved daughter, Amelia Sarah Wallace, on the terms and conditions hereafter named, viz: I will all my real estate, and two thirds of all my personal property of every description that I may own at my death, slaves excepted, to my beloved daughter Amelia, above named, to be entailed to her and her child or children, never to be at the disposal of any other person or persons during her natural life, nor at her own disposal, only that she will receive all the profits, rents, interest, hire and benefit accruing therefrom, for her use and support, during her natural life. The one third of all persona] estate, with exception of slaves, to be at her, Amelia’s, disposal, when she becomes of lawful age, but in the event of the death of my above named daughter, Amelia Sarah Wallace, without child or children, or should she not have any child alive at her death, or should her child or children die without issue, in either event, I do will and bequeath all, or the whole of my estate that my daughter may own at their death, without 'issue as above stated, to be disposed of on the following terms: One fourth to the children of my sister Rebecca Cummings, deceased, or their [612]*612heirs; one fourth to-the child of my sister Fanny McConnell, or her heirs; one fourth to Thomas and Maik Wallace, sons of brother David Wallace, or their heirs; and the remaining fourth to such charitable and benevolent institutions as may appear to be most useful in disseminating the Gospel at home and abroad.”
The-codicil-. Tlie'bilT, its allegations and object. Answer of defts.

The will bears date the 6th May, 1836. In a codicil thereto annexed, on- the 9th January, 1836, there is the following clause : “I nominate and appoint my trusty friends hereafter named, trustees, with the necessary powers-, to hold in trust for the use and benefit of all my heirs, or all the purposes and persons therein named, and dispose of it agreeably to the provisions of my will r Rev. Andrew Todd, John- Chambers, of Washington county, William Bodge, of Mason, and John Andrews, of Sherburn Mills.”

In June, 1841, the will was admitted to record in the Fleming County Court.

In the original will, William Hodge, John Andrews, and L. W. Andrews, were appointed executors, but they declined to qualify, and Thomas Porter was appointed administrator, with the will annexed.

The testator’s daughter intermarried with F. A, Andrews, and died shortly after her father, without issue.

In December, 1843, this information, or bill in chancery, in the name of Owen G. Cates, Attorney General for the Commonwealth of Kentucky, by W, H. Cord, as xelator, was exhibited in the Fleming Circuit Court, praying to have enforced and executed the charitable devise in the will. The bill alledges that the trustees had declined to act, and that no steps whatever had been taken for carrying out the devise. It also charges, that the personal estate of the testator had been squandered, and that a portion of the real estate was improperly and illegally held and claimed by Marshall and others, through the unauthorized and fraudulent acts of F. A. Andrews. The trustees, administrator, devisees and heirs, and others claiming portions of the estate, were made defendants.

The trustees in their answer, state they at first were not inclined to accept the trust, but subsequently, and be[613]*613fore the exhibition of complainant’s bill, three of them had determined to undertake its execution. That a bill had been filed by Dobbins and wife, in the Fleming Circuit Court, claiming a special legacy under the will, making the trustees defendants, and that they, or three of them had filed a cross answer, praying that the devise in charity might be enforced. Andrews, the other trustee, afterwards answered the bill of the Attorney General, and accepted the trust. The other defendants resisted the relief sought, and asserted as devisees, heirs and otherwise their respective claims to the estate.

Decree of the, Circuit Court- When the venue in a cause has been changed to a county where one of the parties resides, the Court may remand, but cannot send it to any other county than that fiom which it was removed.

During the progress of the cause, the Attorney General, upon the ground that the trustees were parties, and had answered in the suit of Dobbins and wife, claiming the devise in charity, and their right to administer it, directed, by his written order, this suit, or the suit prosecuted in his name, to be dismissed, but afterwards modified the order leaving the propriety of dismissing it in the discretion of the Judge.

The cause was subsequently removed to the Mason Circuit Court, when after various amendatory and cross pleadings, it was heard, and the complainant’s bill dismissed, but without prejudice, and without costs.

To reverse that decree, the relator, in the'name of the Attorney General, has brought the case to this Court.

Before we proceed to the examination of the merits, •we will dispose of á question presented by the assignment of errors, growing out of the order changing the venue of the case.

The cause was removed from the Fleming to the Mason Circuit Court, upon the petition of John Wallace, one of the defendants. The order for removal was made by the Judge of the latter Court, to whom it was known, but the fact did not occur to him at the time, that Wallace resided in the county of Mason. The relator, upon that ground, in due time after the removal of the cause, moved the Court to send it to some other county. The Court offered to remand it to Fleming, but to this the relator objected, and thereupon the Court, upon the ground that he had no authority to send it elsewhere, overruled the motion, and we think correctly. The Court might, [614]*614and ought upon motion, to have remanded the cause to Fleming, but had no authority, under the circumstances, to send it to any other county. The power of the Judge over the case, in virtue of the petition of Wallace, was exhausted when he had made the order for its íemoval to Mason. If that order was illegal or improper, he could only remand the cause. He had no authority to set aside or change the order. The statute provides that there shall not be more than one removal of the same cause, except under a particular state of case, which did not exist here. The improper removal uf the cause to Mason, did not affect the jurisdiction of the Court; and as there was no motion by the relator to remand it, but an objection to that course, it seems to us that there was no error in regard to the venue, which can be rendered available.

In the further consideration of the case, it becomes important to enquire as to the validity of the devise sought to be enforced, and if valid, whether it can or ought to be enforced by this mode of proceeding.

It is insisted that the devise is void upon two grounds :

1st.

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46 Ky. 611, 7 B. Mon. 611, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-wallaces-devisees-kyctapp-1847.