Baker v. Red

34 Ky. 158, 4 Dana 158, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 9, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 Ky. 158 (Baker v. Red) 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
Baker v. Red, 34 Ky. 158, 4 Dana 158, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 44 (Ky. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

By his last will, Philip Red, who died in Christian county, in this state, on the 17th of August, 1819, devised: first— to his wife, during her life or widowhood—with an injunction to educate all his children—all his estate, except his land and the debts due to him, which he directed his executor and executrix to vest in other land, all of which he devised equally to all his children; second— to five of his six children “as they [should] come of age or marry,” one negro girl or boy of a designated age, and one horse, saddle, bridle, bed and furniture, to each respectively; third—to his son Edgar, his sixth child, and the only child of his said wife, two slaves—Henry and William, a horse, saddle and bridle, and bed and furniture, when he should attain twenty-one years of age or should marry; fourth—to the same five children—Edgar being neither of them—all his slaves devised to his wife, and not otherwise disposed of in his will—their right to accrue at her death; and, in the event of her marriage, he directed that she should be “THIRDED.”

His widow and his brother William Red were nominated, and afterwards qualified, as his executors.

Some time in 1827, she intermarried with Joseph Wad-dell. Late in the year 1827, or early in 1828, commissioners, who had been appointed for that purpose by the Trigg County Court, made a settlement with the executor and executrix, and divided the slaves and personal estate equally between the widow and two of the testator’s daughters .and their husbands, with whom they had intermarried after his death—the other four children having died, intestate, without having married or attained majority. It seems that one third of the land— [159]*159as well that which was purchased in execution of the power given by the will, as that which the testator owned at his death—was also allotted to the widow; but, though we presume from intimations by the parties to this suit, that the allotment of land and slaves to the widow, was for life only, yet there is nothing in the record which can enable us to understand certainly how it was made. But there can be no doubt the commissioners, being of the opinion that four slaves—that is, Edmund and Mariah and Henry and William—belonged to the widow in her own right, excepted them from the allotments.

Bill, proceedings and decree, and objections to it— by the pl’tfs, and def’ts.

In 1828, the two surviving daughters and their husbands, Baker and Tyler, filed a bill in chancery, against the executor and the executrix and her husband, Wad-dell, alleging many things which we need not notice here, and praying for a settlement and a re-division of the estate.

Answers having been filed, and many depositions taken, the suit was abated as to the two female complainants, in consequence of their deaths; and the case having been prosecuted by the survivinghusbands, to a final hearing, the Circuit Court virtual^^^i^n^rfSft settlement and division made by the^c^usiMiG:a4i&3-W decreeing that Mrs. Waddell wai entitled, in neifbwn right absolutely, to the four (^"i|M^^|'|riah, Henry and William, and by dfbreeing to the coip¡|lainants, only the surrender of son|e still uncollected by the executor, and T^aaymen, t,qjpia note which had been given by himself to thc^fcstator.

The plaintiffs in error insist that the decree should now be reversed, because, as they allege: first—Mrs. Waddell is not entitled to the said four slaves; and, second—they were entitled to a decree for a greater sum than that which the Circuit Court allowed. The defendants, on their part, insist that, the plaintiffs had no authority to prosecute the suit after the death of their wives, and that, if they had, more was decreed to them than they had any just right to demand or expect. And both parties have, in elaborate arguments, relied on facts and positions, some of which are not, in our opinion, [160]*160sustainable; but all of which we will endeavor to cm1 brace, without special notice, in the general consideration, which we will now proceed, at once, to bestow two leac^n£ positions assumed by the plaintiffs.

A man obtainsas a loan, two tcThis wFe’sSfatirar, retains them de^ses'^hem^o hi_s son by that to/fatlraMraing a lunatic, his slaves tn'<5 divided out among his children,&those two, and two others allotted to ter the'last'two' her husband nedfes^fterwlÁch6 his wife’s father anddios°tifeiatter died owner slaves; the husfca-nd never, had am! they did not pass by his will. devisee to take under a will or forced1 Vnly "hi clear and well Afinan "devises estate to his wife, certain slaves to hadCa title"" his widow, after his right’ to^those same slaves by from "her She": she may claim under the last ti-tie, although she has notrenounocd the provisions

First. The slaves, Edmund, Mariah, Henry and William, were the property of the father of Mrs. Waddell, Thomas Racket of Virginia, who, according to this record, was a lunatic-, without any intermission, from some ^me antecedent to 1817, to his death, which did notocCur until two years or more after that of the testator, Red, who removed, with his wife, from Virginia to Kentucky, in 1817, and brought with him two of those four * / t / ^ slaves: that is, Henry and William—delivered to him, on ¡-oan by a son of Thomas Hacket, on the eve of his r ■ . departure lor this state. And about the time of his d®ath, and probably before that event, the children of Thomas Racket, or some of them made, among them-s®lyes, a provisional allotment of his slaves, in which Henry, William, Edmund and Mariah v/ere assigned to the testator’s v/ife; and, after his death, Edmund and Mariah were also brought to Kentucky by his executor, and were, together with William and Henry, appraised, as being among the slaves of the testator,

These ai’e the facts respecting the title to those four s]aves. And, therefore, as it appears, that the title must necessarily have remained in Racket as long as he lived: the testator had no right to those slaves, or to any of them; and, of course, they did not pass by devise or descent to his children, or any of them.

Still, the plaintiffs insist that, Mrs. Waddell cannot c]aim under the will and against the will; but must elect to hold as a devisee only, or surrender her interest under the whl. ^ se®ms to us j that a proper case for such an election has not been presented. Edmund and Mariah were not included in the will: first—because they are not mentioned; secondly—because they were not brought to Kentucky until after the testator’s death, and -were never in his possession; and, thirdly—because it does not appear, that he had, or pretended to have, any

claira to either of them, or even knew that they had - * been allotted to him. As to these two, therefore, there [161]*161•can be no ground for insisting on the doctrine of election.

_ of the will; and, if she acquiesced in the will,under the erroneous i'dea,that her husband, being in possession of the slaVes, had a right to devise them, she is not bound by that mistake. An election cannot be enforced unless the devisee’s title existed when the testator died — according to some authorities. A widow to whom property «whoó^^which she may claim as her own, makes her election by taking under the will, after which, she is precluded; the right of election does not recur „pon her marriage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ky. 158, 4 Dana 158, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-red-kyctapp-1836.