Ball v. Hancock's Adm'r

82 Ky. 107, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 Ky. 107 (Ball v. Hancock's Adm'r) 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
Ball v. Hancock's Adm'r, 82 Ky. 107, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 46 (Ky. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE HARGIS

delivered the opinion of tiie court.

This was an action by the administrator of Washington B. Hancock, deceased, to ascertain his interest in [109]*109lots number 18, 19, 20, and 21, lying on Jefferson and Fourteenth streets, in Cosby’s Enlargement of the city of Louisville, and to subject it to payment of his debts, there being, as alleged, an insufficiency of personal estate for that purpose. The heirs of Marion Sophia, deceased wife of Washington B. Hancock, were made parties, and claimed, by appropriate pleadings, two-thirds interest in the lots which the administrator was. seeking to sell. Their claim was based upon a deed of trust executed by her brother, Henry S. Ball, on the 10th April, 1845, to Fortunatus Cosby. The material parts of the deed which bear upon this controversy, are as follows:

“That the party of the first part, the said Ball, in consideration of a promise heretofore made to the said Marion Sophia to convey the property hereinafter mentioned, to her, and for the further consideration of a. full, complete, and final settlement of all law suits, disputes, and demands of what character they may be, between the said Hancock and wife, a full relinquishment of which between the parties is hereby agreed upon, and is witnessed by this indenture, and for the-further consideration of one dollar.”

Then follows the grant and sale to Cosby of said lots, with a general description thereof, the deed concluding-in these words:

“Upon trust, nevertheless, that the said Cosby, his heirs, and assigns shall permit the said Hancock and the said Marion Sophia to remain in quiet and peaceable possession of said parcel of ground and the improvements thereon, and to talce the profits thereof to the use of the said Marion Sophia and her heirs, and upon [110]*110'this further trust that the said Cosby will, upon the ■ written request of the said Marion Sophia, join her in ■any conveyance to any person for any purpose of the whole, or any part of the described premises; the funds or proceeds arising from such sale or disposition to be used, invested, and disposed of as the said Marion •may direct, the said Cosby exercising no control over -the said premises and liable for no neglect. And also upon the further trust that the said Cosby, his heirs, and assigns will hold the said premises to the use — the •said Marion Sophia solely and separately during the joint lives of the said Marion Sophia and the said Hancock, subject to the direction of the said Marion Sophia as above directed; and from and immediately after •the death of said Washington Hancock, her husband as aforesaid, in case the said Marion Sophia should sur■vive him, then to the said Marion Sophia during her natural life, and after her death to the heirs of the said Washington Hancock; but in case the said Marion Sophia should die during the life-time of the said Hancock, then to the use of such persons for such \estates and changes as the said Marion Sophia by her last will and testament, in writing, or by any instrument of writing in the nature of or purporting to be •the last will and testament, executed in the presence of two witnesses, should direct, limit, or appoint, and in default thereof, then to the use of the children of the -said Hancock, their heirs, and assigns.”

They had only one son, John, by name, who died in 1870, after he became of age, and before either of them died, she made a will during the life-time of their son, -and devised two-thirds of the lots to him'for and during [111]*111his natural.life, and the other third to her nephew, John B. Swan, in fee simple. She died in the life-time of her husband.

It is contended that the son, John Hancock, took a vested remainder in the whole of the lots, subject to be •defeated by any disposition which his mother might make by last will, or by an instrument in the nature of last will, and that his father being his only heir was entitled to two-thi'rds of the lots by descent.

The statement of the consideration which is composed of a promise to convey the property to her to •settle controversies between her and her husband, and of one dollar, recites an agreement that must have been made before the execution of the deed. The recital being equivalent to an agreement to convey to her, we must construe the remainder of the instrument in view of that object, and so as to carry out the contract of the parties, unless a clear and manifest purpose not to •do so is exhibited by the language of the instrument itself. In Bank of Kentucky v. Vance, 4 Littell, 172, the court said: “Therecital of an agreement in a deed, is, in law, equivalent to an agreement made by the deed; and hence it is held, that' upon such recited agreement, an action of covenant will lie.” To the •same effect is the case of Bealle’s adm’r. v. Schoal’s ex., 1 Mass., 354. It is clear, therefore, that the agreed purpose of the deed was to invest Mrs. Hancock with "title to the property conveyed by it. In pursuance of that agreement she was invested with the right “to take the profits thereof to the use of” herself “and her heirs.” This unlimited right to the profits conferred upon her heirs as well as herself, if nothing else [112]*112appeared in the deed restricting it, would amount to a grant of the land itself, for as said by Washburn, 3 vol. sec. 23, p. 622. A grant of rents, issues, and profits of a tract of land is a grant of the land itself, and on p. 695, that “a devise of the rents and profits is equivalent to a devise of the land itself;” and by Smith on Real and Personal Property, page 491. “A grant of th& profits of land carries the land itself.”

In the case of Bowles v. Winchester, 13 Bush, p. 13, it is laid down that “ the devise to the wife of the rents and profits for life and then to her issue, was in substance a devise of the property itself.” “There is no foundation for the distinction (18 B. M., 329) attempted to be drawn between the land itself and its issues and profits.” See 4 Kent’s Com., p. 6.

The terms “her heirs,” indicate an intention to create a fee, and are words of limitation which mark out the extent of the estate conveyed.

But the use of the word “profits,” and the inheritable term “heirs,” are not the only provisions of the deed which evidence the purpose of conveying to her an absolute fee simple title.

She was also invested with the unrestricted power of alienation; the only condition to that power, if it be one, being that she should make a written request of the trustee to join her in the conveyance, and was given the right to the funds or proceeds arising from any sale she should make, “to be used, invested, or disposed of” as she “may direct.”

The trustee was excluded from control over the premises and exempted from any neglect. Thus she and her heirs were granted the profits; she was invested with [113]*113absolute power of alienation and entitled to the proceeds to do with as she pleased, and in the event of her death during the life-time of her husband, she was expressly authorized to dispose of the whole estate in fee simple by testamentary devise. This double express power of alienation by deed and disposition by will, is supplemented by the power cast upon her by operation of law to will the estate, because of the separate quality impressed upon it by the deed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 Ky. 107, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-hancocks-admr-kyctapp-1884.