Bradford's Administrator v. Kinney

287 S.W. 921, 216 Ky. 348, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 916
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 921 (Bradford's Administrator v. Kinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradford's Administrator v. Kinney, 287 S.W. 921, 216 Ky. 348, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 916 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Hobson—

Reversing.

Mary Jane Bradford died in January, 1925. She was seventy-nine years old. She left surviving her, as her sole heirs at law, her. two brothers; George W. Kinney, who ivas eighty-two years of age and Thos. J. Kinney, who was eighty-five years of age. She owned at her death ten or twelve acres' of land in Brooksville, Kentucky, $600.00 in money and some household and kitchen furniture. Her will is in these words:

“I, Mary J. Bradford of Brooksville, Bracken county, Ky., being of sound mind and memory, realiz-. ing the uncertainties of life and desiring to make disposition of my worldy affairs while I have accompanied mental capacity so to do, do hereby make and publish this my last will and testament, hereby revoking all other wills heretofore by me made.
‘£ Item 1. I will and direct that after my decease that all my funeral expenses1 be first paid out of my estate by my executors hereinafter named.
“Item 2. After payments of the above named expense I will and devise to my beloved brother, *349 George W. Kinney, five acres of land. (Here follows boundary of land.)
“Item 3. I will and devise all the remaining real estate or residue of which I may die seized and possessed, being about five or six acres after cutting off passway mentioned in item 2, including house in which I now live and all other 'outbuildings adjoining same to my beloved brother, Thomas J. Kinney for and during his natural life to use and enjoy as he may deem proper.
“Item 4. After the death of my brother, Thos. Kinney, I’devise and bequeath the residue of my real estate devised to my brother Thos. J. Kinney to my niece, Carrie M. Yates, absolutely without entailment.
“Item 5. I hereby nominate and appoint my brothers Thos. J. Kinney and George W. Kinney my executors of this my last will and testament anS. desire and request that the court require no bond or bonds of them as such executors.
“In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand this 13th day of September, 1922.
“ (Signed) Mary J. Bradford ’•*

Carrie M.'Yates is a daughter of Thos. J. Kinney. The will was probated in the county co’urt. George W. Kinney prosecuted an appeal to the circuit court. There was no evidence of want of capacity. The court submitted to the jury the question of undue influence. The jury found against the will. The propounders appeal, insisting that the court should have instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the will and that the verdict of the jury is palpably against the evidence.

Thos. J. Kinney lived in Indianapolis; George W. Kinney lived in Bracken county near the testatrix. Thos. Kinney had a son, Louis, and some grandchildren who were the children of a deceased son, Matt, who had died in very good circumstances: George W. Kinney had several sons and two daughters. In July, 1922, as Thos. Kinney was leaving his sister’s home, she requested him to tell Mr. J. E. Poage that she wanted him to stop there as he passed her house on going home. Thos. Kinney went on home. In a day or two Poage did go to see Mrs. Bradford and she told him she wanted him to write her will. He took down her instructions and told her that he would write it out later. He wrote the will a few days *350 after this and gave it to her, hut nothing further occurred until September 13, 1922, when she saw Poage again and asked him to come to the house and bring W. T. Breeze with him to witness the will. Breeze and Poage were her neighbors and her friends. They carne and the will was duly executed and left with her. Thos. Kinney was in Indianapolis and had no part in the transaction after he delivered the message to Poage as he was going-home in July. Thus things ran along until November 24, 19'24, when the old lady was paralyzed and by phone Thos. Kinney was called to see her. He came and he says that she then asked him to take the paper to Poage for safekeeping, which he did. She continued to grow worse after this and died early in January. The witnesses for the contestant, as well as those for the will, all agree in -saying that she Was a woman of good mind. She was a woman of culture and a strong character, who had decided convictions of her owp. This is undisputed.

The testatrix was the widow of S. W. Bradford, who died some years before, making her his sole devisee, as they had no children. After her husband’s death the estate turned out to be much involved and a litigation ensued, -conducted by Y. Alexander, etc., to take all the property away from his widow. Her brother, Thos. Kinney, came to his sister’s assistance in this litigation and about 1908 secured a settlement of it by which the title to the land that she owned at her death was quieted to her. George W. Kinney did not help her in this matter, and from this time on she looked to Thos. Kinney for help in her business matters. She would write for Mm to come whenever she needed Mm, and he would come to make contracts or settlements with tenants or dispose of crops or any other matters that she had on hand.

George W. Kinney testified that the five acres devised to him by the will was not vrorth over $200.00, but he admits his brother offered him a thousand dollars for it and he declined to take it. He says he frequently went to see his sister and she always treated Mm friendly, but in the last few years of' her life he noticed a change in her manner toward Mm, and she many times told him that he was trying to beat her out of her home; that she said she wanted her burial expenses and debts taken out and then wanted everything divided equally between her two brothers; that she told him this dozens of times and continued to tell him this after September 13, 1922; that he *351 had nothing in the world to do with any attempt to beat her ont of her home; that he noticed no change in the condition of her mind; she was of sound mind, but she wouldn’t let him have anything to do with her business and always got Thomas to attend to it. He said that after her death he asked Thomas if she had left a will and he said he didn’t know, that maybe there was a will; that Thomas insisted on buying a cheap coffin to bury her in, and after the will was opened Thomas said the reason the will was made that way was that he wanted to keep Louis and his children and Matt’s children out of the estate, Louis being Thomas’ son and Matt’s children being his grandchildren.

He also testified that Thomas said that the personal property was to be divided equally between his daughter Carrie Yates and the two daughters of George Kinney, and that nothing was said about this in the will as that had seen settled before.

Miss Lide Kinney, the daughter of George Kinney, testified that after Mrs. Bradford was taken sick she telephoned for Thos. Kinney, and when he came he said they needn’t be running up a doctor’s bill; that after he said this Mrs. Bradford settled with the doctor and told him he needn’t come any more; but she said when she paid the doctor that it did her good to see him and that she hated to do it as it did her good to see him come in.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 921, 216 Ky. 348, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradfords-administrator-v-kinney-kyctapphigh-1926.