Breckinridge v. Denny

71 Ky. 523, 8 Bush 523, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 22, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 71 Ky. 523 (Breckinridge v. Denny) 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
Breckinridge v. Denny, 71 Ky. 523, 8 Bush 523, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 93 (Ky. Ct. App. 1871).

Opinion

JUDGE LINDSAY

delivered the opinion oe the court.

John Faulkner died in the year 1838, having first made and published his last will and testament, which in due time was admitted to probate. This will, among others, contains the following provisions, viz.: “ I will and bequeath my entire landed and personal estate, together with all my negroes and their future increase, equally to my three daughters, subject, however, to the provisions and conditions hereafter set out. For the purpose of the whole of my property of every description being equally and justly divided between my children, and that the same may be made perfectly safe and secure to them and their lawful issue forever, and with the additional desire that their education should be carefully attended to, a matter about which I feel great solicitude, I hereby appoint my friends, Oliver Terrill, James H. Letcher, and Robert P. Letcher, guardians and trustees, to hold for the use and benefit of my children and their lawful heirs forever the whole of the portion to which each is entitled under this will.”

The testator then sets out specifically and minutely the manner in which he desires these guardians and trustees to discharge the trusts reposed in them, and continues: “In making these requisitions as to the mode in which I wish the trusts executed, I desire it clearly understood it is by no means to be inferred that it springs from any want of confidence in the integrity or fidelity of the gentlemen elected as guardians and trustees to my children; but it was suggested by one of the gentlemen chosen, and the only one with whom I have had an opportunity of consulting, that provision of the sort was desirable and proper in reference both to guardians and wards, more especially as I design the trusts to continue [526]*526in tbe persons appointed and their successors forever. My children are not at liberty to choose guardians at the age of fourteen. I have adopted that mode which I have deemed the most safe for the preservation of their estate by the appointment of guardians and trustees, and my wishes -upon the subject I hope will be strictly obeyed in all time to come. Under no color, under no pretext, no device whatever, is my real estate to be sold by interposition of a chancellor or by an act of the legislature. My will is that the guardians and trustees and their successors shall hold the estate in trust for the use, support, education, and benefit of my children and their posterity forever. If one of them dies without lawful issue, then the property, or part to which she is entitled, is to go to -the survivors, her two sisters, and to be held in trust in the same manner designated. If two should die without lawful issue, then the survivor is to have the whole of the estate, to be held under the same regulations and restrictions as have been already set forth and specified. Should either of my daughters, however, after she arrives at the age of twenty-one, desire to choose her own trustee, she is at liberty to do so, upon the party so chosen giving his consent, entered of record in the County Court of Garrard, to act as trustee; but when chosen he is to have no greater power than the one appointed under this will. He is to hold the estate in trust, and has no authority or power to sell in any way whatever.”

By subsequent clauses the testator provides for filling the vacancies that may be caused by the failure or refusal of either of the guardians or trustees to act, or by their removal from the county of Garrard; also for the division of his lands and negroes; and then uses this language: “But after my property is divided in the manner I have directed, the trusteeship still continues, in the manner heretofore mentioned, in the trustees herein appointed and their successors forever.”

A careful analysis of all the provisions of this will con[527]*527strains us to conclude that it was the intention of the devisor, through the intervention of trustees, to secure his estate to his children and their descendants for all time to come. Inasmuch as such intention was contrary not only to the spirit but the letter of the law as it existed at the time the will was made and published, it should not be assumed, unless the language of the devisor leads naturally and legitimately to that conclusion. In fact, if the will allows any other construction, not involving the necessity of distorting or straining the obvious meaning of the expressions used by the writer, the courts will incline to adopt it as the correct one. The purpose of securing to the devisees “and their lawful issue forever” the estate devised, the expressed intention that the-guardians and trustees should hold it “for the use and benefit of my (his) children and their lawful heirs forever,” and that after the property should be divided in the mode directed the trusteeships should still continue in the trustees appointed “ and, their successors forever,” are provisions which might not be held to be necessarily inconsistent with the idea that the testator intended that his children should take estates for life, or defeasible fees iii the realty devised to them. Nor do we think it necessary to construe the dying “without lawful issue” as meaning an indefinite failure of issue. It is not necessary to resort to the canons of construction at all. The testator explains such language as would ordinarily admit of doubt by stating that he “ designs the trust to continue in the persons appointed and their successors forever,” and that the guardians and trustees and their successors are to hold the estate in trust “for the use, support, education, and benefit of my (his) children and their posterity forever.” There is perhaps no broader or more comprehensive term in our language than that of “posterity.” It embraces not only children, but descendants to the remotest generations; and as the trustees were to hold the estate for the support, education, and benefit [528]*528of the first takers “ and their posterity forever,” it was but natural that the devisor should express the hope that his wishes as to the manner in which the estate devised should be held and managed would “be strictly obeyed in all time to come.” The fact' that the will provided that in case one or more of the devisees should die without lawful issue, the survivors or survivor should take their interests, does not rebut the idea of an intended entailment, for the survivors or survivor was then to hold under the same regulations and restrictions as the original devisees..

There is an essential difference between this will and that of Ebenezer Best.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ky. 523, 8 Bush 523, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breckinridge-v-denny-kyctapp-1871.