Carhart v. Aldridge

109 So. 700, 144 Miss. 178, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 347
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1926
DocketNo. 25704.
StatusPublished

This text of 109 So. 700 (Carhart v. Aldridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carhart v. Aldridge, 109 So. 700, 144 Miss. 178, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 347 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

*184 Ethridge., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Mrs. Kate Feltus Carhart, formerly Mrs. Kate B. Feltus, widow of James A. Y. Feltus, deceased, filed her bill in the chancery court of Washington county to set aside an instrument of conveyance executed by her in favor of the appellees, and an instrument creating a trust in her behalf, signed by the appellees as trustees, and a decree of the chancery court in a former suit filed by the appellees against her in the chancery court of Washington county, numbered 7379, in which she was removed as executrix and trustee of the estate of James A. V. Feltus; deceased, under an appointment of the chancery court and by the provisions of the will of James A. Y. Feltus, deceased.

It appears by the bill and exhibits thereto that Jas. A. Y. Feltus executed the will, which is made an exhibit to the bill herein, disposing of his property and making James B. Fraley, of Chicago, 111., executor and trustee of the said will, and also testamentary guardian of the minor children of the said Feltus. It is provided in the will that, in the event of the death or refusal or inability of the said James B. Fraley to act as trustee and executor, the appellant, Kate Berkley Feltus, was appointed to act for and to succeed him, with like power and discretion, and, in the event of he,r death or inability or refusal to act, then the oldest living[ child to act for or succeed the said James B. Fraley or the said Kate Berkley Feltus, and that, if it should fall to a child not yet of age, then William Griffin of Greenville, in the state of Mississippi, was to act for and succeed the persons thereinbefore named until and only until such child should become -of age. The will then directed and appointed the acting trustee as guardian of the personal effects and property of all the minor children of James A. V. Feltus, and likewise appointed the said James B. Fraley, or his successor as named executor of his last will *185 and testament, and directed that he or she be required to furnish no bond as such executor.

In the sixth section of the will it was provided that the trustee, as trustee and executor, or as either or both, should manage, care for, improve, and protect all of the trust property, and defray all necessary expenses and charges out of the income or sale or disposition of the said property, and the said trustee, his successor or successors, was authorized and directed to pay to the testator’s wife, Kate Berkley Feltus, a yearly income of not less than one thousand eight hundred dollars nor more than two thousand five hundred dollars in monthly installments, for, and only for, the care of herself and of the testator’s children, and for all their expenses, including house and yard help, but not rental for the home or repairs to it, or of the feed of six animals named in the will. In the seventh section of the will it was provided that the allowance for the care and support of the wife and children of the testator, specified in section 6 thereof, “may at the discretion of my trustee be increased in event of serious sickness or disaster or to assist in my children’s education while they may be away from home.” The will provided that:

“. . . My said trustee or executor, or both, is hereby empowered and authorized and directed to collect, receipt for and discharge any and all notes, obligations, rents, incomes or profits, due or to become due to me or to my estate; to sell, transfer, convey and lease any and all of my personal or real estate with full discretion, and discretionary power is hereby vested in my said executor to sell by public auction or private sale any and all of the said trust estate and properties, at such time, and upon such terms, for such price, and in such manner as to time and mode of payment of .the purchase money, or as to any other matters relating to successor or successors shall or may deem expedient, except, however, that I direct that the property now owned by me and referred to as the plantation and known as ‘Three Oaks’ shall be *186 kept intact, but my trustee, Ms successor or successors, is authorized, with full power and discretion, if he shall deem it advisable, to- sell and convey locations from said plantation for bona-fide manufacturing or commercial purposes in such amounts and from such location as he shall determine in his discretion. My said trustee is hereby fully authorized and empowered, with full discretion, to take tracts of ten or more acres from any part of the said plantation property for the purpose of subdividing the same into building or town lots; or to take any necessary ground for railroad tracks or trackage, depot or depot ground, public road or building lot of any kind. It is my wish, however, except as stated above, that the plantation be preserved until my youngest child is of age.”

James B. Fraley qualified as executor and trustee, and testamentary guardian, and spent some time in executing said trust, but, being a man of more than sixty years of age, and living in Chicago, he decided that he could not continue as trustee, as it would require too much of his time upon the plantation in Mississippi, and he filed a petition setting up his refusal to act, and his final account as executor and trustee, in the chancery court of Washington countjq praying that all parties in interest be made parties thereto, and that his account be approved and his resignation accepted, and that he be finally discharged from executing the trust and as executor of the said estate. The court entered a decree on this petition and final account, reciting:

“This cause coming on this day to be heard upon the resignation of-James B. Ftaley, as executor of said estate, and also upon the report and final account of said executor, and it appearing that all the persons interested in said estate have been cited by legal process to show cause, if they can, why the final account of said executor should not be approved and he discharged, and the court being of the opinion that the resignation of said executor should be accepted and his final account approved *187 and he discharged, it is therefore considered by the court and so ordered and decreed that the resignation of James B. Fraley, as executor of the estate of J. A. Y. Feltus, deceased, be accepted, and that his final account be approved and said executor finally discharged.”

The said Fraley thereupon turned over the property and effects in his hands as executor and trustee, and the bill alleged that the complainant was appointed as executor and testamentary trustee of said estate, and the appellant took charge of said property on the 1st day of January, 1911, and entered upon the due and prompt administration of the same under the powers of said will, and continued until the 15th day of October, 1923, when she was forced to resign because of the wrongs and injuries set forth in her bill.

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 700, 144 Miss. 178, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carhart-v-aldridge-miss-1926.