Chenault's Guardian v. Metropolitan Life Ins.

53 S.W.2d 720, 245 Ky. 482, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 608
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 22, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 720 (Chenault's Guardian v. Metropolitan Life Ins.) 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
Chenault's Guardian v. Metropolitan Life Ins., 53 S.W.2d 720, 245 Ky. 482, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 608 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner—

Reversing.

The opinion relates to a power granted in a deed and the rights of an infant remainderman in property mortgaged to secure a loan of $16,500 made to a vendee of the donee of the power.

Mrs. Bettie D. Chenanlt owned in fee a farm containing 221.75 acres called the “Miller Place,” and also an undivided one-third interest in fee in another farm containing 371.68 acres called the “Anderson Chenanlt Place.” The other two-thirds interest in this farm was owned jointly by her sons, J. D. Chenanlt and C. F. Chenanlt. On January 22, 1907, in consideration of an annuity of $300 to be paid her by each of the sons, and for love and affection, Mrs. Chenanlt conveyed her property to her sons jointly “during their natural life and at their death to their children, and, if none, then to my heirs.” The habendum is as follows:

“To have and to hold unto the second parties during their natural lives and at their, death to their children and in the event that either of second parties should die without living children the interest of such one to go to the children of the survivor and any other grand-child or children, I might have in such event and in the event neither of second parties left children' at their death and first party had no grand children living at the death of second parties then the land hereby conveyed to go and descend to my heirs at law in fee.
“The second parties are hereby given the right to sell and convey by deed in fee without the intersection (sic) of a court or any judgment or order of any court the land hereby conveyed on *485 either tract of land hereby conveyed but the proceeds arising from said sale or sales must be reinvested in real estate under the same terms and limitations set out in this deed.
“This reinvestment is incumbent on the second parties only a purchaser from either of them not being required to see to the reinvestment of the proceeds arising from any sale of the lands in fee by either of second parties.”

Briefly stated, the conveyance was of a life estate to each son, with remainder to their respective children or to the grantor’s grand children or her heirs at law, as the contingencies might develop. But the life tenants were empowered to sell for reinvestment the estates so conveyed them without obtaining the authority of the court, conditioned, however, upon the investment of the proceeds in other real estate, which should be held under the terms and limitations of the deed. The purchaser was relieved of responsibility of seeing that the terms of the trust respecting the reinvestment were carried out.

Acting under that authority, on January 3, 1910, the two brothers exchanged the interest which each had in the two farms. J. D. Chenault conveyed his entire interest in the Miller farm to C. F. Chenault, and he conveyed his interest in the other place to J. D. Chenault. Before proceeding with the development of the case to the ultimate legal questions, we may consider the query whether the power to sell granted by the mother included or contemplated an exchange of interests in the land.

Strictly speaking, to sell property is to transfer it to another in consideration of a price paid or agreed to be paid in money. Commonwealth v. Davis, 12 Bush (75 Ky.) 240. However, since the intention and authority of the grantor in the deed before us was that the specific land might be disposed of for the purpose of acquiring other land, we have no doubt that such an exchange was within her contemplation and is within the terms of the power. Although some courts hold otherwise (Perry, on Trusts, sec, 769; 49 C. J. 1271; Compare Ross v. Barr’s Ex’r, 53 S. W. 658, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 974), such was the construction given a clause in a will granting power to a devisee to sell and convey *486 lands devised to him for reinvestment in other lands according to his discretion, in Broaddus v. Centers (Ky.) 116 S. W. 742. See also, Groodloe’s Ex’r v. Davie & Collier, 4 Ky. Opin. 363. The exchange, therefore, was authorized and is valid. Now, the provisions of the. .power were that whatever property might be received in substitution of the original trust estate by way of reinvestment should be held upon the same terms. Although for a one-half trust interest in the Miller farm C. F. Chenault conveyed to J. D. Chenault a one-third fee interest and a one-third trust interest in the Chenault farm, and undertook to convey a fee-simple title in all of it; nevertheless all of it became subject to the conditions of the mother’s deed. That was the reinvestment of J. D. Chenault’s trust estate in the Miller farm. The result of the exchange was that J. D. Chenault became the owner of a two-thirds interest in the Chenault farm impressed with the trust to be added to the one-third interest he already owned in fee.

In the same month, upon the ex parte petition of J. D. Chenault and his mother, the Madison county court, through commissioners, partitioned this Chenault farm. It appears that in the proceeding J. D. Chenault was regarded as owning a two-thirds interest in fee, and the land was so divided as to sever and set apart one-third as being held under the trust and conditions of the mother’s deed. By the commissioner’s report, which was confirmed, lines were established whereby 286.68 acres were laid off as that owned in fee, and 85 acres, including the mansion house and other improvements, as the life or trust estate. Subsequently Chenault sold and conveyed to McKinney 152.93 acres of the tract said to be held in fee, under the partition deed, leaving 218.75 acres in the entire tract, of which, according to the record, 133.75 were held in fee and 85 acres as a life estate. Notwithstanding that partition proceeding, in July, 1922, J. D. Chenault and others (adult contingent remaindeimen) filed another petition in the county court in which his infant daughter (born in 1915) and the infant children of C. F. Chenault were made defendants and brought before the court by a guardian ad litem. This petition set up the ownership of the remaining 218.75 acres as being two-thirds in fee and one-third for life, and asked for a partition in that proportion. The former proceeding and severance were wholly ignored. The county court in this latter *487 ease, through commissioners, divided the tract, and it appears that a deed was executed by a commissioner of the court whereby Chenault was conveyed 145.50 acres in fee and 73.25 acres for life under the terms of his mother’s deed instead of the 85 acres originally set apart. The right of one owning property in this way to have the life interest set apart was declared in Orsburn v. Orsburn, 196 Ky. 176, 244 S. W. 417. However, so far as the record before us discloses, several requirements of section 499 of the Civil Code of Practice, under which a partition may be had, were not complied with in the first proceeding. But neither of those proceedings is attacked in this case, and we do not undertake to pass upon the validity of either of them.

In 1925 J. D. Chenault had become heavily in debt, and it appears that there were mortgages on some part of this land. Louis Dunbar, who was engaged in the real estate business and in procuring farm loans through several financial institutions, was applied to for a loan on this property by Mr. Chenault.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 720, 245 Ky. 482, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chenaults-guardian-v-metropolitan-life-ins-kyctapphigh-1932.