Chorn v. Chorn's Administrator

33 S.W. 1107, 98 Ky. 627, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 29, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 1107 (Chorn v. Chorn's Administrator) 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
Chorn v. Chorn's Administrator, 33 S.W. 1107, 98 Ky. 627, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 13 (Ky. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PRYOR

delivered the opinion oe the court.

James Ckorn died in the county of Montgomery, in the month of August, of the year 1888. He left no children, but his widow, Mary W. Chorn, survived him and qualified as his personal representative. She instituted an action in the Montgomery Circuit Court for a settlement of his estate, and, during the progress of that litigation, many claims were presented by his- creditors for payment, and some of them, being contested below, are now the subjects of this appeal.

His heirs at law, consisting of a brother and sister and the-children of a brother and sister deceased, were defendants to the action below and are the appellants in this court.

The decedent owned a large and valuable estate, but seems to have been much indebted, and, after satisfying the [630]*630claims of creditors, there is but little, if anything, left for the heirs at law.

We will not consider all the exceptions filed to the claims presented, as many of the grounds of exception did not exist, and the claims were properly allowed, and will only take up such exceptions as, if improperly overruled, must affect, materially, the rights of those who are entitled as heirs at law.

The widow was allowed as a credit in her settlement the sum of near $6,000, being the amount of two notes her husband owed the National Valley Bank of Staunton, Virginia; and the objection made to this credit is that her husband borrowed this money for the Traders Deposit Bank, of Mt. Sterling, and being the bank’s debt, as personal representative she ought not to have paid this money. There is no evidence that this was the bank’s debt or that the widow had any reason to believe it was other than her husband’s individual liability.

The decedent had pledged as collateral to secure the payment of this borrowed money one hundred and fifty shares of the stock of the Traders Deposit Bank that belonged to, him, and it was the duty of the widow, as his personal representative, to pay off! the debt to the Virginia bank and take up the collateral for the estate. This she did, and, besides, the evidence is conclusive that the debt for which the collateral was pledged was not the debt of the Mt. Sterling bank, but that of the decedent.

The widow was also allowed various articles of personal property, such as household furniture, including a piano, some of which she proves was purchased out of her own means, and other articles given to her and held and claimed as her separate estate during the life of the husband. They consisted of a mirror, an old set of parlor furniture, an old [631]*631piano, given her by her husband on her twenty-eighth birthday, and some silverware given to her by her mother, with her maiden name upon it. Several witnesses state that this household property, given by the father and mother of Mrs. Chorn, was given as her separate estate, and her husband (now deceased) recognized it as such. Someofthepersonalty the wife purchased and paid for by checks on her own bank a.ccount, and we perceive no reason why the husband could not, by gift, create this separate estate, so that, as between himself and wife, she could hold it against his personal representative or his heirs at'law. The creditors of the estate are making no complaint, but the controversy is between the widow and the heirs at law of the husband, the latter denying the right of the husband and wife to create a separate estate in this manner.

This court held, in Jones v. Nisbet, 12 Ky. Law Rep., 796, that where the wife, after marriage, claimed the piano as her separate estate (that she held before marriage), under' an agreement with her husband, the title was in the wife,, and the officer had no right to sell it for the husband’s debt. (Thomas v. Harkness, 13 Bush. 23; Maraman’s adm’r v. Maraman, 4 Met., 84.)

The claim of the wife to this property was properly sustained.

The wife owned jointly with the husband a tract of two hundred and four acres of land in Bourbon county. The one-half of this tract was conveyed to the wife for and during her life “as her separate estate, free from the disposal and control of her present husband * * it being for her own use as her separate estate.”

The husband controlled this estate for several years, rented the land out and collected the rents, the one-half of which,, after deducting taxes and repairs, belonged to the wife; also [632]*632sold a number of walnut logs from the place. He held it as her separate estate, and, unlike the income from the rent of the general estate in land of the wife, could not be converted to the use of the husband, so as to deprive the wife of her interest in it.

In Carter v. Carter, 2 Bush, 288, this court said: "Section 1 of article 2, chapter 47 of Revised Statutes, conceding to the husband the use of the wife’s land with power to lease it for three years, and to receive the rents, does not apply to land held by a trustee for the ‘sole and separate use’ of the wife.”

The husband, by collecting these rents, converted himself into a trustee for the wife, and, if living, would not be heard to say, in a litigation with the wife, that he had used the rents for his own purposes. The heirs at law of the husband occupy no better position, than the husband would if living, and the facts showing that he collected these rents, his estate must account to the wife, and the court will not assume, without proof, that these rents were paid to the wife or invested in some way for her use.

If creditors were complaining there would be more reason for subordinating the wife’s claim to their demands, but, even as against creditors, the chancellor would not disregard such a meritorious claim, and, in overruling the exceptions to this claim, we perceive no error.

The heirs also complain of an allowance to O’Rear & Big-staff of $1,800 for their services as attorneys for the admin-istratrix, and to this branch of the case it is insisted the appeal is barred. The allowance to O’Rear & Bigstaff, as attorneys, was made more than two years before the appeal was taken, as a preferred claim, and the administratrix directed to pay it; but it is contended, and the facts sustain this view, that this allowance was for services rendered and [633]*633to be rendered in an ex parte proceeding that could not well be said was a final judgment, such as precluded the chancellor from any further control over it after the .expiration of the term at which the allowance was made.

It is often difficult to determine what constitutes a final judgment, and, particularly, in actions for the settlement of the estates of deceased persons.

The report of the settlement in which the accounts of the attorneys, O’Rear & Bigstaff and Brooks & Woodford, were allowed, had been confirmed, and, as to the first named attorneys, an order to pay the money had been made, and the land of the decedent directed to be sold to ’pay creditors, but no order of distribution had been entered; but, on the contrary, subsequent references had been made and other claims allowed; and if such steps in behalf of creditors, in the settlement of decedent’s estates and that class of litigation, are to be .regarded as final, it would result in the personal representative being compelled, in every protracted litigation for the settlement of an estate, to appeal from every allowance made to which his exceptions had been overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 1107, 98 Ky. 627, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chorn-v-chorns-administrator-kyctapp-1896.