Clark v. Payne

157 S.W.2d 63, 288 Ky. 819, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 158
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 24, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 157 S.W.2d 63 (Clark v. Payne) 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
Clark v. Payne, 157 S.W.2d 63, 288 Ky. 819, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 158 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Tilpord

Reversing.

Tbe rights of the numerous parties in the proceeds of sale of the 400 acre tract of land involved in this litigation are determinable solely by the proper construction to be placed upon the will of Peter Bramblett probated in the year 1866. Hence, it is unnecessary to refer *821 to the procedural methods employed by the litigants, or to do other than set forth the terms of the will, the origin of the relationships through which the contesting groups trace their asserted rights to participate, and the conclusions which we have reached. The will:

“I, Peter Bramblett, of the County of Bourbon, State of Kentucky, do make this my last will and testament.
“I devise to my granddaughter, Mollie P. Bramblett, the farm and tract of land in said County whereon her father, Wm. P. Bramblett, deceased, formerly resided containing about 400 acres more or less; also two negro men, Jerry and Henry, and two negro women, Ludy and Rhoda, and Rhoda’s four children, which said land and slaves shall be held by her as her exclusive property during her life and at her death to descend to her children (if she should have any) then living or to the descendants of such of her children as may then be dead and if she leaves no such issue, then said land and slaves shall return to my estate.
“I devise to my brother, James Bramblett, the tract of 176% acres of land which I purchased of George W. Hall, situated in Bourbon County, to him, his heirs and assigns forever.
“After the payment of my debts and one thousand dollars to my executor hereinafter named for his services in settling up my estate, I devise all the rest and residue of my estate, consisting of about 600 acres of land more or less whereon I now reside, all my household and kitchen furniture, slaves, stock, crop, money, notes, debts, claims, demands and choses in action to my wife Polly Bramblett, for and during her life with the privilege and power to devise $5,000.00 thereof in cash to whomsoever she may think proper, and after her death all said estate hereby devised to her shall be sold by my executor hereinafter named who is vested with full power to convey the same to the purchaser or purchasers and the proceeds thereof after deducting the five thousand dollars and the one thousand dollars mentioned herein I devise to be equally divided between my brothers and sisters and their descendants, to wit: To Malinda Young, one equal share; *822 to Ambrose Bramblett’s descendants one eqnal share. To Elizabeth Mitchell’s descendants one equal share and to Susan Smalley’s descendants one equal share. I constitute my stepson John Hall executor of this my last will and testament and devise to him the one thousand dollars aforesaid for his services in settling up my estate. The devise made to my granddaughter,. Mollie P. and to my brother James in the first or second sect, or clause of my will is all that I intend they shall have or receive from my estate. Out of the estate devised to my wife, my executor shall also retain in his hands after my wife’s death a sufficient sum of money to support comfortably my two invalid servants Horace and Clarissa during their lives. It is my will that whenever my servant Jefferson elects to accept his freedom agreeably to the laws of Kentucky, he shall have it after my wife’s death and one hundred dollars in cash. Witness my hand this 19th day of July, 1864.
“Peter Bramblett.”

Peter Bramblett left no lineal descendants other than his granddaughter, Mollie, whose father, William P. Bramblett, Peter’s only son, had died prior to the execution of the will. Polly Bramblett, the mother of William and the widow of Peter, was also the mother of John and Preston Hall, born of a former marriage. Thus, John and Preston Hall, the stepsons of Peter, were half brothers of William, and uncles of the half blood of Mollie. Their descendants, together with the descendants of Mollie’s maternal uncle, constituted the heirs at law of Mollie who died in March, 1939, without ever having married. Though not related by blood to the testator, they were adjudged by the Chancellor to be the sole owners of the land in controversy to the exclusion of the descendants of the testator’s brothers and sisters who would have been his sole heirs at law had he survived his granddaughter and died immediately after her death. Thus, the major controversy is outlined.

A subsidiary question necessary to be decided in the. event of a reversal of the Chancellor’s decree is, whether the descendants of the testator’s brother, James, are excluded from participation by the residuary clause of the will.

*823 In tlieir learned and lengthy brief appellees’ counsel cite our numerous decisions holding that all technical rules of construction must yield to the intention of the testator when that intention is ascertainable from the language employed. Yet, in the absence of tenable reasons for supposing that the testator preferred that his estate should pass to strangers to his blood, rather than to descendants of his brothers and sisters in the event his own line failed, appellees ’ counsel resort to technical rules to uphold their position.

They contend that the words, “my estate,” may not be construed to mean “my heirs,” but if so construed, the remainder interest thus created, though ‘ alternative or substitutional,” or contingent “with a double aspect/’ not being a true executory devise, is ineffective as violative of the rule that an inheritance must always be vested in some person or class of persons and cannot rest in nubibus pending the termination of a life estate. In effect, they invoke the common-law rule of “Worthier Title” by insisting that the provision for the return of the property to the testator’s estate, in the event his granddaughter left no issue, is not only ineffectual as a remainder, but is void for uncertainty, and that the reversionary interest therein passed to her by the laws of inheritance upon his death. But, as said in the recent case of Mitchell et al. v. Dauphin, Deposit Trust Company et al., 283 Ky. 532, 142 S. W. (2d) 181, 184, in which it is pointed out that this doctrine, in Kentucky at least, is but one of construction:

“After a careful consideration we are convinced that the doctrine of worthier title serves to hinder, rather than aid, in the ascertainment of the intention of a testator, which is the cardinal purpose in the construction of wills, and that it has no place in our jurisprudence.”

The rule that a remainder may not rest in nubibus pending the termination of a particular estate arose out of the common-law theory that the fee must always reside somewhere so that there will always be some one in existence to represent the inheritance in actions brought for its recovery or protection, and appears to be little more than a corollary, or rather, an excuse for the application of the worthier title rule. “Executory devises” and “springing uses” are but pathways around *824

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W.2d 63, 288 Ky. 819, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-payne-kyctapphigh-1941.