Clemens v. Caldwell

46 Ky. 171, 7 B. Mon. 171, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 19, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 Ky. 171 (Clemens v. Caldwell) 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
Clemens v. Caldwell, 46 Ky. 171, 7 B. Mon. 171, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 125 (Ky. Ct. App. 1846).

Opinion

Judge Bkeck

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Thomas Clemens, by his last will, which was admitted to record in the Mercer County Court, in 1826, devised one third of his estate to the children of his sister, Elizabeth Caldwell, then the wife of Charles Caldwell, and directed that it should be converted by the trustee therein named, into cash and vested in good United States government stock, and the interest arising therefrom to be also invested in the like stock, until the children of said Elizabeth should attain the age of twenty one years, when the whole amount, principal and interest, was to be equally divided between them; but he adds: “incase the said Elizabeth shall die without heirs, then this one third part of my estate, which I now give to her children, shall descend to any other lawful heirs.” The will in conclusion contains this clause: “I do hereby appoint my uncle, James Clemens, of Huntsville, Alabama, and his successor or successors, as trustee or trustees, for the execution of this will.”

James Clemens, the trustee named in the will, having renounced his right and refused to qualify as executor, James Clemens, Jr., was appointed administrator with the will annexed, and as such, executed bond, with James Clemens, Sr. and Isabella Clemens his sureties.

In 1837, Jeremiah Clemens Caldwell, by his father and next friend, exhibited this bill in the Mercer Circuit Court, alledging that he was the only child of Elizabeth Caldwell, and as such, under the will of Thomas Clemens, was entitled to one third of his estate. That James Clemens, Sr., had not accepted the trust for the manage’ [172]*172merit of the complainant’s interest, and was not disposed so to do, and James Clemens, Jr., resided in St. Louis, Missouri; that he had rendered no account of the estate to which the complainant was entitled, which had come to his hands; nor how it had been invested or used ; that complainant resided with his father in the county of Mercer, and that it would be for iris interest to have some other person appointed a tiustee for the management of the fund pursuant to the directions of the will, and that an account should be rendered by the said James Clemens, Jr., of the estate of the testator, &c. The said James Clemens, Sr. and the said James, Jr,, and Thomas Reed and his- wife, Isabella, late Isabella Clemens, were made defendants.

Interlocutory decree of the Circuit Court.. First'answer of James- Clemens, Jr. Amendfed1 Bill. Seeond answer of J. Clemons, Jr.

In March, 1838, the1 Court appointed Charles Caldwell, the father of the complainant-, trustee, requiring him to execute bond with surety, in the penalty of twenty thousand dollars; conditioned that he should “faithfully collect, dispose-of, and account for the estate of the complainant, so-far as it might'come to his hands, under such orders, directions and instructions as may hereafter be made upon him by the Mercer Circuit Court, in this cause.” As to the residue-of the cause, the Court retained it for further proceedings and decree.

In 1840, James Clemens, Jr. filed his answer, admitting that the complainant was entitled to a portion of the ■estate of Thomas Clemens, in his hands, as claimed, and be expresses a willingness to settle it up. His answer, however, is very indefinite and unsatisfactory as to its amount and condition. Pie admits be has made no settlement as administrator, and that he has not invested that portion-of the estate to which complainant is entitled.

Subsequently amended-bills were filed, alledging more1 specifically, the amount of the testator’s eslate, which-had been converted into money by the administrator, and charging him with having used it, and profitably, for himself, in the very extensive and- valuable business in which he was engaged.

In 184.3, the defendant further answers, and for the first time questions the jurisdiction of the Court and the: [173]*173right of complainant to maintain his action. His answer is still evasive and unsatisfactory as to the amount and condition of the fund in question.

Second amended bill. Third answer of J. Clemens, Jr. Decree of thes Circuit Court,.

A subsequent amended or supplemental bill was filed by complainant, alledging that his father, Charles Caldwell, who had been appointed tiustee, had accepted the trust and executed bond as required by the decree. He further alledges the continued and profitable use, in his own business, by the defendant, the administrator, of the estate of the testator, or the portion to which the complainant was entitled, and that he, still failed to render any account thereof; and by specific allegation and interrogatory, he calls upon him for further answer.

The defendant in his answer states that the estate of the testator amounted to twenty two thousand and fifty four dollars 68 cents. He admits that he had on hand of this sum, in cash, as early, as the 1st January, 1828,. twelve thousand four hundred and six dollars 15 cénts; and that in 1839, he received between two and three thousand more. As to the residue of the estate, the answer is still not satisfactory. He again admits that complainant is entitled to one third of said estate. He does not deny the repeated allegation as to the profitable use of the fund in his own business. What or how great profits he has made, he does not attempt to explain.

The cause was heard in part, and the Court recognising and confirming the appointment of Charles Caldwell as trustee, decreed that the defendant, the administrator and his sureties, pay to the said trustee, one third of the $12,406 15, on hand the 1st January, 1828, with compound interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, up to the rendition of the decree, amountingto $11,509 38, and that the trustee might have execution therefor, &c. And as to the residue of the cause, it was retained., and an auditor appointed to settle the account of the administrator, &e.

To reverse that decree, James Clemens, Jr. prosecutes this writ of error.

The questions raised by the assignment of errors are,, first, that the Court below had no jurisdiction.

An administrator with the will annexed, becomes a trustee in the place of an executor refusing to qualify, and is responsible as such, and amenable to the jariadiction of the Chancellor who may remove him as trustee of a a devise, and appoint another. The failure of a trustee to invest the fund as directed, and the use thereof in his own business, is good ground for his removal by the Chancellor. The effect oi the removal of one trustee and the appointment of another, is not to change the purposes of the tru3t, but for its security to thb cestui que trust, and it is stilt within the power of the Chancellor.

[174]*174This objection, we think, is untenable. Whether Jas, Clemens, Jr. is regarded as occupying the attitude in regard to the fund in question, of a trustee under the will, for the investment and management thereof as therein directed, as contended by his counsel, or whether he should be regarded merely as an administrator, and that the duty of investing and managing the complainant’s portion of the estate did not devolve upon him, in either case, we think the jurisdiction of the Court was unquestionable.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ky. 171, 7 B. Mon. 171, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clemens-v-caldwell-kyctapp-1846.