Cosby v. Hays

257 S.W.2d 575, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 788
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 13, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 257 S.W.2d 575 (Cosby v. Hays) 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
Cosby v. Hays, 257 S.W.2d 575, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 788 (Ky. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

DUNCAN, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Clark Circuit Court affirming a judgment of the Clark County Court which appointed appellees, J. Smith Hays, Sr., and J. Smith Hays, Jr., as coadministrators with the will annexed of the estate of Iva Coy Hays, deceased. Her nieces and nephews, as devisees, and her brothers, as heirs at law, are the appellants.

The deceased, Iva Coy Hays, married J. Smith Hays, Sr., in 1919, and the parties resided together in Winchester, Kentucky, at the home of the husband until her death in 1951. No children resulted from this marriage, but ,J. Smith Hays, Sr., had several children as a result of a previous marriage. In 1928 or 1929, deceased received an inheritance of approximately $30,000 from the estate of her father. The investment of this fund was handled principally by J. Smith Hays, Sr., who made and changed investments and drew checks on his wife’s account for that purpose. In 1944, decedent made a holographic.will which provided as follows:

“I want all of my investments, dived equaly between my nieces' and nephews
Iva Coy Hays”

On the same paper and preceding the will was the following list of investments prepared at the direction of Iva Coy Hays by one of her nieces:

“Iva Coy Hays List
Invested in this house where it was built— $3,000.00
50 Shares of Louisville Gas and Electric no par stock Class “A” $2,157.50
20 Shares Winchester, Building and Savings Ass.— $2,000.00
5 Bonds E. M. Glass. 1st Mort. $6,005.83
8 U. S. Bonds due 1950 $8,000.00
5 Dan H. Lovell Inc. 5% Bonds $5,000.00
5 Stratton & Terstegge Co. 1st Mort. 4¾% Bonds $5,007.90
Cash Security Trust Co. Deposit at Lexington
Cash Commercial Deposit Bank . At Both Banks together $1,493.75
This is what I have invested Feb. 17, 1944.”

The proceedings prior to the entry of the order which is the subject of this appeal are rather prolix. After the death of his wife, J. Smith' Hays, Sr., filed his unverified application for appointment as administrator, and objections were filed by the heirs. Subsequently, a verified. amended application was filed, seeking the appointment of J. Smith Hays, Sr., and J. Smith Hays, Jr., as coadministrators. Objection to the amended application was filed and before the application and objections were acted upon, the nephews and nieces filed a petition for the probate of the holographic will. The petition was consolidated with the other proceedings, and the county court refused to probate the will, overruled the objections to the amended application, and ' appointed J.' Smith Hays, Sr., and J. Smith Hays, Jr., as coadministrators. Upon appeal to the circuit court, the county court was reversed and ordered to probate the will and set aside its order appointing the administrators.

Upon return of. the proceedings to the county court, J. Smith Hays, Sr.; and J. Smith Hays,, Jr., filed their unverified application for appointment as codaministra-tors with the will annexed. Objections were filed by the devisees and heirs, and a second application for appointment as administrator with the will annexed was filed by deceased’s brother, J. Mack Coy. [577]*577Upon consolidated, hearings, the cqunty court probated the will and appointed J. Smith Hays, Sr., and J. Smith Hays, Jr., as coadministrators with the will annexed. This order was affirmed upon appeal to the circuit court.

On the appeal here, appellants insist that the court erred in the appointment of the administrators1 with the will annexed because: (1) their application was not verified as required by KRS 395.015; and (2) J. Smith Hays, Sr:,' was ineligible for appointment' under' the provision's of KRS 395.050 because his interests are antagonistic to the provisions of the will. •

KRS 395.015(1) requires that every person seeking appointment as executor, administrator, curator, or administrator with the will annexed shall make and file • in duplicate a written application under oath. In Wall v. Bingham, 296 Ky. 13, 175 S.W. 2d 1010, this Court declined to determine whether or not the requirement for verification was jurisdictional because it was unnecessary in the decision of that case. It was there decided that an appointment" of a personal representative based upon an application which did not meet the statutory requirements was erroneous:

Here, we have a different situation. Although there was no verification of the application for appointment as administrator with the will annexed, the amended application for appointment as coadministra-tors was verified. The statute requires that the application disclose certain information under oath. The same facts are required in an application for'appointment as administrator that are required when applying for appointment as administrator with the will annexed. It would have been unnecessary in the consolidated hearings to have required the appellees to verify the last application when the same facts had been previously verified by an application pending before the court in the consolidated hearings. We think the verified application for appointment as coadministrators constituted a sufficient verification to meet the requirements of the statute.

Appellants’ second contention possesses more merit. They insist that the interest of the appellee, J. Smith Hays, Sr., is antagonistic to the will and that he is1 ineligible for appointment for that reason. The controversy between the devisees and husband relates to two items, the first being the item of $3,000, which the list of investments shows as “Invested- in this house where it was built,” and the second is the item of $8,000, shown by the list to be “8 U. S. Bonds due 1950.”

Concerning the first item, it is admitted that about 1930, soon after-Mrs. Hays received her inheritance, she gave her husband a check for $3,000 for the purpose of. paying an indebtedness which represented a part of the cost of the home owned individually by J. Smith Hays, Sr. The de-visees contend that this sum represented a loan, and in support of that fact, two witnesses testify that they heard J. Smith Hays, Sr., say that he had borrowed $3,-000 from his wife and had executed his note for that amount. This conversation is denied by Mr. Hays, who admits receipt of the check but insists that it was a- gift which was neither given nor received with any thought of repayment.

With reference to the. item of .$8,000,.it is shown that in 1940 eight government bonds in the principal amount of $1,000 each were purchased-in the name of “Iva Coy Hays or J. Smith Hays, Sr.” These bonds matured in 1950, and their proceeds were placed on deposit in the Security Trust Company, at Lexington, Kentucky, to the account of “Iva Coy Hays or J. Smith Hays, Sr., as joint tenants with right of survivorship.” It is shown that the latter account was opened by Mr. Elays, but the signature card was signed by hfrs.

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257 S.W.2d 575, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosby-v-hays-kyctapp-1953.