Couchman v. Couchman

47 S.W. 858, 104 Ky. 680, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 16, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 858 (Couchman v. Couchman) 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
Couchman v. Couchman, 47 S.W. 858, 104 Ky. 680, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 212 (Ky. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

JUDGE WHITE

delivered the opinion op the court.

B. W. Couchman died August 12, 1887, in Clarke county, Ky. August 22, 1887, at the regular term of the "Clarke County Court, his will, bearing date January 4, 1886, was admitted to probate. By this will the testator devises to his wife, appellee, E. J. Couchman, $3,000 cash, and sufficient to purchase horse, harness and carriage. This to be absolute. He also gave to his wife, during widowhood, his home farm, and the dividends on certain stock in turnpikes. He gave to his niece Amanda, $3,000; to the Bible College at Lexington, $500; also, to the Foreign Christian Missionary Society, $500; also provided for the purchase* of a scholarship in the Midway Orphan School; also, devised t.o his brothers and sisters, $100. He then directs that all the remainder of his estate shall be divided equally, per capita, among his nephews and nieces; and, to the end that an equal division may be had, he directs his executors to sell and convey his real estate, except the home [683]*683place, devised to his wife. He then provides that, upon the marriage or death of his wife, the farm and turnpike stock devised to her shall be sold, and the proceeds divided as general estate, devised to his nephews and nieces. He appoints his wife, E. J. Couchman, his brother, John A. Couchman, and his friend, R. T. G-. Bush, as executors. This bears date January 4, 1886. Within a year after the probate of this will the widow, E. J. Couchman, renounced the will, and elected t© take under the law-. On August .26, 1889, the widow, Elizabeth J. Couchman, propounded for probate a paper purporting to be, in substance, a codicil to the foregoing will; it being alleged that the original was lost or destroyed. This paper was probated as a codicil by the Clarke County Court September 23, 1889, and reads: “I, B. W. Couchman, do make and publish this codicil to my last will and testament, as follows, to-wit: (1) I give to my wife, Elizabeth J. Couchman, the home place, to have and to hold in fee simple, and the Curry place, to have and to hold during her natural life, and after her death to go to such of my blood kin as she may designate during her life, by will or otherwise. (2) I desire my said wife, in addition to the three thousand dollars given to her in my will, to have a sum equivalent to the rent of the land derived by her from her father’s estate, and which I have used, or received rent from since it became her property.” It is claimed that this codicil was written in July, 1887, shortly before B. W. Couchman died. At the time this codicil was probated there had never been an appeal or other proceeding seeking to reverse, supersede, or annul the order probating the will, made August 22, 1887. Nor does it appear by this record that the judgment of probate of the will, of August 22, 1887, has ever been appealed from, superseded, .or annulled. From the order and judg[684]*684ment probating tbe codicil dated September 23, 1889, an appeal was prosecuted to the Court of Common Pleas of Clarke county in July, 1892. Tbe trial in tbe Circuit Court of Clarke county resulted in a judgment probating tbe codicil, and from that judgment, after motions for new trial bad been overruled, this appeal is prosecuted.

This record is very voluminous, and contains numerous exceptions to tbe admission and exclusion of testimony, and exceptions to tbe giving and refusing instructions to tbe jury, and other errors of tbe trial court. Among tbe questions raised by counsel, and urged, is tbe contention by appellants that tbe judgment of tbe County Court admitting to probate tbe original will of B. W. Couchman was a bar to tbe subsequent proceeding to probate tbe codicil in tbe County Court, and that, subject to review in a trial de novo on an appeal from it to tbe Circuit Court, it was absolutely conclusive. On behalf of appellees it is contended that tbe codicil being merely an appendage to tbe will, and its probate depending on tbe probate of tbe will itself, tbe order and judgment of probate of tbe will were not final and conclusive as to tbe codicil; in other words, that the jurisdiction of tbe County Court as to probate was not exhausted till tbe whole will was probated, and that this includes all codicils. Tbe County Court and tbe Circuit Court necessarily took the appellees’ view of the law on this question.

This question has never been passed on by this court, and is one of first impression. Counsel for appellees have cited, as tending to support their position, the case of Reed’s Will, 2 B. Mon., 79, where Chief Justice Robertson uses this language: “A codicil, dated in 1840, and providing for the transportation of tbe emancipated persons to Liberia, or tbe sale of them in the event of their refusal to [685]*685be thus transported, has not been proved or offered for probate; and, therefore, the only purpose of noticing it in this opinion is to suggest that it may be hereafter proved and recorded as an appendage to the will, if in fact it was. legally published, and the testator was competent at the time of its publication.” We are also referred to the case of Schultz v. Schultz, decided by the Court of Appeals of Virginia, reported 10 Grat., 358 [60 Am. Dec. 335], as sustaining this position of appellees. In that case the court said at page 373: “I think it certainly can not be maintained that, in all cases where the probate court has admitted to probate a paper purporting to be, a last will and testament it has thereby fully exercised its entire jurisdiction over the subject of the testamentary disposition of the decedent’s estate. To affirm this proposition would be, in certain cases, so far as the probate court is concerned, to compel a man to die intestate as to part of his estate, though it might have been his deliberate and expressed intention to dispose of the whole. A man’s last will must not of necessity be confined to one testamentary paper. It may consist of several different testamentary, papers of different dates, and executed and attested at different timesi It can not be indispensable, either, that they should be propounded in the court of probate at the same time. If a will has been produced and admitted to probate in the proper court, and subsequently another testamentary paper be found, purporting to be a codicil to the former, it can not be doubted that the probate court could' also receive and admit it to probate at a subsequent period,” citing Reed’s Will, 2 B. Mon,, 80. It may be remarked here that the decision of the Virginia court in the above case was by a divided court — -two dissents; also, that there was no question of codicil before it, but the con[686]*686test was between two complete wills. Tliat statute governing the probation of wills at the time of the Schulte case was the same as our statute at the time of the case of Reed’s Will, our statute being copied from that of Virginia.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 858, 104 Ky. 680, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couchman-v-couchman-kyctapp-1898.