Flournoy's devisees v. Flournoy's

64 Ky. 515, 1 Bush 515, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 181
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 23, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 64 Ky. 515 (Flournoy's devisees v. Flournoy's) 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
Flournoy's devisees v. Flournoy's, 64 Ky. 515, 1 Bush 515, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 181 (Ky. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PETERS

delivered the opinion op the court:

This litigation, necessarily protracted by the opposing interests of an unusually large number of parties, and involving questions difficult of solution, has arisen primarily upon the will of John J. Flournoy, published on the 3d day of September, 1813, and is in the following language, omitting the introductory part and the codicil:

“ I, John J. Flournoy, of the county of Boone, and State of Kentucky, reflecting on the certainty of death and the uncertainty of the time when it may take place, have determined to make this my last will and testament in the manner and form following, to-wit: I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Agnes Flournoy, the whole of my estate of every kind, both real and personal, during her natural life, except as shall be otherwise provided in an after part of this my will.

‘■‘■Item — I recommend Nancy Grant, John J. F. Wills, Lucy Flournoy, and John Fowler, to the tender consideration of my wife, Agnes Flournoy, hoping she will try to assist them as much as she consistently can, having respect, unfortunately, to the numerous and [519]*519heavy debts that I owe, and will require her utmost diligence to discharge.

“Item. — At the death of my said wife Agnes, I desire that one half of my estate, both real and personal, may be divided amongst my brothers and sisters, and their heirs forever. The balance to be at the disposal of my said wife, to be managed as she may think proper.

“Item — I do constitute and appoint my wife, Agnes Flournoy, sole executrix to this my last will and testament, authorizing her to make and receive conveyances of land where I have made contracts.”

The codicil need not be inserted, as it only authorized the wife of the testator to emancipate four favorite slaves by name, and give them a small stock of cattle and some other things of little value, not material to this controversy.

The testator having died at his residence in the then county of Campbell, in 1835, without having altered or republished his will, the same was, at the November term, 1835, of the Campbell county court, probated, and his widow, as we may assume, took the whole of his large and valuable estate into her possession, and, as his executrix, undertook the execution of his will. She retained and managed the estate till her death, in July or August, 1840, having previously thereto, by her will, executed the power of appointment as to the one half of the estate of her late husband conferred upon her by his will. And her will was admitted to record in the county court of Kenton in August, 1840 — the county of Campbell having been divided during the sitting of the Legislature in the winter of that year, and the county of Kenton created and established by legislative enactment — the residence of Mrs. Flournoy, which was also the residence of her husband at the time of his [520]*520death, and all the estate that he owned in the county of Campbell, were included in the limits of the new county of Kenton.

It would be a waste of time and labor to insert the whole of Mrs. Flournoy’s will, which is somewhat voluminous, in this opinion; only so much of it, therefore, as is deemed necessary to a clear understanding of the origin and history of this litigation, and of the various questions presented for judicial determination, will be referred to or recited.

The testatrix, in the preamble to her will, declares her intention as follows: “ Being authorized by the last will of my late lamented husband, John J. Flournoy, to dispose of the one half of the estate, real and personal, left by him at the time of his death, in such manner as I may think proper, and desiring by this, my last will and testament, to execute said power to the full extent of the same, I do devise and bequeath all and every part of the said moiety of real and personal estate, and all my other estate, of what kind and nature soever, in manner and form as follows, to-wit,” &c.

After devising to her brothers and a sister several distinct parcels of land located in Boone county, which constituted a part of her husband’s estate, but not equal in quantity or value, perhaps, to the one half of the whole of his lands, and after disposing a portion of his slaves and other property amongst her own kindred— brothers, sisters, nephews, and nieces — by specific bequests, not amounting in all to the one half of the slaves and personalty of her late husband, as appears from a schedule attached by her to her will, and is satisfactorily shown otherwise, she added a residuary clause in the following words: “All the residue of my estate, of every kind and description whatever, whether of the moiety I [521]*521have a right to dispose of or of my own individual property, either real, personal, or mixed, I give and bequeath to my sisters, to be equally divided between them- — share and share alike — after deducting from the said residuum six hundred dollars, to be paid out of the same by my executors to Lydia Ann and Kitty, daughters of my sister, Keturah Grant. Should the residue of my estate be less than six hundred dollars, then, whatever .it be, I direct it to be paid to said Lydia Ann and Kitty; and whatever portion of said residue may be given to my sister Keturah, I direct my trustee, Samuel Winston, to hold in the same manner and for the same purposes, in all respects, as in my devise to said Keturah.”

The testatrix appointed Matthews Flournoy, Samuel Winston, and Moses Y. Grant, her executors, of whom Winston alone qualified.

The devisees were put into possession of the several parcels of land, and the slaves devised to them respectively, and Some of the specific money legacies perhaps paid over to the legatees, by Winston as her executor. But the whole of the residue of the estate of John J. Flournoy he took into his possession, upon the death of his testatrix, Mrs. Flournoy, and managed and controlled the greater part thereof up to his death, which occurred in 1850, having previously made and published his last will and testament, wherein he appointed his wife, Mrs. Mary Winston, his executrix, who undertook the execution of the same, it having been probated in the Campbell county court.

On the 4th of May, 1852, this action was brought in the Kenton circuit court by Elliott and others, the residuary devisees of Mrs. Agnes Flournoy, against Mrs. Mary Winston, executrix, and the devisees and heirs of Samuel Winston, deceased, the devisees and heirs of John J. [522]*522Flournoy, deceased, and against a part of the devisees of Mrs. Agnes Flournoy, and other persons who were in possession of different parcels of land which the testator, John J. Flournoy, owned at his death, to compel, in the language of the petition, Mrs. Mary Winston, executrix of Samuel Winston, deceased, to render a just and true account of the transactions of her testator as the executor of John J. Flournoy, and also of Mrs. Agnes Flournoy to deliver up the real and personal property of both estates, and to pay over the assets which were in his hands, arising from claims collected from rents, hires, and profits from all other sources, to be divided amongst those entitled thereto; and to deliver up to plaintiffs their just portions, as residuary devisees of Mrs. Agnes Flournoy.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ky. 515, 1 Bush 515, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flournoys-devisees-v-flournoys-kyctapp-1866.