Gardner v. Anderson

227 P. 743, 114 Kan. 778, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 8, 1923
DocketNo. 24,446
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 227 P. 743 (Gardner v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Anderson, 227 P. 743, 114 Kan. 778, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 288 (kan 1923).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This action was brought by Georgia Gardner to procure a construction of the will of her father, the late Zimri Gardner of Johnson county. The executors and trustees were made defendants; and C. J. Gardner, uncle of Georgia and brother of the testator, was made a defendant on his own application.

Part of the will reads:

“First. I hereby give and bequeath to Anna Thomas the sum of Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars, also all of my household effects, consisting of furniture, bedding, dishes, and in fact all household goods.
“Second. I hereby give and bequeath to my daughter, Georgia Gardner, the remainder of my property, both personal and real, for the length of her lifetime only. My direct intention being that she shall have the income only from said property.
“Third. Should my daughter, Georgia Gardner marry and have issue, then I direct that at her death my property shall descend to them equally, share and share alike. In the event of no issue, then at her death, all my property shall revert to the Gardner estate.
“Fourth. I direct that all my debts and expenses incurred in my last sickness shall first be paid.
“Fifth. I hereby appoint Arthur R. Anderson and Harry Dickens trustees to carry out the provisions of this will, and they shall have the power to make such investments as to them seem best, and shall pay over to the said Georgia Gardner the net income from said property. I direct that said trustees shall not be required to give bond.”

The plaintiff alleged that she was the only daughter and sole heir of Zimri Gardner, that she was of age, unmarried and without issue. Her petition then narrated the execution of the will, its admission to probate, the appointment and qualification of the executors and trustees, the extent and description of the property disposed of by will, and the possession of the property by the trustees. Plaintiff further alleged that a doubt and uncertainty had arisen as to the true construction of the will — the defendant trustees claiming to have authority to hold possession and manage the property until she [780]*780should marry and have issue and thereafter to hold and manage the property until her death and then divide between her issue, and in case plaintiff died without issue to turn the property back to her deceased father’s estate; but plaintiff’s construction of the will was that the duties of the trustees were purely nominal; that under section 11686 of the General Statutes of 1915 the lands of her father devised to the trustees passed to her by operation of law; that by the second paragraph of the will the legal title to all the property was vested in plaintiff; that the third paragraph created an estate tail which vested in plaintiff the absolute ownership together with full control, management, possession and right of disposition, and vested in plaintiff the right to sell it and give good title; and that the part of the third paragraph, which provides that if no issue be born to plaintiff the property should revert to the Gardner estate was void—

“(a) Because it is in violation of the. rule against perpetuities.
“(b) Because an ‘estate’ of a'person is not a person or entity which can take under a will as provided by the laws of Kansas.”

Plaintiff prayed for all appropriate relief. The executors and trustees answered, in part, as follows:

“4. These defendants allege that it was the intention of the said Zimri Gardner, in executing his said' will that these trustees should hold all of his said property and make investments as should to them seem best, and to pay over to the plaintiff the net income of the said property, and that upon the death of the said plaintiff without issue surviving her all of the property remaining in the hands of these trustees should then be paid over to the brothers and sisters of said Zimri Gardner, and would then constitute his heirs to whom would descend all the property of his estate under the laws of the State of Kansas, and they ask the court to so construe said will. . . .
“6. Plaintiff ought not to recover for the reason that said Zimri Gardner left brothers and sisters to whom would descend the said estate in the event of plaintiff’s dying without issue.”

C. J. Gardner, in part, answered:

“4. This defendant says that said will should be construed to give control of the estate of Zimri Gardner, deceased to the said trustees during the life time of plaintiff, and at her death, if she shall die without issue, to pay and deliver said estate to this defendant and his brothers and sisters and the issue of such of the brothers and sisters as may then be deceased.”

The parties stipulated that the testator had several sisters and brothers, including defendant C. J. Gardner, at the time of his death, and the names of these are set out in the record.

[781]*781The trial court decided—

“That the will of Zimri Gardner deceased, creates an active trust. That the trustees are to manage the estate and to pay the income thereof to the plaintiff, Georgia Gardner, during her lifetime. At her death the property vests in the issue of Georgia Gardner, if she shall have issue, and if she has no issue, the property, the court finds, should vest in her legal heirs. The court further finds that the defendant C. J. Gardner has no interest in the estate.”

The plaintiff and C. J. Gardner appeal.

The principal contention of Georgia'Gardner is that the devise of the life estate to her with remainder to her issue created in her an estate tail, with whatever legal consequences may flow therefrom.

What is an estate tail? An estate tail or fee tail is a freehold estate in which there is a fixed line of inheritable succession limited to the issue of the body of the grantee or devisee, and in which the regular and general succession of heirs-at-law is cut off. (2 Bouvier’s Law Dict’y [Rawle’s 3d rev.] 1200; 21 C. J. 931.)

“The expression fee-tail, or feodum talliatum, was borrowed from the feudists (see Crag. 1. 1.1. 10, S. 24, 25); among whom it signified any mutilated or truncated inheritance, from which the heirs general were cut off; being derived from the barbarous verb taliare, to cut; from which the French tailler and the Italian tagliare are formed. (Spelm, Gloss. 531.)” (Note in 1 Cooley’s Blackstone, 3d ed., 387.)
“Next, as to the several species of estates-tail, and how they are respectively created. Estates-tail are either general or special. Tail-general is where lands and tenements are given to one, and the heirs of his body begotten. . . .
Indeed, in last wills and testaments, wherein greater indulgence is allowed, an estate-tail may be created by a devise to a man and his seed, or to a man, and his heirs male; or by other irregular modes of expression.” (1 Cooley’s Blackstone, id. 387-8.)

An estate tail may lawfully be created in Kansas. In Ewing v. Nesbitt, 88 Kan. 708, 129 Pac. 1131, this subject was carefully considered and it was there said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P. 743, 114 Kan. 778, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-anderson-kan-1923.