Goff v. Evans

290 S.W. 490, 217 Ky. 664, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 490 (Goff v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goff v. Evans, 290 S.W. 490, 217 Ky. 664, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 36 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner—

Affirming.

The executor of. Eliza E. Evans was adjudged to be, as such executor, entitled to thirty shares of the capita,! stock of the Mt. Sterling National Bank, to reverse which judgment this appeal is prosecuted. In the early part of 1907, John Evans died testate. The second and third provisions of his will are the only two thereof involved, and they are:

“Second. Should my wife, Eliza E. Evans, survive me, I give and bequeath all my personal property and all 'benefits that I am deriving from my four children, Sallie D. Mason, John T. Evans, Eli B. Evans and J ames 0. Evans, the sum of $200.00 each, payable the first day of January annually as long as she may live, and also to my wife the dividends accruing from twenty-five shares of bank stock in the Clark County National Bank, of Winchester, Ky., the dividends of thirty shares in the Mt. Sterling National Bank, at Mt. Sterling, Ky., and the dividends of twenty-five shares in the Pendleton Bank of Falmouth, Ky.
“Third. In order to make all my children equal in distribution of my property, I hereby will, bequeath and give to my three daughters, Mary E. Goff, Ann E. Cooper and Dannie M. Evans, and their bodiíy heirs, the above said bank stock to be equally divided between them according to valuation and *665 premium of shares to have and to hold for their benefit subject to judgment of trustees which I hereby appoint, James 0. Evans, in event of said trustee’s death, Eli B. Evans and John T. Evans shall act. Said bank stock shall not- be sold only to be reinvested in other bank stock or real estate as trustee may deem best and to be deeded as the real estate which I have heretofore deeded them.”

His wife, Eliza E. Evans, survived him, and on September 7, 1907, she made a will, and that part thereof which is involved is:

“I hereby direct that after the payment of my just debts and funeral expenses that the balance of my property of each and every kind be equally divided between my seven children, Sally D. Mason, Mary E. Golf, Annie E. Cooper, John 'T. Evans, Eli B. Evans, James 0. Evans and Dannie E. Hadden.”

Eliza E. Evans died in November, 1924. Shortly thereafter her will , was probated, and her son, J. 0. Evans, is the executor of her will as well as the will of his father, John Evans. In 1922, the Mt. Sterling National Bank declared a stock dividend of 100%, and thus there is due and is to be executed to some one a stock certificate for 30 shares of its capital stock. By some of the heirs it is contended that this 30 shares, which we -shall refer to as dividend stock, should be issued to J. O. Evans, as executor of Eliza E. Evans, and by others it is contended 'that this 30 shares, just like the original 30 shares, passed under the will of John Evans to his daughters, Mary E. Goff, Annie E. Cooper, Dannie M. Evans, now Dannie M. Hadden, and their bodily heirs.

J. O. Evans, as executor of his father and as executor of his mother, and as guardian of some infant children, began this suit against the other devisees of his father and his mother, and the Mt. Sterling National Bank to obtain the advice and direction of the court in the matter, and in that suit, inter alia, makes this allegation:

“Plaintiffs state that on or about the — day of —, 1922, there was declared by the Mt. Sterling National Bank a stock dividend of 100'% upon its outstanding capital stock, including the 30 shares *666 of its capital stock referred to in the said will of J ohn Evans, deceased. They state that said stock dividend upon the said 30 shares of stock referred to in said will of John Evans, deceased, amounted to 30 shares, and that the 'Mt. Sterling’ National Bank is ready and willing to issue certificates for stock representing said stock dividend to such of the parties hereto as are properly entitled to same. They state that the said 30 shares of said stock referred to in the will of John Evans were then of the par value of $100.00 per share, and that the said stock dividend thereon is of the par value of $100.00' per share. They state that in the period from the death of the said John Evans, testator, up to the time of the declaration of the said stock dividend, the net earnings of said Mt. Sterling National Bank, over and above all amounts paid by it during said period in dividends, amounted to much more than the sum of $100.00 per share upon the capital stock of said bank, and, therefore, to more than $100.00 per share upon the said 30 shares of stock constituting a part of the estate of said J ohn Evans, and that said stock dividend amounted to and constituted the transfer by said bank to its account from its earning’s for said period of $100.00 per share for each share of its capital stock then outstanding. They state that the actual and market value of each share of the capital stock of said bank, at the time of the declaration of said stock dividend, was more than double the actual and market value of each share of said stock at the date of the death of John Evans, and that immediately after the declaration of said stock dividend, although the number of outstanding shares of stock of said bank was thereby doubled, each share of said stock, including the stock so declared as the stock dividend, was of a 'greater actual and greater market value than the actual or market value of said bank stock at the date of the death of John Evans. They state that there is a controversy between the parties to this action as to who is the owner of the said 30 shares of stock issued as a stock dividend as aforesaid, and that it is necessary that the will of John Evans be construed and a determination by this court made of the question of ownership of said stock dividend. ’ ’

*667 To that, this demurrer was filed:

“The defendants, Mary E. Goff and Dannie E. Hadden, demur to the petition of the plaintiffs, J. 0. Evans and others, because it does not state facts constituting a cause of action against the defendants ; and because when taken together with the exhibits it shows that these defendants and their bodily heirs are the owners of the stock in the Mt. Sterling National Bank declared as a stock dividend and mentioned in the petition; that a correct construction of the will of John Evans, deceased, confers upon the defendants, and their bodily heirs, the legal title to the stock of the Mt. Sterling National Bank designated as a stock dividend.”

The defendants, Mary E. Goff and Dannie E. Had-den, filed answer, the first paragraph of which is practically the same as this demurrer. In the second paragraph of their answer, they show that John Evans had made conveyances to his children as follows:

In 1898, to J. 0. Evans, 288 acres of land.
To John T. Evans, 205 acres of land.
To Sallie D. Mason, 226 acres of land.
To Annie E. Cooper, 19,3 acres of land.
In 1903, to Dannie E. Hadden, 129 acres of land and $3,000.00 in money.
To Mary E. Goff, 215 acres of land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 490, 217 Ky. 664, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goff-v-evans-kyctapphigh-1927.