Headley v. Headley

11 S.W.2d 123, 226 Ky. 483, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 27, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 123 (Headley v. Headley) 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
Headley v. Headley, 11 S.W.2d 123, 226 Ky. 483, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 117 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

*484 Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson—

Affirming.

H. P. Headley died testate, leaving surviving Mm two sons, George W. Headley and Hal Price Headley, and one daughter, Alma Headley De Waal. By his will .he devised all of his estate to the trustees of his respective children, making Hal Price Headley the trustee for •George W. Headley, George W. Headley the trustee for .Hal Price Headly, and making them both the trustees of the daughter, Alma- Headley De Waal. He devised his .La Belle farm to the trustee for George W. Headley. He ■devised part of his Beaumont farm to the trustee for Hal Price Headley, and the remainder of this farm, which •contained 872 acres, to the trustees for Mrs. De Waal. .The will provided that the land devised to the trustee for each of the testator’s children should be held by the trustee during the life of such child, and after his or her ■death during the life of his or her children. No bond was required of the trustees. The two sons were made executors of the will, without bond. It was also provided that ■either of the. brothers could by will dispose of the land ■devised to him. The will then provided as follows:

“I direct that the real property above mentioned and which has been devised to my son, Hal Price Headley, in trust for the benefit of my son, ■George W. Headley, may be sold and conveyed by the trustee, and the proceeds of said sale be reinvested in other real estate, which shall be held and used under the same conditions and limitations as set out in this will, but said real estate shall not be sold and conveyed unless my son, George W. Headley, shall have signified his consent to such sale and reinvestments by uniting in the deed conveying the property.
“Also the real property devised to my two sons, George W. Headley and Hal Price Headley, or the survivor, in trust for my daughter, Alma Headley De Waal, may be sold and conveyed and the proceeds reinvested,in other real estate, but said sale and conveyance shall not be made unless my daughter, Alma Headley De Waal, shall signify her consent by uniting in the deed conveying the property, and when the proceeds of said sale shall have been reinvested in other real estate, it shall be held sup *485 ject to the same conditions and limitations as the real.property disposed of. .•
“I also direct that the real property which has been devised to my son, George W. Headley, in trust for the benefit of my son, Hal Price Headley, may be sold and conveyed by the trustee, and the proceeds of said sale be reinvested in other real estate, to be held under the same conditions and limitations as set out in this will, but said sale and reinvestment shall not be made unless my son, Hal Price Headley, shall have signified his consent by uniting in the deed conveying the property.
-• “I want it also understood that if it should become necessary or expedient in the opinion of the said trustees to sell any of the real estate devised and bequeathed in this instrument for the purpose of reinvestment, said sale or sales, shall be made only with the consent of the beneficiary, as herein-before set out, and the purchaser or purchasers shall not be required to look, to the reinvestment of the proceeds of any of said sales, but the trustees shall be liable therefore.”

The will was written in 1918, The .testator died in 1921. After the writing of the will the testator conveyed the Beaumont farm to Hal Price Headley in consideration of $187,000, and the conveyance to him by Hal Price Headley of a tract of 132 acres of land. After his death, in a suit brought for the construction of the will, it was adjudged that the 132 acres passed under the will equally to the trustee for Hal Price Headley and the trustees of Mrs. Be Waal, and should be equally divided between them. The land at the testator’s death had no building on it, except an old distillery house, and was used for grazing purposes. It lies only a fourth of a mile beyond the corporate limits of Lexington, and as the city has grown and the demand for lots has increased this land has become more valuable for urban purposes. It was valued then at $250 an acre, and is valued now at $350 an acre. The net profits from the rent of the land for grazing purposes only brings an income of about 2 per cent, on the present value. The land cannot be used for urban purposes, unless a large sum of money is spent in streets, a sewer system, and for water and light. The trustees doubt their power to make any such expendi *486 ture, and are unwilling to take the risk of speeding so large a sum of money upon an uncertainty. On the other ■hand,"the two children of the testator, are willing to take this risk, and proposed to buy the land from the trustees at $400 an acre. Thereupon this proceeding was instituted, to obtain the judgment of the court.,whether the conveyance of the land should be made by> the trustees to Hal Price Headley and Mrs. De Waal equally, for the consideration of $400 an acre. The circuit court directed the trustee to make the conveyance; the proceeds of the sale to be held by the trustees under the will on the same terms as the trustees held the land. The guardian ad litem for the infant children prosecutes an appeal for them from this judgment. • Section 491 of the Civil Code provides:

‘ ‘ That when lands are held in trust by one person for the life of another, with remainder over to a class of persons, or to any person not ascertained or to be ascertained until the death of the person upon whose life such estate for'life is made to depend, or with power on the part of such person for whose life such life estate is held by the trustee, to dispose by a last will and testament, or by an instrument in the nature of a last will and testament, it shall be competent for the circuit courts or courts of like jurisdiction in the county in which such land or part thereof is situated, in an action to which all persons having a present or vested interest in such land or parties, to direct the trustee to either sell or mortgage such land; but in all actions it must be averred and proven to the court that such sale or mortgage would be beneficial to all the parties concerned, and facts showing such benefits must be alleged ■ and proven. Any deed or mortgage executed under authority, or'in pursuance of any judgment rendered in any such action, shall be held and construed and have the same effect as if executed by every person having a vested or contingent interest in or ownership of such land, and as if executed by all persons and classes who could take under the limitations or provisions of said deed, or ■ as devisees under the exercise of such power to devise or appoint, and as if every claimant, present or future, under such deed of power, was! under no disability whatever. The proceeds of the sales authorized by this section *487 shall be paid into court, and shall.be reinvested by the court after first havingy by-.appropriate order, provided for the payment of the costs and taxes, if any, in other property to be conveyed and held subject to the same limitations and trusts a's the land sold was held. ”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 123, 226 Ky. 483, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/headley-v-headley-kyctapphigh-1928.