Howe v. Howe's Ex'x

155 S.W.2d 196, 287 Ky. 756, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 633
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 14, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 155 S.W.2d 196 (Howe v. Howe's Ex'x) 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
Howe v. Howe's Ex'x, 155 S.W.2d 196, 287 Ky. 756, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 633 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

— Affirming.

This appeal involves the construction of the last will and testament of Frances Milward Howe. The will in question is as follows :

“I, Frances Milward Howe, a resident of Lexington, Kentucky, being of sound mind, do this third day of December, 1937, make this my last will and testament.
“After all debts are paid, I leave to my mother in law, Mrs. Carl Howe, the sum of One Thousand Dollars. To Florence Oswald of Oak Park, Illinois, I leave One Thousand Dollars, also my diamond engagement ring.
“To Alice and Cynthia May, daughters of my cousin, John W. May, of Louisville, Kentucky, I leave One Thousand Dollars each.
“To my friend, Louise Schoyer Bullard, I leave One Thousand Dollars.
“To my nephew, Hugh Emmett Milward, I leave my property located at the corner of South *758 Broadway and Maxwell Streets,' Lexington, Ky. now occupied by the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.
“To Ann Race Milward, my sister in law, I leave my house located at 1021 North Euclid Ave., Oak Park, Illinois.
“To Hugh Emmett Milward and Ann Race Milward I leave all my personal property consisting of antique furniture, stocks and bonds and money invested with Travelers Life Insurance Co. and Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co., to be divided equally.
“I desire Ann Race Milward to be the executrix without bond.
“This will is written in my own hand writing and needs no witness.”

In approaching our discussion of this will and its several provisions which bear directly upon the question raised ;by the appeal, we take note of certain undisputed facts as to the relation of the testatrix to the two groups of beneficiaries mentioned in her will and the character and quantum of her estate at the time of writing her will and at the time of her death occurring some eighteen months thereafter, out of which the bequests were directed to be paid.

The testatrix’ holographic will was written by her in December, 1937, some eighteen months prior to her death on May 6, 1939, when she was a childless widow, some sixty-seven years of age.

At the time of writing her will and also that of her later death, textatrix owned two pieces of real estate, one a rented storehouse in Lexington, Ky., and the other a residence property in Oak Park, 111.

She also owned some antique furniture, certain stocks and bonds and some money invested with or in policies she held in the Travelers Life Insurance Co. and the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.

By the first of the three dispositional clauses of her will, she bequeathed, after her debts were paid, $1,000 each to the mother of her deceased husband, Mrs. Carl Howe, to his aunt, Florence Oswald, and to his sister, Cornelia Howe, and also specifically bequeathed to the *759 latter her diamond engagement ring. By the will’s second paragraph, she likewise bequeathed $1,000 each to Alice and Cynthia May, daughters of her cousin, John W. May, and by its third paragraph she bequeathed the like amount to her friend, Louise Schoyer Bullard.

By the fourth and fifth clauses of her will, she specifically bequeathed to her nephew, Hugh Emmett Mil-ward, the only child and infant son of her deceased brother, her store property in Lexington,. Ky., then “occupied by the G-reat Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.” and to Ann Race Milward, the widow of her deceased brother and mother of his infant son, Hugh Emmett Milward (to whom she had devised the storehouse property), her residence property in Oak Park, 111.

Further, by the sixth clause of her will (over which the present controversy as to whether it makes a specific or only a residuary bequest has arisen) she bequeathed to Hugh Emmett Milward and his mother, Ann Race Milward, “all my personal property consisting of antique furniture, stocks and bonds and money invested with Travelers Life Insurance Co. and Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co., to be divided equally” and by the concluding clause of her will directed that Ann" Race Milward (her sister-in-law and mother of her infant nephew, Hugh Emmett Milward) be appointed executrix without bond to administer her estate.

Upon testatrix’ death, occurring some eighteen months after her writing of this will, it was by the orders of the Fayette county court duly admitted to probate and the appellee Ann Race Milward (now Ann Faulkner) was appointed and duly qualified as her executrix under the will and filed this action for its construction and for a declaration of rights as between these two adversary groups of beneficiaries thereunder.

The necessity of bringing this suit was caused by the fact that at the time of testatrix’ death she left approximately but $200 in cash, the real estate mentioned in the will, the antique furniture, stocks and bonds and money invested with the two named insurance companies, which (except the $200) were all devised by testatrix to her sister-in-law, Ann Race Milward, and infant nephew, Hugh Emmett Milward.

Inasmuch as the debts and costs of administration exceeded the $200 left by testatrix, the executrix was re *760 quired to pay the excess amount of the debts and costs of administration out of the money invested with the insurance companies.

It thus developing that there was not sufficient cash in the estate to pay the general legacies of $1,000 bequeathed to each of the six beneficiaries named in the first three dispositional paragraphs of the will, a controversy arose between such group of beneficiaries and the executrix, Ann Race Milward, and her infant son, Hugh Emmett Milward, to whom testatrix bequeathed by the sixth clause of the will all her personal property, consisting of the antique furniture, stocks and bonds and money invested with the two named insurance companies, as to which of these legacies made between the two groups of beneficiaries should be abated.

In this suit brought the executrix set out in her petition the death of testatrix, the provisions of her will and that plaintiff, Ann Faulkner, had duly qualified as executrix thereof. The will was inserted in full, its provisions discussed and the existence of a controversy was alleged to have arisen between the plaintiffs and defendants as to the construction of clause 6, together with the respective contentions of the parties as to whether it bequeathed a residuary or specific estate to plaintiffs.

The petition concluded with a prayer for a declaration of rights of the two groups of beneficiaries claiming thereunder.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W.2d 196, 287 Ky. 756, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-howes-exx-kyctapphigh-1941.