Hull v. Simon

128 S.W.2d 954, 278 Ky. 442, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 456
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 16, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 954 (Hull v. Simon) 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
Hull v. Simon, 128 S.W.2d 954, 278 Ky. 442, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 456 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

Ella Simon died intestate in September, 1934, without issue and leaving surviving, as her heirs at law (her mother having predeceased her), only her father, William Horn, and her husband, Charles Simon, who was thereupon appointed and qualified as administrator of her estate.

In October next following Ella Simon’s death, her father, William Horn, died, leaving a last will, by which he devised his estate to his children.

This action was brought by the deceased Horn’s children and his executor against the appellee, Charles Simon, individually and as the administrator of his deceased wife’s estate, asking a settlement of it and that he be required to settle his account, as her administrator,, with the master commissioner and directed to refund tlm amounts alleged wrongfully paid himself out of her estate.

Thereupon the defendant, Charles Simon, here the appellee, filed his answer as administrator, setting out his settlement of his account, as such, with the master commissioner, and further filed in his individual capacity answer and cross-petition, alleging in substance that his wife, Ella Simon, had died without leaving any estate and, further, that although, at the time of her demise, she had on deposit in certain building and loan associations something over $12,000, which was carried in her name, and some $1,500 in cash, which she had previously drawn from such accounts and hidden about their home, *444 the said funds, aggregating considerably over $13,000, did not belong to her but represented the accumulated earnings of the defendant, her husband, which he had regularly turned over to her as he received them, to be kept and conserved by her for him, with the understanding that same were to remain his, save in the one event of his predeceasing his wife, when these funds were to become hers.

Issues being joined by appropriate pleadings, the case was referred to the master commissioner to hear proof upon‘the question as to whom these funds belonged at the time of Ella Simon’s death; that is, whether they were beneficially owned by her and as such a part of her private estate, which the appellants sought to have apportioned and distributed among them, or whether they were received and held by the deceased in trust for her husband, the defendant.

The master commissioner, after hearing proof upon these matters pursuant to the order of reference, reported. his finding and conclusion to be that the net estate of the deceased, Ella Simon, remaining after payment of its indebtedness, amounted to something over $12,000 and that the same was the deceased’s private estate, which upon her death intestate descended in equal shares to Charles Simon, her husband, and William Horn, her father, who survived her and willed his interest in her estate to his children, the appellants.

The cause thereafter being submitted to the court for judgment upon the defendant’s exceptions to the commissioner’s report and the record, the learned chancellor sustained defendant’s exceptions to the master commissioner’s finding and adjudged that the plaintiffs had failed to show that any part of these building and loan deposits, carried in the name of Ella Simon at the time of her death, or of the cash found in her house after her death, was beneficially owned by her and, further, that there was no substantial evidence showing that she had possessed any private estate at the time of her marriage or had ever thereafter earned any income or wage, out of which she might have accumulated the amount in question or any part thereof. On the other hand, he adjudged that it was abundantly shown by the testimony of defendant’s witnesses and also that of the appellants’, as well as that of defendant given in his deposition, taken as if upon cross-examination by the plaintiffs, that this net estate in controversy represented *445 solely the accumulated earnings and wages of the defendant, Charles Simon, which he had received during the long period (some 25 years) of his childless married life with the deceased, Ella Simon, and all of which he had regularly turned over and entrusted, as they were paid him, to his wife, for her safe-keeping and handling for him, with the understanding and agreement at the time had between them, that they should be and remain his property and be repaid him, save and except in the one instance of his predeceasing her, in which event they were to become hers.

In harmony with such finding, the chancellor concluded that equity required that the decedent, having received and accumulated the appellee’s wages under such circumstances and with such understanding, should be held to have received and held them as a constructive trustee for defendant and that, such being the rightful relationship of the parties as to the fund in question, the same constituted no part of the separate estate of the wife, but was a trust fund held by her solely for the use and benefit of the defendant, and accordingly directed the master commissioner to pay over to the defendant such part of this fund in controversy as remained in his hands.

Plaintiffs, feeling aggrieved by this ruling of the chancellor, have appealed, asking its reversal principally upon two grounds: (1) That it was erroneous because rendered by the chancellor when' under the influence of the testimony given by defendant (upon which they allege it was mainly based) as to his transactions and communications had with his deceased wife in regard to these funds, which testimony is expressly prohibited and made ■ incompetent and inadmissible by the provisions of Section 606, subsection 2, Civil Code of Practice, viz.:

“No person shall testify for himself concerning any verbal statement of, or any transaction with, or any act done or omitted to be done’ by * * * one who is * * * dead when the testimony is offered to be given * * * unless * * * a representative of, or some one interested in, his estate, shall have testified against such person, with reference thereto.”

And (2) that the testimony is insufficient to establish a constructive trust in favor of appellee.

*446 Turning’ our attention to the disposition of the first of these objections (that is, that the judgment should be reversed because the evidence upon which it was based was incompetent and improperly considered by the chancellor as tending to support his decision), it is to be noted that appellants, in support of this contention, cite and rely upon the case of Nolty’s Administrator v. Fultz, 261 Ky. 516, 88 S. W. (2d) 35, 37, wherein it was held, in an administrator’s suit to recover property allegedly belonging to intestate’s estate, that interrogatories addressed to defendant, under Sections 140, 141 and 606, subsection 2 of the Civil Code of Practice, made defendant competent to testify as to any matter within the field opened by the interrogatories, but not as to matters in other fields. The language of the opinion, in so holding, is that:

“When plaintiff propounded the questions he did to Mrs. Fultz, he thereby waived her incompetency as a witness and made her competent to testify ■about any matters concerning which he had interrogated her, but no further.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 954, 278 Ky. 442, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hull-v-simon-kyctapphigh-1939.