Humphries v. Humphries

3 Ky. Op. 721, 1870 Ky. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 10, 1870
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ky. Op. 721 (Humphries v. Humphries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humphries v. Humphries, 3 Ky. Op. 721, 1870 Ky. LEXIS 260 (Ky. Ct. App. 1870).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Williams:

Samuel P. Humphries, husband of appellant Margaret, died in December, 1857, devising all his estate to his surviving wife, after the payment of his debts. He owned a large real estate scattered through different parts of Illinois, upon which several tracts there existed, more or less, special liens, and to some of which he only held equitable title, whilst the legal title to some was in a trustee.

Besides these special liens he was largely indebted, more than his personal estate would pay.

He resided in Woodford county, Kentucky, when he died, though he departed this life in New Mexico. He appointed his father, D. C. Humphries, also of Woodford county, his executor.

He had resided on a farm in Woodford given by parol to him by his father, which his father sold soon after his death, professedly to save his Illinois lands from sale for his debts.

D. O. Humphries made large advances on account of his deceased son, professedly for the benefit of his wife and children and to save the real estate from sale.

Among his real estate was an undivided fourth in certain lands which he had bought from W. T. Scott, and held a memorandum in writing signed by both as to it. D. O. Humphries, as executor, undertook in writing to pay Scott the remainder due on it, settled by them at $1,099.19, in March, 1863. August 15, thereafter, he took Scott’s deed to himself, individually, for this 560 acres of land for the recited consideration of $1,111.08.

S. P. Humphries had bought from Brown over 700 acres, at [723]*723$14,000, half of which he paid the following spring, leaving the remainder to be paid in two equal annual installments. This land adjoined T. C. Taylor’s 400 acres, in Logan county, Illinois, and which was put in the co-partnership formed for farming purposes between said Taylor and decedent, S. P. Humphries, and which was to continue for five years, notwithstanding the latter should die in the mean time, this land was then valued at $10 per acre.

S. P. Humphries having left Brown’s bond with Taylor, the deed to the land was made to him, D. C. Humphries being present and consenting. D. C. Humphries paid the last installment of $3,500 with accumulated interest on this land.

Taylor paid the remainder of $1,500, which was due on the other $3,500 installment when S. P. Humphries died.

There was a house and lot in Bloomington, bought by the firm and paid with its means, for $800.

Subsequently, in settling the partnership accounts, and D. O. Humphries acting both as executor on his deceased son’s estate and as agent for his widow, under a plenary power of attorney 'with the right of substitution, and he then professing to act for the benefit of his deceased son’s widow and children, Taylor conveyed the whole of this partnership tract, save a small portion, the title of which was in Lecker, who also conveyed it to D. O. Humphries, but received from him neither money nor other consideration than the settlement of their partnership accounts, and one-half of which Taylor says belonged to S. P. Humphries.

S. P. Humphries had bought of Wilson 960 acres, known as the Illiopolis tract, on speculation, which Taylor was to sell and pay one-third of the profits to Humphries’ brother-in-law, Stribbling, and retain one-third for his own compensation, and to facilitate such selling the title was made to Taylor.

S. P. Humphries, on his brother-in-law’s order, gave his mother-in-law his note for $1,200, on account of this contract for one-third profit.

There was a vendor’s lien on this land for $1,800, which D. C, Humphries liquidated.

D. C. Humphries professing to act as the agent and friend of his deceased son’s widow and children and as executor for his estate, procured a deed from Taylor to this tract of land, paying nothing, but the $1,800, dated March 12, 1861. D. C. Humphries [724]*724wrote to Sims of May 3, 1864, in which letter he recognized this land as that of his daughter-in-law and her children; this tract is proved to be worth $30,000.

D. O. Humphries was not authorized by appellant, Margaret, to take these lands by removing the incumbrances, nor in any other manner, but as her agent he was authorized to sell them when a sale could be made such as his judgment approved.

There is no evidence in the record that he ever proved said will or had it recorded in Hlinois, nor that he ever, by order of any court, undertook its execution there, nor do we know from anything in this record that he could, by the laws of Illinois, as executor, have anything whatever to do with them; so far as any legal presumption arises from the developed facts, it is that he acted as agent for his deceased son’s widow.

As between himself and her then the most he could claim would be to be reimbursed his outlays for said lands and then to convey the legal title to her, he holding the same all the time for such trusts. His devisee can stand in no better condition unless this legal and equitable relation be changed by the fourth clause of D. O. Humphries’ will.

As the Iliopolis tract had not been sold when S. P. Humphries died, Taylor’s right to sell was revoked by his death, Taylor’s compensation being dependent upon a sale for profit and as this had not taken place he ceased to have either a right to sell or interest in the profits, or the land. Nor did such contingent right of sale in the agent or trustee convert the land into money, nor impress on it the quality of personalty, though Humphries had purchased it on speculation. Clay & Craig vs. Hart, 7 Dana., 11.

The Bloomington house and lot, however, having been purchased with the profits of the farm and the partnership assets of a personal nature, which gave D. C. Plumphries the right to take it at a fair valuatiofi for advances which he had made to the estate.

D. C. Humphries having devised the Illiopolis tract of 960 acres of land and the Bloomington' house and lot to his daughter Mary, proceeded to devise, by the fourth clause of his will as follows:

“I give to my grandsons, D. C. Humphries and T. S. Humphries, the land I purchased from T. G-. Taylor and Telfer, in Logan county, Illinois, containing 1,200 acres, [725]*725more or less. I also give to my grandsons, D. O. and T. S. Humphries, my claim on their father’s estate, for money paid more than received as will appear by a reference to a settlement in county court of Woodford county, which sums of money I advanced rather than sacrifice his property in Chicago, Chenoah, Kankakee and Christian counties, Illinois. I give the above property to my grandsons upon condition that my daughter, Margaret A. Humphries, wife of my son Samuel, is to have one-third of the income of the rents and the hire of the property above described given by me, during her life, and upon further condition that no claim is to be set up against my estate in consequence of my being executor of the estate of S. P. Humphries.”

It will be noticed that these conditions apply solely to the devise of the land and slaves and not to the bequest of the advances made by the testator for his son’s estate.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ky. Op. 721, 1870 Ky. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphries-v-humphries-kyctapp-1870.