Jones v. Thomasson

166 S.W. 1001, 159 Ky. 196, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 775
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 1001 (Jones v. Thomasson) 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
Jones v. Thomasson, 166 S.W. 1001, 159 Ky. 196, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 775 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

The question in this ease depends on the construction of so much of the will of James Dawson as reads as follows: “The balance of my property, real personal and mixed, I will shall be equally divided among all my children, to-wit: Zerilda Cook, Elizabeth Ellis, Nancy M. Bradley, Sarah E. Lyon, Albina Jones and Miriam Darnaby for and during their natural lives, free from the control of their husbands, and not to be liable for their debts, and after their death to their children.” Under this will the devisee, Albina Jones, the appellant here, received twenty acres of land. She had two daughters, Lucy and Sue Jones, and no other children. Lucy died several years ago, intestate and unmarried, and Sue died about two years ago, childless, after having married the appellee, Weller Thomasson, to whom she willed all of her property. The appellant, Albina Jones, claims that upon the death of her two children, childless, she became invested with the fee-simple title in the twenty acres of land; while it is insisted for the appellee, Weller Thomasson, that his deceased wife, Sue Jones, had a vested, vendible interest in an undivided one-half of the land in remainder, to which he became entitled as the devisee under her will.

The lower court adjudged that, “Albina Jones is the owner for the period of her natural life of the twenty acres of ground described in the petition, and the owner of the fee-simple title subject to her life estate in the one-half of said land which she received by inheritance from her daughter, Lucy Jones. And it is further adjudged that the defendant, Weller Thomasson, is the owner of the other undivided one-half of the said twenty acres, subject to the life estate of the plaintiff, Albina Jones, therein, which one-half was passed to him by the will of his deceased wife, Susan Jones Thomasson.”

Of this judgment Albina Jones complains, and urges on this appeal, as she did in the lower court, that Weller Thomasson did not take any interest in the land under [198]*198the will, and that she is entitled to the fee in the whole thereof.

It will he observed that the will does not make any provision for the disposition of the estate in the event of the death of the children of the devisees. It simply provides that each devisee should take, an estate for life, and that after the death of the devisee, his share shouldt go to his children.

It is conceded that the children of the devisee took an estate in the land, but it is argued that the estate was a defeasible fee in remainder which was defeated by their death before the death of their mother, and that upon their death, the mother, Albina Jones, became entitled to the whole estate.

In behalf of the appellee, Thomasson, the argument is made that the will created a life estate in the children of the testator, with a vested interest in remainder in his grandchildren, and that this estate in remainder having vested in them immediately upon the death of the testator, it could not subsequently be divested by the mere incident of their death before the death of the life tenant.

It seems quite evident under the authorities that the grandchildren did take a vested estate in remainder, and this being so, it is difficult to perceive upon what ground a sound argument can be rested that they could be divested of this estate by their death before the death of their mother. Having taken a vested estate, this estate could be subjected to the payment of their debts and might have been deeded or devised to them; or, if either of them died intestate, his part would pass under the statute .of descent and distribution, as did, for example, the share of Lucy, which her mother inherited under the statute upon the death of Lucy, the owner of the remainder, childless and intestate.

When the remainderman dies intestate during the existence of the life estate, the owner of an estate that has been derived under a will that makes no provision for the disposition of the estate upon the death of the remainderman, it passes under the statute of descent and distribution, unless the remainderman has disposed of it by a will, but if the remainderman has disposed of it by will, then of course it would go as directed in the will. If it passes tinder the statute, the takers step into the place of the remainderman, and so with the devisee under the will.

[199]*199There is nothing in this will to indicate that the testator intended that the ordinary rules governing the' rights of the owners of a vested remainder should not be applied. It may be true, as suggested by counsel for Albina Jones, that the testator desired that the estate should not be diverted to strangers, and doubtless if he had thought that his grandchildren would die before their mother, he would have added some provision saving to his blood the estate; but as the clause in the will under consideration is free from ambiguity, there is no room for that construction, and the estate must take the ordinary course.

In Campbell v. Hinton, 150 Ky., 546, Ned Hinton, by his will, devised all of his property to his wife, with the provision that ‘ ‘ at her death what of it that is left is to go equally to my heirs at law; my object is to keep my property in the Hinton family. I will to my son John Hinton twenty-five dollars in addition to a home with my wife if he wants to live there; this is in addition to his rightful share of my estate after the death of my wife.”

After the death of the testator his son, John Hinton, who was his only child, died, of age, and before his mother. After the death of his mother, the life tenant, a controversy came up between the kindred of Ned Hinton and her kindred as to the ownership of the property. It was insisted for her kindred that John took a vested remainder which at his death passed to his mother and at her death to them; while it was maintained by the kindred of Ned Hinton that John Hinton took a contingent remainder, which was defeated by his death before 'his mother, and that at her death the property passed to them under the will of Ned Hinton; but we held that John Hinton took a vested remainder which at his death passed to his mother, and at her death to her heirs. There is no material difference between that case and this.

Another ease in point is Weil v. King, 104 S. W., 381. In that case the devise was to the widow for life, and after her death to her children. In holding that the children took a vested estate in remainder, although there was no devise over, we said: “Enjoyment, however, was uncertain, in as much as the life tenant might live longer than the remainderman, as did happen in the case of the grandchildren; but this did not affect the [200]*200vested character of the estate, for there was no vesting over or other contingency by which the estate was to be determined. Charles Moore having no vested estate in the property, it passed to his mother at his death.”

In Hackney v. Tucker, 121 S. W., 417, the testator provided that “E. McLeod and Martha, my daughter, shall have two hundred acres of land in the west side of my land and the rest is my wife’s, and at her death is to fall back to them.” After the death of the testator, Martha died before her mother, and the question was, what estate did Martha take in the land? And we said: “We find that the testator conveyed the lands in question to his wife, and upon her death to E. McLeod and Martha, the testator’s daughter. Thus the wife was given a life estate, while E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 1001, 159 Ky. 196, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-thomasson-kyctapp-1914.