Kuechler v. Rubbathen

99 S.W.2d 193, 266 Ky. 390, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 676
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 1, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 S.W.2d 193 (Kuechler v. Rubbathen) 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
Kuechler v. Rubbathen, 99 S.W.2d 193, 266 Ky. 390, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 676 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Ratliff

Affirm-

ing.

Josephine K. Kelly died testate on the 17th day of January, 1935, a resident of Newport, Campbell county, Ky. At the time of her death she was the owner of various kinds of property in both Campbell and Fayetteeounites, Ky.

*391 _ In her will she appointed the appellee, who was a resident of Lexington, Fayette county, Ky., as the sole executor of her estate. Appellee came into possession of the decedent’s will soon after her death and took it to Lexington and had it probated in the Fayette county court. In September, 1935, he filed suit in the Fayette circuit court seeking a construction of the will. However, he had not qualified as executor of the decedent’s estate.

After appellee had filed the suit in the Fayette circuit court for a construction of the will, Henry Miller and Mrs. Carrie Saner, both of whom were beneficiaries of the will of the decedent, filed in the Campbell county court a copy of the will and a motion supported by their affidavits, requesting” the court to fix the time for offering the will for probate in the Campbell county court and asked for a subpoena duces tecum for appellee requiring him to produce the will. The court issued the subpoena and fixed, the time for hearing on September 25, but by consent the date was extended to October 2, 1935. Appellee failed to appear in person, but his attorney appeared and resisted the issuance of'the subpoena, because appellee lived more than 30 miles from Newport. The court then issued a rule against appellee returnable October 15, 1935, and on that day he appeared in person and by his counsel filed a response to the rule stating that the will was in the files of the Fayette county court where he had it probated and that he could not produce it. The court then heard testimony on the application and motion of appellants to probate a copy of the will.

The cause was submitted with the understanding that the court withhold any ruling thereon until October 30, 1935, and on the following day the court ordered the will probated and appointed appellant administrator with the will annexed and denied appellee the right to qualify as executor of the estate of the decedent. The order in part reads:

“And the Executor named in the Will not having applied for appointment as such, it is now ordered upon the motion of the propounders that Henry Kueehler be and he is appointed Administrator with the Will Annexed of said estate and he will give bond in the sum of Fifteen Thousand Dollars.”

When appellee received information that appellant *392 had been appointed administrator with the will annexed and his right to qualify as executor had been denied him, he moved the Campbell county court to allow him to qualify as executor and to set aside the order appointing- appellant administrator with the will annexed; and at the same time he filed his motion for a rule against appellant to require him to show cause why he should not be removed as such administrator. A hearing was had on the two motions, and the county court entered an order overruling both of them, reciting, among other things, “that [appellee] in offering the will of decedent for probate in Fayette county, and in filing a suit for construction of said will in Fayette county, the executor has taken an inconsistent position and the court doubts his real sincerity and interest in the ultimate welfare of the estate.”

From the above order appellee appealed to the Campbell circuit court, and on a hearing of the case that court entered judgment setting, aside so much of the order of the Campbell county court as appointed appellant administrator with the will annexed and removed him as such administrator, and further directed the Campbell county court to allow appellee to qualify as executor of the estate of decedent, and from that judgment Henry Kuechler has prosecuted this appeal.

The questions of decedent’s residence and the propriety .of the ultimate probation of the will in the Campbell county court, are not presented in this appeal. The only question before us is whether or not the conduct of appellee, whom the testator named as executor of her estate, was such as to deprive him of the right to qualify as executor and discharge the trust reposed in him.

It is insisted for appellant that appellee’s failure to appear in the Campbell county court when the will was probated was sufficient to warrant the court to conclude that he declined the appointment or to qualify, and the court then had the right to appoint an administrator with the will annexed. But it will be noticed that appellee was not notified to appear in the Campbell county court to accept or decline the trust, but he was only required by the notice to produce the will. It is nowhere shown that he actually refused to qualify. It is also insisted that appellee’s conduct in taking the will out of the county of the residence' of the testator and *393 having it probated in Fayette county and neglecting to qualify as executor or to take any steps to settle or otherwise administer the estate, and thereby depriving, or at least delaying, the beneficiaries of the will in receiving their legacies, amounted to constructive refusal to qualify.

Appellant relies principally upon section 3846 of the Kentucky Statutes, which reads as follows:

“If a personal representative shall reside out of the state, or become insane, or become otherwise incapable to discharge the trust, or bankrupt, or insolvent, or in failing circumstances, the county court shall remove him, and the other representative shall discharge the trust; but if he reside in the county of his appointment, or in an adjoining county, and is not insane, he shall have ten days’ notice before the order of removal is made; if insane, the notice must be given to his trustee, if he have one, and if there is no representative, the court may appoint one.”

There is no contention that appellee is a bankrupt or insolvent or in failing circumstances, nor that he has expressly refused to qualify as executor. But it is insisted that his conduct as indicated above proves him to be ‘ ‘ otherwise incapable to discharge the trust, ’ ’ as provided in the statute, supra, and to support his contention he cites and relies on the cases of Zinn’s Adm’r v. Brown et al., 225 Ky. 814, 10 S. W. (2d) 300, and Warden v. Hoover’s Adm’r, 214 Ky. 370, 283 S. W. 444.

In the Zinn Case, supra, it was held that where an heir, appointed as administrator, attempted to deceive his coheirs into belief that they should sign writing whereby he and his son would receive three-fifths of the estate, and that the other two-fifths was a sum equal to that amount, when facts within his knowledge did not sustain that statement, he was properly removed as administrator, under Kentucky Statutes, sec. 3846, on ground that he was “otherwise incapable to discharge the trust.” The Warden Case, supra, is of like import and founded upon similar facts and reason. Those cases do not sustain appellant’s argument; and, furthermore, it will be noticed that those cases, supra, deal with administrators of intestate decedents, not with executors named in the will by a testator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.2d 193, 266 Ky. 390, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuechler-v-rubbathen-kyctapphigh-1936.