Lanciscus v. Louisville Trust Co.

256 S.W. 424, 201 Ky. 222, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 283
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 30, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 424 (Lanciscus v. Louisville Trust Co.) 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
Lanciscus v. Louisville Trust Co., 256 S.W. 424, 201 Ky. 222, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 283 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming the judgment in each case.

These two appeals were separately prosecuted from a judgment of the Jefferson circuit court, chancery branch, division number one, construing certain clauses of the last will and testament of Mrs. Bose Ethel Bartlett, late wife of the appellant, James Herbert Bartlett. Certain specific devises were made by the testatrix in her will, among which were $1,000.00 to each of seven named charitable institutions. In clause IV she gave to the Louisville Trust Company in trust for her nephew, the appellant, Herbert C. Lanciscus, $50,000.00, to be invested and reinvested by it and the net income to be paid to the cestui que trust monthly during his life and at his death the trust ceased and if he died with lineal descendants the property was given to them, free from the trust, but if he left no such descendants it was then devised equally to the'named charitable institutions. By clause V of her will she gave to the same trustee for the use and benefit of her sister, Mrs. Anna Perry, $10,000.00', and directed that the net income from it be paid to her during her life and at her death to be paid to the same nephew monthly for his lifetime, when the trust should cease and the property should go to his lineal descendants, if any, but if not to the same charities.

Clause VI of the will says:

“All the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed and wheresoever situated, I give, devise and bequeath to my husband, James Herbert Bartlett, of Anchorage, Ky., for and during his lifetime, but with power in him to use and dispose of, during his lifetime, for his support, maintenance, comfort and pleasure, all or any part of said rest and residue of the estate; and my execu[224]*224tor shall deliver the corpus or principal of said rest and residue of my estate to him as soon as practicable after my death. No one shall be permitted to question his disposition of said estate, or any part thereof. If, however, at the time of his death, said rest and residue of said estate, or any part thereof, shall not have been disposed of by him, I give and devise the same to the Louisville Trust Company in trust, for the use and benefit of my said nephew, Herbert C. Lanciscus, to be invested and reinvested in property and securities as allowed by law and the net income therefrom to be paid to my said nephew monthly during his lifetime, and after his death, the principal of said rest and residue of said estate, freed from the trust, shall be delivered to and become the property of his lineal descendants, if he leave lineal descendants, but in the event he dies leaving no lineal descendants, then the principal of said rest and residue of said estate, freed from the trust, shall be paid and distributed equally to the aforesaid charities.
“I expressly provide that my said nephew shall not anticipate or assign any of the income from the funds mentioned in clauses IY, Y and YI of this will, and if he does assign or anticipate any of said income, it shall be the duty of said trustee to resist the payment of the same, and if the court of last resort decides that such anticipation or assignment of the income by my nephew is valid, then it is-my will that the interest of said nephew in said income shall1 immediately cease and the principal of said funds mentioned in clauses IV, Y and VI of this will and any accrued income then existing shall be delivered to and become the property of my said nephew’s lineal descendants, if he then has any, freed from the trust, and if he has no lineal descendants, then the same shall be delivered to and become the property of said charities absolutely and freed from the trust. No one shall have the right to demand any bond or security whatever of my said husband, nor shall any one have the right to demand of him an accounting of the principal or income from the said rest and residue of my estate.” (Our italics.)

This equity action was brought by the trust company against the immediate and remote devisees for a construction of the will, and upon submission the court sustained the inhibition by testatrix against assigning or anticipating the income by her nephew from his devise contained in the second literary paragraph of clauce YI, and further [225]*225adjudged that the husband of the testatrix took under the same clause less than an absolute estate in the devise therein made to him, but that he had the unlimited right during his lifetime to spend, use and dispose of for his pleasure as much of the property given to him as he saw proper, even to all of it, but that if he died without exercising his right of disposition as to any of it, then the residue would go as directed in the same clause, and from that judgment the two appellants prosecute separate appeals.

At the beginning it may be observed that we are relieved from the task of searching the contents of the will to ascertain the intention of the testatrix, which is the first duty of a court in the interpretation and construction of wills; for in this case her intention is plainly and unmistakably expressed, which, as to the devise to the husband, was that he should possess all of the powers with reference to the property devised to him during his lifetime that an absolute owner of the same character of property possesses while living, and the only restriction imposed on the devise, was that he should not have the right to make a testamentary disposition of any portion of it, not consumed or otherwise used by him as directed in the will, during his lifetime.

It is strenuously argued in behalf of the husband that at common law the only characteristics of absolute ownership in personal property wére the right of possession and the right of absolute disposition, and that when they are combined the entire estate in the property is vested in the one having those rights. It is, therefore, insisted that under the rule contended for, the attempted limitation of the “remainder” interest in the husband’s devise was void because, under the terms of the will, the first taker (the husband) took all of it and there was nothing left to which the attempted “remainder” interest could attach. Necessarily that argument must and does proceed upon the theory that the word “remainder” has the same significance when applied to the creation of future interests in personalty that it has in the creation of the same character of interests in realty. If the premise is correct the conclusion contended for would necessarily follow, but we are not prepared to admit the similitude. If the devised personalty is given in specie and is nonperishable, nor will be fully consumed in its use by the life tenant, there may be a “remainder” interest created in it similar to that in real property; but, if the property [226]*226is of a perishable nature and if the use of it by the life tenant destroys or consumes it the word “remainder,” as applied to a future interest, has no such significance as when applied to the same interest in realty. "When applied to realty the word designates a future title to the whole of the property, while if applied to the aggregate of personalty, perishable or nonperishable, it can at most refer and attach to the residue or remnant of the property. In other words, when applied to real estate it has reference to the title, and when applied to such personalty it refers to the quantity or amount of the residue or remnant of the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 424, 201 Ky. 222, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanciscus-v-louisville-trust-co-kyctapp-1923.