Lewis v. Lewis

70 S.W.2d 679, 253 Ky. 843, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 742
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 23, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 70 S.W.2d 679 (Lewis v. Lewis) 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
Lewis v. Lewis, 70 S.W.2d 679, 253 Ky. 843, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 742 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

' The determinative question in this case is the correct interpretation of the will of W. P. Lewis, deceased, which was executed by him on September 14, 1900, and duly probated in the Franklin county court in which county he resided, on December 2, 1918. Omitting the attestation clause, and the signatures of testator and witnesses, the will in its entirety says: “I, Waller P. Lewis, of Frankfort, Franklin County, Ky., do make and publish this my last will and testament. First: I will and devise to my beloved wife, Sophronia B. Lewis, all my estate, real, personal and mixed of every description, desiring my debts to be paid. Second: I will and devise that at the death of my said wife if any of my estate remain undisposed of that it be equally divided among my legal heirs according to law. Third: I appoint my friend, Samuel Lewis, Executor of this my last will and testament without surety, and authorize and empower him to sell and dispose of any and all of my estate as he may see fit for the benefit and comfort of my said wife. ’ ’

On May 29, 1922, the widow of the +estator, Sophronia B. Lewis, executed her will, and after her death, and on July 6, 1931, it was probated in the same court; she having died a resident of the same county of her *845 deceased husband. She appointed the same person,. -Samuel Lewis, to execute her will that her husband did. to execute his, and he qualified in both capacities. She-devised about- one-fifth of her estate to relatives of her deceased husband, and the remaining four-fifths to her brothers and sisters; neither she nor her husband leaving children or descendants of deceased ones. Some of her husband’s collateral kindred (and who are appellants and were defendants below) after the death of the-testatrix contended that all of the property left by her,, and upon which alone her will could operate, was a part, of her husband’s estate either in specie or that into-which it had been converted, and to settle that question the executor of the two wills (appellee and plaintiff below, Sam Lewis) filed this equity action in the Franklin, circuit court against all of the appellants and defendants below (the husband’s collateral heirs) seeking a. construction of the will of W. P. Lewis and for the advice of the chancellor, and in his petition he- set out the-facts and filed copies of both wills as exhibits thereto.. Some, but not all of the defendants answered and denied some of the affirmative allegations made in the-petition, and also set out the facts we have related and. averred that all of the property left by the testatrix was either a part of her husband’s estate in kind, or’ substituted that which had been converted by her, and that her husband’s will gave to her only a life estate therein with the right to encroach upon the corpus only to the extent of supplying her the “benefit and comfort” expressed therein, and that plaintiff, as executor of her husband’s will, was made trustee therein for testatrix with the power to dispose of the husband’s property and distribute it to his widow for such purpose, and that (she not having consumed the property during her lifetime) the remnant passed under her husband’s will to his collateral heirs as he therein directed.

That pleading was made a cross-petition against plaintiff and the other defendants who did not join therein. A demurrer submitted to it by plaintiff was sustained by the court. Defendants declined to plead further, and their cross-petition was dismissed and a judgment was rendered interpreting the will of W. P. Lewis as devising to his surviving widow the absolute-fee to' all of his property, and from that judgment the-cross-petitioners prosecute this appeal.

It will at once be seen, as stated in the beginning, *846 that the sole question for determination is the interpretation of .the will of "W. P. Lewis, according to the approved rules of law for that purpose, chief among which is, that the intention of the testator, as expressed in the language he employed throughout the entire testamentary paper, is the one to be administered by the court when applied to for that purpose. A great number of eases from this court sustaining, approving, and applying that rule may be found listed in volume 19 of West’s Kentucky Digest on pages 239-243, both inclusive, under the title “Wills,” and in 439 and 440. They are of one accord, with the possible exception that some of the ■earlier ones, written by this court immediately following its creation, were more strict in the application of the common-law technical rules for the construction of wills than is the present and more modern accepted doctrine. For a considerable preceding period this as well as other courts have adopted the rule, and applied it without exception, that so long as the intention of the testator, as gathered from all parts of his will, is not in conflict with some positive principle of law, it will be given effect, and counsel for both sides in this controversy admit that such is the present state of the law and constitutes the rule that should be applied in this case.

A consultation of the cases-will further reveal that in applying such general rule no hard and fast subsidiary ones are to be given unqualified effect, because of the all-sufficient reason that no two wills are couched in the same language, and that, after all, the issue is determinable by the ability of the court to properly interpret the language that the testator employed from the beginning to the' end of his will, which necessarily implies that the testator’s desires are not complete nor unalterably expressed in only one clause, but that his intention with reference thereto may be modified or qualified by other later clauses or expressions inserted in the will before it is. finished. Differently stated, the rule is that a testator is not through expressing his intention until he reaches the end of his will and he may qualify any section, paragraph or clause, by an entirely disconnected one in another part of his will, the same as may be done by parties to a written contract, or by a Legislature in the enactment of a statute.

, It is the contention of counsel'for plaintiff in this .case, and which the trial court approved, that the rule *847 and principle of interpretation as announced by this and other courts in a great number of cases (an illustration of which is Plaggenborg v Molendyk’s Adm’r, 187 Ky. 509, 219 S. W. 438, and others cited therein and still others following it) should govern this case, and which, if true, would require us to affirm the judgment; while 'counsel for defendants, though not disputing the sound■ness of those cases, invoke the general rule supra, and ’contend that it was the intention of W. P. Lewis, as expressed by him in his entire will, to qualify the absolute title vested in his wife by the first clause of his will, and to confine her beneficial interest in his property to only a life estate with power -to encroach upon its corpus if necessary for her “benefit and comfort,” and which qualification is manifested in the third clause of his will, notwithstanding he in its first clause devised 'to her an apparent absolute estate therein.

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248 F. Supp. 568 (W.D. Kentucky, 1965)
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165 S.W.2d 358 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1942)
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158 S.W.2d 976 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1942)
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Bluebook (online)
70 S.W.2d 679, 253 Ky. 843, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-lewis-kyctapphigh-1934.