Malone's Guardian Ad Litem v. Malone

73 S.W.2d 38, 255 Ky. 210, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 223
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 22, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 38 (Malone's Guardian Ad Litem v. Malone) 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
Malone's Guardian Ad Litem v. Malone, 73 S.W.2d 38, 255 Ky. 210, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 223 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

OPINION op the Court by

Judge Eiohardson

Affirming.

Tilomas Malone, a resident of Mason county, Ky., died testate, leaving surviving him Catherine Malone, as' his widow, and three children, Thomas M. Malone, Jr., John Maurice Malone, and Anna Alma Malone, all of whom were over 21 years of age. John Maurice and Anna Alma were not married and lived with their mother; Thomas M. Malone, Jr., was married and lived at his own home.

At his death, Thos. Malone owned over 900 acres of land situated in Mason county, which was incumbered by a mortgage in excess of $80,000 to the Bank of Maysville.

After directing the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, he devised his real and personal property to his wife, the personal property to be hers absolutely, and the real estate to be hers during her natural life to use and have the income therefrom, with the power in her as executrix to sell and convey the real estate for the payment of his debts or for reinvestment as she deemed best and proper, with the provision that, if the proceeds of any of his real estate which she might sell that was not necessary .or not used in the payment of his debts be reinvested in other real estate of her own selection to be held by her “in the same manner and have the income therefrom during her life.” By the third clause of his will he devised his real estate at her death to his three children ‘ ‘ share and share alike, ’ ’ but, should either of the children die leaving descendants, “then the descendants shall take the share that such *212 child would have taken if living. ’ ’ Catherine Malone was nominated executrix of the will, and upon its probation she duly qualified.

In addition to the debt to the Bank of Maysville he was indebted to others several thousand dollars; consequently his estate was insolvent.

In March, 1931, the executrix and the sons and daughter of the testator, with the Bank of Maysville,. began negotiations with the hope of being able to dispose of Malone’s -land for an amount sufficient to pay his debts.

John Maurice Malone was, at the time, sui juris- and unmarried, and practically assumed the responsibility of the head of the family. With the consent of his mother, brother, and sister, he took charge of his father’s affairs and engaged inactive negotiations to sell his father’s land- in the endeavor to pay the debts of his father.

The result of the negotiations was a contract between the executrix and the Bank of Maysville whereby the bank agreed to purchase certain acreage of the land owned by the testator at the price of $40,000 to be credited on the $80,000 and interest, owing it by the testator at the time of his death. The remainder of his real estate was to be taken individually by Mrs. Malone fertile remainder of the bank’s debt. The contract provided, that the executrix should offer the land at public sale,, after due advertisement, and, should the acreage the-bank agreed to take bring more than the price that was to be paid for it by the bank, the excess credited on its-mortgage debt. The property was put on sale in accordance with the terms of the contract. Various parcels were offered for sale, and the price realized for the acreage the bank agreed to take was less than $39,000, but-' no offer at any price was obtained for the land which Mrs. Malone individually agreed to take and pay therefor the remainder of the bank’s debt. John Maurice Malone took the leading active part in forming the plan, and making the arrangements whereby the bank was to-take part of the property and Mrs. Malone the remainder in order to pay the entire mortgage debt of the bank;but, about the time the negotiations were ready to be closed, he became mentally incompetent, was adjudged so by the Mason -circuit court on April 8, 1931, and" he has since been confined in the Eastern State Hospital at Lexington, Ky., a hopelessly incurable lunatic.

*213 It is superfluous to say that the testator’s land was legally hound for his debts, and Catherine Malone was under the duties of executrix with power to sell the land and liquidate the debts; therefore ,unless justified by the unusual and peculiar facts herein, could not become the purchaser of any portion of the testator’s r.eal estate. To help the situation and relieve her as far as possible of her liability from, herself becoming the purchaser of the testator’s real estate, Thos. M. Malone, Jr., and wife, and Anna Alma Malone, a single woman, executed and delivered a deed, conveying to Catherine Malone their interest in the real estate of the testator in consideration of her paying the debts of the testator. In order to prevent foreclosure by the bank of its mortgage on the remainder of the real estate of the testator, as executrix of the will of Thos. Malone, as his widow and individually, Catherine Malone executed and delivered a deed to J. M. Collins,' trustee, conveying to him that portion of the testator’s real estate which she was to take under the contract with the Bank of Maysville. This plan was solely designed and executed in order to dispose of this portion of the real estate of the testator for the liquidation of the balance of the bank’s debt. J. M. Collins, as trustee, in turn conveyed the land to her individually and for and in consideration of her paying the balance of the $34,624.20 due the Bank of Maysville, she having theretofore paid of her own funds $10,624.20 of the debt of the bank. After the delivery of the Collins deed to her, she paid the bank with her own funds $15,000 of the $34,624.20, leaving $20,-000 of the bank’s debt unpaid. She borrowed this sum of the bank on her individual obligation to it, which was in effect a continuation of that much of the original mortgage debt.

In 1932 she made application to the Federal Land Bank of Louisville, Ky., for a loan to take up this $20,-000. The Federal. Land Bank refused to accept the title.

This action was brought to validate her deed to Collins and his deed to her and to quiet her title to the land. A decree was entered declaring she was vested with a complete title in fee simple to the land conveyed by her as executrix to Collins, trustee, and by him as trustee to her individually. The guardian ad litem of John Maurice Malone appeals, and the executrix is here insisting on an affirmance of the judgment.

It is an accepted rule a trustee having power to sell *214 tbe trust or devised property cannot buy it from himself unless the' cestui que is sui juris and it clearly appears from the evidence that the trustee acted in good faith, that the consideration was adequate, and that'the cestui’ que trust consented to the sale with full knowledge of' all material facts, and consciously and intentionally acted upon his independent thought, uninfluenced by any fact either stated or withheld by the trustee, and, unless such facts appear, the purchase by the trustee is always subject to be avoided by the cestui que trust and this is so in every case where the latter is not sui juris. The cestui que trust may thereafter either treat the property in the hands of the trustee as still being held by him in trust or, if he has sold it, to adopt the sale and seek an accounting from the trustee of the profits which he realized from his sale of the property after he had purchased it.

In Clay v. Thomas, 178 Ky. 199, 198 S. W. 762, 764, 1 A. L. R.

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73 S.W.2d 38, 255 Ky. 210, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malones-guardian-ad-litem-v-malone-kyctapphigh-1934.