McBrayer v. McBrayer's Ex'trix

26 S.W. 183, 95 Ky. 475, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 26, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 183 (McBrayer v. McBrayer's Ex'trix) 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
McBrayer v. McBrayer's Ex'trix, 26 S.W. 183, 95 Ky. 475, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 50 (Ky. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

JUDGE PBYOB

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was instituted in the court below for a construction of the ninth clause of the will of Judge W. H. McBrayer, of Anderson County, who died on the 6th of December, in the year 1888.

He left surviving him his widow, who is the plaintiff in the action and the appellee in this court. She qualified as executrix, and also his son-in-law, D. L. Moore, qualified as executor.

[478]*478The testator had but one child, a daughter, who died before the testator, leaving three children — Mary, ~Wallace and William Moore — and these children, by the provisions of the. will, are made the principal objects of his bounty. Their father was D. L. Moore, who was left as executor to manage the estate in conjunction with the widow of the testator.

lie made a liberal provision for his wife, and also bequests of much value to his son-in-law and to his collateral kindred.

At the time of his death, and for.many years prior thereto, he manufactured and sold whisky at his distillery in the County of Anderson. Its product was much used, and the trade-mark on the barrels so extensively known as to give the use of the trade-mark itself a value of not less than $25,000 a year. The trade-mark was “W. H. McBrayer Cedar Brook Distillery,” and of the value, as conceded by the pleading's, of a sum exceeding $200,000.

The testator’s property, when the specific devises were paid, consisted almost entirely of this noted distillery, and this, by the residuary clause of the will, passed to his infant grandchildren.

lie had made a contract sometime before his death with Levy & Bro., of Cincinnati, by which ho sold them all the whisky distilled and to be distilled at the “ Cedar Brook Distillery ” between December 1, 1886, and December 1, 1891. This contract had to be complied with, and not only so, it was evident the distillery had to be operated in order to raise the money to satisfy the specific devises made to his kindred other than those who were his direct descendants. The distillery was operated under his own supervision for more than a year after the will was writ[479]*479ten, and by its provisions it was to be operated by Ms executor for three years from the time of Ms death.

He was a man of large business experience and knew the necessity of having the distillery carried on by his executor until from its products the executor could discharge the burden upon Ms estate imposed by the provisions of his will. With this in view we find the ninth clause of the will, now the subject of construction, to read as follows: “ It is my will that my Cedar Brook Distillery shall be operated by my executors for three years after my death in order to carry out the bequests of this will, after which time I desire that my name be entirely stricken from the business, and my executors are hereby invested with all the rights, title and interest in said property necessary to the operating of the same, so that no trouble will or may be had with the Government of the United States by reason of my said executors operating said distillery after my death.”

By the thirteenth clause it is provided that “If at any time my executors shall disagree as to the best method of settling up, managing and disposing of my estate, the view held by my said wife shall in all cases be adopted, it being my desire to give her prominence and priority in everything that pertains to my estate.”

It is claimed by the widow — and such was the ruling of the chancellor below — that by the provisions of the ninth clause of the will the trade-mark or brand attached to the product of the distillery, viz.: “ W. H. McBrayer Cedar Brook Distillery,” could not longer be used by his grandchildren in the manufacture or sale of the whisky at said distillery or elsewhere because of the provision in the ninth clause of the will of the testator, by which the [480]*480distillery is to be operated for three years by his executors after his death, to carry out the bequests of the will, “ after which I desire that my name be entirely stricken from the business.” It is insisted, from the language used, the purpose of the testator was that the name of W. II. McBrayer should no longer be connected with the distillery, and the trade-mark that gave the product of the distillery and the devise its chief value was thereby destroyed. In other words, the true meaning of this ninth clause is that after the expiration of the three years from the death of the testator his name was not to appear as a part of the brand or trade-mark and to be in no manner connected with the business.

On the other hand it is contended for the appellants the. testator’s meaning was that after the expiration of the three years (the time in which the distillery was to be operated by his executors), his estate or his executors should no longer conduct the business by using his name .so as to make his estate liable, etc. It is again argued that the name “~W. II. McBrayer Cedar Brook Distillery," is a valuable property right, which neither the executors nor the testator himself could destroy, and for that reason it passed to the devisees.

It is not-necessary, in view of the conclusion reached, to determine the right of the devisor to prohibit the use of the trade-mark, or that of his name, in the manufacture of whisky by those to whom he devised the distillery, and while we perceive nothing illegal or inconsistent with public policy in such a prohibition, although made a condition upon which the devise is to take effect, it is not required that this question should be further considered.

The testator could have had no conscientious motives [481]*481prompting him to restrict the devise. He had been a distiller for many years and had, without doubt, devised to these grandchildren the distillery property that it might be used and operated for the purpose of making whisky, .and if regarded by him as an evil he would not knowingly have vested them with the title to property which, when applied to its proper use, would have produced that which the testator was not willing to have his name associated with in any form. lie was a man of intelligence- and of much experience in the business affairs of life, and in the construction of his will we must look to the language used and the circumstances surrounding him as gathered from the writing itself in order to determine his intent and purpose when using the language found in the ninth clause of that instrument. He knew that to give to his executors as such the unlimited power .as to time in which to operate the distillery might involve his estate largely in debt, and looking to the liabilities or the burdens he had placed upon the estate by the various bequests made, and knowing the capacity of his distillery, supposed that in three years from his death, with proper management by his executors (in whom he seems to have had the greatest confidence), the distillery would relieve his estate of the burdens upon it, and after that period he did not desire the business to be continued in his name by his executors, as it might result in financial disaster instead of a benefit to those interested.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 183, 95 Ky. 475, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbrayer-v-mcbrayers-extrix-kyctapp-1894.