McGinnis v. McGinnis' Ex'r

190 S.W.2d 323, 300 Ky. 759, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 636
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 1, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 323 (McGinnis v. McGinnis' Ex'r) 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
McGinnis v. McGinnis' Ex'r, 190 S.W.2d 323, 300 Ky. 759, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 636 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court-by

Judge Cammaqk

Affirming.

Gelon R. McGinnis died testate in April, 1942. On April 16th, his will was probated and the Liberty National Bank & Trust Company qualified as executor and trustee thereunder. Provision. was made for Mrs. Mcginnis in paragraph (b). of. Item 4 of the will. This provision follows: “The Trustee shall pay to my wife, Mary McIntosh McGinnis, so long as she may live and remains my widow, the entire net income from the trust estate. In the event the net income from said trust estate is not sufficient to pay my wife, Mary McIntosh Mc-Ginnis, the sum of Two Hundred ($200.00) Dollars Per month, then I direct that the Trustee shall use so much of the principal as may be necessary in order that said monthly payment of $200.00 may. be effected, and said payments shall continue so long as my said widow shall live and does not re-marry,: or until thé said trust fund is exhausted.”

Provision was made in Item 5 for the payment of $25 pér month after the death of Mrs. McGinnis to her mother'and'father and to the .appellee, Daphne Hedden. The-trustee was given the right to encroach upon' the principal of the estate to make the $25 payments to these beneficiaries. Under Item 6 it was directed that, after the death of the beneficiaries just named, the remainder of the estate should go to the Lawrenceburg Presbyterian Church at the rate of $800 per. annum to be .used in.payment of the pastor’s salary until the balance of the estate was consumed., . . .....

On June 15, 1942, Mrs. McGinnis, upon the advice of cohns.el,’ the 'Honorable. Thud Cheatham, of Tayiorsville, Kentuclry, .renounced the will... On ajvice of her .present counsel Mrs. McGinnis instituted this action on August *761 20, 1943, to set aside her renunciation of her husband’s will. ....

During the arguments on the demurrer to the petition the chancellor, Honorable Churchill Humphrey, announced that, he desired to hear, Mrs. McGinnis. .The reason for his decision may be gathered from the following memorandum opinion which,appears in the record: ,

“This is one of those cases where covin of, imposition upon,' and improvidence of chancery’s favored (widow) is suggested. Improvidence is pleaded; covin and imposition are not brought on the stage but are painted on the back drop. , .

“At first impression I do not think there is anything in plaintiff’s case, but I suspend judgment until I can have heard her story and her counsel shall have had opportunity to complete his argument. After that I will decide whether to rule on demurrer or to reserve ruling' until the case is heard in chief.

“This may be irregular, highly irregular. But this court is too busy to permit its bar to become a fighting pit for the gamest of all cocks, the Kentucky lawyer. I get the distinct impression in this case that counsel, instead of attempting to advise the court on fact and law, are jockeying for position and trying not the case but one another. The court will let the plaintiff tell her own story, then the court will determine whether to rulé on demurrer or to reserve ruling and to direct counsel to proceed along conventional lines.

“Just one witness' — and that the plaintiff. If the plaintiff does not testify on the twenty-fourth, the court will give her counsel opportunity to complete his argument on demurrer and will then rule on the sufficiency of her petition.”

After hearing Mrs. McGinnis at length, and also some testimony of a representative of the trustee, the chancellor rendered the following opinion:

‘ ‘ The plaintiff widow renounced her husband’s will. This after consultation with Lawyer No. 1.

“The plaintiff widow has now consulted Lawyer No, 2; she wishes to revoke her renunciation and reinstate herself as beneficiary under 'the will.

*762 “The case is pending on demurrer to petition. Prom the pleading itself I couldn’t determine whether the widow charged covin, or oppression.

“So I let the widow tell her own story in open court. The court has no right perhaps to consider this testimony on demurrer — that is under our code; of course it was quite common under the old equity practice to require the pleaders to go before a master, make discovery, and generally boil their pleadings down to a size and shape to fit them within or to exclude them from the established molds of equitable principle.

“Widow plus coercion equals equity.

“Here however we have widow but no coercion; simply a woman who has consulted one lawyer and has made a decision. Now, under the advice of a second lawyer, this same woman has come to a contrary conclusion. In short we have a woman who has changed her mind and asks equity to implement that change.

“I know the old adage: ‘Every woman has a right to change her mind. ’ I know however of no equity principle by which the chancellor can, on the invocation of such right alone, set aside solemn' deliberate acts advisedly done, or divest rights which by.such acts have become vested.”

After the second amended petition was filed a special chancellor sustained a demurrer to the petition as amended, and upon the appellant’s refusal to plead further her petition was dismissed; hence this appeal.

It is insisted that the conduct of the chancellor who heard the cause was highly improper, because he had no right to order testimony to be heard on the demurrer.. Assuming this position to be sound, it would not alter the case if the petition as amended failed to state a cause of action. As said in Stockton v. Hall, (Hardin) 3 Ky. 160, “It is better to do right from wrong inducements, than to reverse that which is right because it was wrongfully engendered.”

It may be well to say at the outset that it has been held in this jurisdiction that a widow may withdraw her revocation of a will, if her application is timely made and she can show that the renunciation was against her interest, or was induced by fraud, misrepresentation or *763 any untoward intervening cause, provided the rights of innocent parties have not intervened. This is an exception to the general rule, however, which -is to the effect that a widow having deliberately elected to renounce a will can not thereafter recall it, because she is given one year in which she may investigate fully her rights under the will. Craven v. Craven, 181 Ky. 428, 205 S. W. 406, and cases cited therein.

Thus we are faced with the question as to whether Mrs. McGinnis stated facts in her petition as amended sufficient to meet the test just mentioned. In substance the petition charges “the renunciation was made through mistake of law and fact;” shortly after the death of Mr. McGinnis the plaintiff consulted an attorney who had transacted some business for Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 323, 300 Ky. 759, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcginnis-v-mcginnis-exr-kyctapphigh-1945.