Morgan v. Meacham

130 S.W.2d 992, 279 Ky. 526, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 16, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 992 (Morgan v. Meacham) 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
Morgan v. Meacham, 130 S.W.2d 992, 279 Ky. 526, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 67 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Ratliee

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

On the first day of August, 1928, Rodman Meacham and his wife, Louise Jones Meacham, wrote their respective wills. Rodman Meacham’s will is brief and clear and the construction of it is not in dispute. By the first clause of his will he directed that his just debts be first paid out of his estate. He then willed all the rest and residue of his estate of every kind and description to his wife, Louise Jones Meacham, if she be living at the time of his death, but if she be not living at the time of his death, he then willed and bequeathed his entire estate to his mother, Elizabeth T. Meacham, and if she not be living at his death, then to his brother, Charles M. Meacham, Jr.

Louise Jones Meacham died in April, 1930, survived by her husband, Rodman Meacham, who died in November, 1933, leaving surviving him his mother, Elizabeth. T. Meacham, and it is not disputed that all the property Rodman Meacham owned at his. death vested in Elizabeth T. Meacham. But the amount, nature and extent of the property owned by Rodman Meacham at the time of his death is in dispute and that question has to be determined by the construction of the will of his wife, Louise Jones Meacham.

The principal question involved in this appeal is the construction of the will of Louise Jones Meacham, and especially the powers and rights of the first taker under the will and the rights of the remainderman.

By the first clause of Louise Jones Meacham's will she directed her just debts be paid first, and by clauses two and three she disposed of certain personal effects, household goods, etc., none of which is in controversy. Paragraphs four and five of the will read as follows:

“Fourth: — I will and bequeath to my Aunt, Miss Lucy Whitlock, of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, during her lifetime, the sum of $150.00 per month to be paid to her monthly out of my estate. Until my estate is finally settled, I direct my executors to pay said sum to her monthly, either from principal or income. Upon final settlement of the estate, this bequest shall. become a fixed and preferred *530 charge upon the estate and said sum of $150.00 per month shall be paid to Miss Lucy Whitlock by my heirs or devisees named in the following paragraph, so long as she may live.
“Fifth: — Subject to the provisions of paragraph four hereof, I will bequeath and devise all the rest and residue of my estate, of every kind and description, to my husband, Rodman Meacham, to be his absolutely during his lifetime, with right to sell, convey and transfer any property which I may own at my death. He shall have full power to use and expend any part or all of said estate for any purpose whatever and without accounting to any one for its use or disposition; but if any of said estate remains at his death then I will and devise such remainder to Mary Louise Perkins, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. T. W. Perkins, of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, absolutely and in fee-simple. If she be not living at the time of my husband’s death, it is my will that the interest herein devised and bequeathed to her shall go to her children, if any, and if she has no children, then the same shall in such event be divided among my lawful heirs in accordance with the laws of descent and distribution of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
“Inasmuch as my husband, who is made the chief beneficiary in this clause, has extensive business operations of his own, and in order to forestall and prevent any controversy between his heirs and my own after the death of both of us, I suggest that he keep an account of the estate going from me into his hands and of the disposition thereof, which account if so kept, shall, be final and conclusive evidence of any interest in my estate to which my heirs and devisees may be entitled upon his death.”

By paragraph six she appointed the First National Bank of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, and James Breathitt, Jr., of Hopkinsville, as joint executors of her will with power and authority in them to sell and convey any and all her property, real and personal, owned by her at the time of her death by either public or private sale within their discretion, and directed that James Breathitt, Jr., shall act as the attorney in the settlement and handling of her estate.

The First National Bank of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, *531 and James Breathitt, Jr., qualified as executors of the will of Louise Jones Meacham, herein called testatrix, and took into their possessiqn the whole of her estate, consisting in a large part of various stocks, bonds, promissory notes, etc., of the approximate value of $170,000. Thereafter, the said bank resigned the trust as executor and made settlement of its accounts with the Christian county court which was approved by that court, and James Breathitt, Jr., continued to act as sole executor until his death in October, 1934. Prior to the death of Rodman Meacham the executors of testatrix’s estate had turned over to him a large part of the securities left by testatrix and much of which he had spent, but some of which was left in his hands when he died, and a part of the estate remained in the hands of Mr. Breathitt at the time of his death and was taken charge of by the First-City Bank & Trust Company of Hopkins-ville, as executor of Mr. Breathitt’s estate.

During the lifetime of Rodman Meacham and after the death of the executrix, his wife, he borrowed $14,000 from the First-City Bank & Trust Company, and to secure the payment of same he pledged certain of these securities coming from testatrix’s estate and delivered them to the bank; and it appears that he borrowed the sum of $7,000 from the Planters Bank & Trust Company and pledged other securities of testatrix’s estate as collateral to secure the payment of that loan.

In September, 1934, just previous to the death of James Breathitt, Jr., First-City Bank & Trust Company, administrator of the estate of Rodman Meacham, deceased, with the will annexed, and First City Bank & Trust Company in its individual capacity, filed their petition in the Christian circuit court naming therein as defendants, Planters Bank & Trust Company, Mary Louise Perkins, then an infant over 14 years of age, Lucy Whitlock, Elizabeth T. Meacham and James Breathitt, Jr., the latter being the executor of the will of Louise Jones Meacham, deceased, in which action the plaintiffs asked a declaration of rights of all parties involved. The petition set out the wills of Rodman Meacham and his wife, the testatrix, the date of their respective deaths, the money borrowed from the respective banks and the securities of the estate of testatrix pledged by Rodman Meacham to secure the loans; and that the bank account of James Breathitt, Jr., as executor of the will of testatrix was kept at the First-City *532 Bank & Trust Company and from time to time said executor found it necessary to pay certain preferred charges against the estate of testatrix and in payment of which he created over-drafts in the aggregate sum of $2,308.44 and set out the items paid and the purpose therefor, and asked for a declaration of rights under the Declaratory Judgment Act on the following points:

“(1) What are the rights of plaintiff, First-City Bank

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 992, 279 Ky. 526, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-meacham-kyctapphigh-1938.