Oehlschlaeger v. Oehlschlaeger's Ex'r

108 S.W.2d 528, 269 Ky. 596, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 647
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 11, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 528 (Oehlschlaeger v. Oehlschlaeger's 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
Oehlschlaeger v. Oehlschlaeger's Ex'r, 108 S.W.2d 528, 269 Ky. 596, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 647 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

Mrs. Fredericka OehlscMaeger, a widow and child *597 less, then past 80 years of age, died testate on January 17, 1937. Shortly thereafter her will was probated and appellee the Citizens Savings Bank of Paducah, named in the will as trustee and executor, qualified as executor.

The will carefully, though somewhat inartistically prepared, by clause 1 provided for payment of her funeral expenses and all legal obligations. By clause 2 of the will, and a codicil added on the same day the will was executed (January 7, 1935), testatrix made 45- or more cash bequests to her husband’s and her relatives, and several charitable and religious institutions.. These specifically designated bequests aggregated approximately $23,000. In the same clause testatrix made-specific bequests of personal property, such as furniture, pictures, jewelry, and wearing apparel, describing each article and naming the legatees. In pleading it is-alleged that this part of clause 2 has been fully administered.

By clause 3 of the will testatrix bequeathed $500 to-the Citizens Savings Bank as “trustee,” the income thereof to be used in the maintenance of the family vault, providing that the excess of income from this fund if such should result, should go to some worthy charity in the city of Paducah.

Clause 4 of the will reads:

“All the rest and residue of my estate I hereby will and bequeath unto the Citizen’s Savings Bank ■of Paducah, Ky. as [Trustee] or its successors,, with full power and authority to invest and handle-in its discretion, as follows 70% for the use and. benefit of George Oehlschlaeger, John Oehlschlaeger, Heirs of wm. Oehlschlaeger deceased, Jake Oehlschlaeger, Fredericka Arnold, Tillie Evitts,, Henry Oehlschlaeger, children of Jake Oehlschlaeger, deceased, and 25% to my heirs who reside in Germany and are mentioned by name in the cash-bequests and 5% to the Evangelical-Reformed Church Synod of St. Louis, Mo.”

Clause 5 of the will (italics' ours) reads:

“Whereas a lease was executed by me to the Paducah Realty Company for the business house No. 315 Broadway, Paducah,_ Ky. and said lease provides an option that said property may be purchased by said Paducah Realty Co. [15 years after *598 the execution of said lease] or before such date for $40,000. It is my will that the trust herein created, shall continue until the 15 years referred too in said lease have expired, unless said property is sold before that time, then said [trust] if Paducah Realty Company have not bought said ■ property under its lease option. Then my trustee if deemed best for my estate, may sell said property [subject] to the 50 year term of said lease, and my trustee also shall sell if deemed best any other real estate ■owned by me and not heretofore disposed of, and after all has been sold, then .the trusteeship shall terminate, and any proceeds of any property from the sale of the property 315 Broadway, together with the proceeds of any other real or personal property not heretofore sold or distributed by my [trustee] shall be distributed in the same ratio as is provided for and to the same beneficiaries _as shown in preceding paragraph [4] with proviso that if- any- of the beneficiaries named persons be not living, and the children, if any of such be dead, distribution be per stirpes and not per capita.”

Clause 6 is as follows:

“The net income from rents or other sources that will come into the hands of my trustee shall once each year be distributed in the manner provided for the distribution of corpus of the trust fund in the preceding paragraph [4] but before any division is made the several bequests shall first be paid in full.”

In clause 8 testatrix authorized her executor or trustee, or their successors, either at public or private sale, and on such terms and conditions and at such time ■or times as they may in their discretion deem best, “and in the interest of my estate, to grant, bargain,' sell ■or lease and dispose of my lands, tenements, or property real or personal, whereof I may be seized at the time of my death, and upon such sale thereof to execute, acknowledge and deliver all necessary and proper deeds or instruments of conveyance in law, for the vesting in the purchaser or purchasers the fee simple title thereto.”

By a suit filed under the declaratory judgment act (section 639a-l et seq. of the Civil Code of Practice), by the executor, the court was asked to declare the rights *599 of the parties under the will, the parties plaintiff being the executor and those 38 or more relatives of both testatrix and her deceased husband, and the 6 charitable and religions associations named in the second clause of the will to whom and to which cash bequests had been made. _ The parties. defendant were those persons and the religious institution to whom and to which the residue was bequeathed under clause 4.

The court directed that George Oehlschlaeger sue on behalf of the first class,,and that John Oehlschlaeger, Sr., defend for the other class. They thus appeared, suing and defending also in their own proper persons.

It was alleged in the petition that at the time of the death of testatrix she owned approximately $8,000 in value of stocks and bonds, a house and lot on South Fourth street of the value of about $500, another lot on South Third street of the approximate value of $8,000. At this point it is asserted that the personal property is insufficient to pay in full the cash bequests and, further^ that the same, with the proceeds from the sale of the first two lots above mentioned, would still be inadequate to pay the cash bequests, costs of administration, payment of debts, and to. provide for the $500 trust set up in clause 3 of the will.

It is further pleaded that testatrix was the owner of lot No. 315 Broadway in Paducah, the same mentioned in clause 5 of the will. It is said with respect of this lot that it is now rented to a good and solvent tenant at a satisfactory rental. The lease provided for a 50-year term, with option to the lessee to purchase the property at any time within 15 years of the lease date at the fixed price of $40,000. The date of the lease is not shown, but it is said that it has 40 years to run. This would, as we gather it, extend to the lessee 5 years more in which to exercise the option to purchase. The lessee had not, at the time of suit, expressed any purpose to, or given notice that it would, exercise its right of option. This property plaintiffs say is valuable and may be sold at a price commensurate with its fair value.

Allegations are that it is impossible to make a settlement of the. estate without selling some of the real estate, a sale being necessary for the purpose of paying the items above mentioned, and that the executor is being called upon by legatees to-make settlement. Executor says that it was given no power by the will' to en *600

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Related

In Re Estate of Kappenmann
141 N.W.2d 780 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 528, 269 Ky. 596, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oehlschlaeger-v-oehlschlaegers-exr-kyctapphigh-1937.