Payne's Will

20 Ky. 422, 4 T.B. Mon. 422, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 20, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 Ky. 422 (Payne's Will) 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
Payne's Will, 20 Ky. 422, 4 T.B. Mon. 422, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 47 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Chief Justice Bibb

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Meredith Payne, the executor, named in the, last will and testament of George Payne deceased, applied to the county court of Washington, offered, evidence of the execution of the will, of the loss thereof, since the testator’s death, of its contents, by a substantial copy produced, and applied for letters, of probate, Richard Payne opposed the probate, and the court being divided, the application was^ therefore, not granted; from which Meredith Payne, the executor, has appealed.

The due publication of the testator’s will in writing, made and attested according to the solemnities required by the statute, is proved by the two attesting witnesses; and the sanity of the testator improved not only positively by,the witnesses, but by the means adopted by the the testator in equalizing, by his own judgment, and the aid of the two attesting witnesses, called to assist him in the valuation, at the drawing of the will.

Proof that the will was purloined from the depositary. Copy offered in the county court,now offered here to be recorded. Interests of legatees and devisees vests the instant of the testator's death and are not lost by the fraudulent or accidental destruction of the will before probate.

[423]*423After it was executed, it was delivered by him to one of the subscribing witnesses, for safe keeping, where it remained until after the testator’s death.

That George Payne had made and published his will before his death, was known to his family, and that it had been deposited with one of the witnesses. On application of one of the sons of the testator, the depositary made a copy, examined it with great care, with the assistance of the person whom the son had sent for it, who deposes to the repeated examinations by himself and the depositary, and to the delivery thereof to the appellee. In a short time afterwards, on the application of another of the sons, the depositary being about to make another copy, discovered that it had been purloined, and under circumstances which induce a belief that the will had been abducted and secreted or destroyed by the procurement of some one, dissatisfied with the provisions of the will, but by whom it is not known.

Richard Payne, who contests the will, has refused to bring forward the copy delivered to him, although called upon by the depositary, very soon after the loss of the original, as well as at the county court, when probate was applied for. The copy offered to the county court, and now to this court, is the best evidence which is in the power of the executor, and is satisfactorily proved to be a substantial, if not a literal copy of the original.

The fact of due publication of the will according to the statute, with the requisite solemnities to make it effectual to pass the real and personal estate, according to the legacies and devises contained in it, is proved beyond doubt. That the testator ever revoked, or even intended to revoke, is not suggested by any colour of evidence. At his death the will was in existence, fair, uncancelled, unobliterated and of full effect.

In law, upon the death of the testator, the interest of the executor was vested, and most of his powers also, before probate of the will; the rights and interests of the legatees and devisees were also completely vested at the instant of the testator’s death [424]*424and before probate. The after Toss or destruction of the will by accident, or fraud, cannot destroy and divest those vested rights and interests. In this, Wentworth, Swinbourne, Toller and Powell, adjudged cases, ancient and modern, all agree. The rights and interests of the legatees and devisees are no more lost nor destroyed, than the rights of a creditor by the accidental loss of his bond, or of the purchaser by the casual loss of his deed. The devisees take as purchasers under a will.

Objections to the jurisdiction stated. Jurisdiction of the county courts is not ministerial, but judicial —and is unlimited as to the nature and matter of the controversy. Probate shall be granted by one county court, as where testator resided, and that shall have effect throughout the state.

The counsel for the appellee do not deny the effect of the will, if it were duly made and published, nor pretend that the loss of it after the testator’s death, can destroy its effect. But they question the power of the county court, as a court of probate, to take the proof, and act upon the subject; they insist that the matters of controversy are withdrawn from that jurisdiction and transferred to the court of chancery.

By the statute of this state it is declared “that the several county courts shall have power to hear and determine all causes, matters, suits and controversies testamentary, arising within their respective jurisdictions, and to examine and take the proof of wills, and grant certificates thereof,” &c. 2 Dig. 1244, sect. 10. The power “to hear and determine, is a judicial, not a ministerial power. And the grant of that power over testamentary controversies is without limit or restriction, as to the nature or matter of such controversy.”

The after provisions of this statute, regulate the question of jurisdiction so as to give to some one county court of the state, complete authority over the subject, and to make the probate granted in any county, co-extensive with the state, so as to avoid the inconvenience and expense of probate in different counties, they give also to the same courts power to grant letters of administration. According to the rule given, the jurisdiction belonged to the county court of Washington, because, the mansion house, residence and death of the testator, were i,n that county.

History of th jurisriiction of the England*1 ° Wills containing devises of land.

. The scope of the powers ánd jurisdiction thus conferred tnáy be better understood by reference to the history of the idrisdicfion and powers cxer-ciseu by the courts, ecclesiastical and temporal, m testamentary caiises, matters, suits and controver-sics in England. That history will be found in the case of Marriott vs. Marriott, 1 Stran. 666. It appears that the Bishop arid Sheriff sat together in. the county courts, by the laws of King Edgar; and that the probate of testaments was in the county courts. . William the conqueror separated the ecclesiastical courts from the civil, Under a charter of Henry the first, the ecclesiastical jurisdiction over testamentary matters crept in, under colour of devises to pious uses; in the time of Bichard the second, when he was in confinement, the clergy obtained from bina a confirmation of ecclesiastical im-. munities, and these were confirmed by the Pope. Thenceforth the ecclesiastical courts commenced with their method for the publication of wills. Notwithstanding this, the jurisdiction of county courts continued as to wills, and was acknowledged to be h. matter riiixti fori; but afterwards, in the time of Richard the second, the clergy got the right to publish the law of William the conqueror, and confirm it, that no matters of ecclesiastical cognizance should íae transacted in the county courts. Thenceforward the clergy, uiider the constructions of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, exercised the whole jurisdiction over wills.

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Related

Stewart v. Morris
231 S.W.2d 70 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1950)
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Bluebook (online)
20 Ky. 422, 4 T.B. Mon. 422, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paynes-will-kyctapp-1827.