Platt's Exr. v. Locke

129 S.W. 329, 139 Ky. 72, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 17, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 129 S.W. 329 (Platt's Exr. v. Locke) 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
Platt's Exr. v. Locke, 129 S.W. 329, 139 Ky. 72, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 10 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion op trie Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

The questions arising upon this record come up in a suit to settle the estate of M. M. Green, who died in 1908. He was the husband of Millicent P. Green, who died in June, 1905. Neither of them left any children. Mrs. Green in her will, after providing for the payment of her debts, said: “I give all the remainder of my estate of whatever kind, real or personal, including whatever interest I may have in paid up in surance policies on the life of my husband to my husband, the said M. M. Green, with full power to sell, convey, invest and use for his support and comfort in such manner as he may choose, and that no accounting be required of him, and that no inventory or appraisement shall be made of my estate. I ask that my husband make a will disposing of any part of my estate that may be left after the death of my husband and the payment of his just debts .and funeral expenses in accordance with the suggestions which I have written and directed to him and which he fully understands.” M. M. Green directed that all of his estate, real and personal, of whatever nature, including a policy of insurance on his life in the New England Mutual Life Insurance Company and a policy on his life in the Equitable Life Insurance Company “on both of which policies all premiums are paid and which were given to me by the will of my deceased wife M. P. Green, ’ ’ should be convert ed into money as soon after his death as possible, without prejudicing its value. After making pro[75]*75visions for the payment of certain specific legacies, he gave the remainder of his estate to the nephews and nieces of his wife, declaring that: “The object of this will is to divide shch portion of the estate left me. by my deceased wife as may remain at my death in accordance with her wishes, orally expressed bnt no Ter written. It is not to cover any other property of which' I may be possessed. ’ ’ The estate left by Mr. Green consisted of real estate which sold for some $15,000, the two insurance policies mentioned in the will amounting to some $3,000, and $1,225 in money.

It is the contention of the heirs at law of M. M. Green that his object in writing the will was to give to the heirs of his wife only that part of his estate which he derived from her, and that the only part of the estate that came from his wife was the real estate, and therefore, as he died intestate as to the other estate he owned, it passed to them under the law of descent and distribution. It is conceded that the real eslate was owned by his wife and devised to him by her will, and so no question is made that the proceeds of il passed under his will to the legatees therein named. So that the controversy between the parties to this litigation grows out of the fact that his heirs a I law claim that they are entitled to the proceeds of the insurance policies and the money owned by Mr. Green at his death, while the legatees insist that the insurance policies as well as the money came to Mr. Green from his wife and therefore passed to them under his will. The chancellor held that the legatees were entitled to the money realized from the insurance policies, but that the money on hand was not disposed of by the will and descended to his heirs at law; and in this conclusion we concur.'

[76]*76As it is manifest from the will of M. M. Green that he only intended to give to the legatees therein named such property as he had received from or through his wife, it is insisted hy counsel for-his heirs at law that, although the will recites that the insurance policies were given to him hy the will of his deceased wife, this was a mistake of fact upon his part, as in truth these policies did not belong to his wife, and therefore she could not have given them to him hy her will. We do not think it necessary to make any extended analysis of the argument of counsel for the heirs at law in support of this conclusion or the facts upon which it rests. Although there is some ground for the assertion that in declaring in hip will that these policies were given to him by his wife, the testator was in fact mistaken, and it may be conceded that, looking at the matter from a strictly legal standpoint, Mrs. Green at her death did not technically have in these policies any interest that could pass hy her will to her husband. It is yet manifest from a consideration of the language used in each of the wills that Mrs. Green as well as M. M. Green recognized the fact that these policies were owned hy Mrs. Green, and that she gave them by her will to her husband. It thus appears there was some understanding between the parties hy which the ownership of these policies was recognized to he in Mrs. Green, and that, if Mr. Green died without disposing of them, they should he given hy him to her kindred. The plainly expressed intention of M. M. Green in respect to the disposition of these .policies is entitled to more weight than the circumstance that, viewed from a legal standpoint, they did not in fact come to him from his wife. -He declares in his will that these policies were given to him by the will of his wife,’ and this [77]*77declaration upon his part is under the facts of this' case entitled to controlling weight. The further expression in his will that he disposed of his estate in accordance with the wishes of his wife, orally expressed hut never written, indicates very clearly that he and his wife had a distinct understanding with reference to these policies, and that the proceeds of them, if not disposed of by Mr. Green, were to go to his wife’s relatives. To say in the face of these solemn declarations of the testator that these policies were not disposed of by his will would be to ignore his plainly expressed intention.

In reference to the money on hand when Mr. Green died, the argument is made by counsel for the legatees that, when Mrs. Green died, she left some $800 in cash, and that they are at least entitled to the amount that is shown by the evidence to have come into the possession of Mr. Green under the will of his wife. There is evidence that Mrs. Green at her death did leave several hundred dollars that passed to her husband under her will, but there is no evidence that any part of this money was on hand when Mr.' Green died, or, to put it in another way, it is as fair and reasonable to assume that Mr. Green before his death had used or disposed of the cash left to him by his wife, as to assume that he retained or preserved it. The will of Mrs. Green only imposed upon her husband the obligation of disposing according to the agreement between them of such estate given to him by her as he might have at his death. The will provided that he had full power to sell, use, or dispose of in such manner as he pleased any part or all of the estate devised to him by his wife; the only direction as to its disposition by him being that he should make a will disposing of any part of her es[78]*78tate that might be left at his death. It was therefore incumbent upon the legatees to show not only what property came to Mr. Green from his wife, but also to show what part of this property was on hand at his death. They do show that there came into his hands some $800, but they fail to show that any part of this fund was on hand at his death. The fact that he had $1,225 does not prove that any part of this came to him from his wife. For aught the record shows, he may have spent all that his wife gave him, and have saved after her death out of his own industry and means the money on hand when he died.

Corinthia G. Platt, a sister of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 329, 139 Ky. 72, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platts-exr-v-locke-kyctapp-1910.