Robbins v. Robbins

55 S.W.2d 31, 246 Ky. 411, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 768
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 31 (Robbins v. Robbins) 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
Robbins v. Robbins, 55 S.W.2d 31, 246 Ky. 411, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 768 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Carl C. Robbins, on and prior to May 10, 1929, owned and operated a printing establishment in Winchester, Ky., from which he, as editor and publisher, issued a newspaper known as the Winchester Sun. He *412 had so conducted it that he had established not only a profitable paper, but also a valuable good will. On the afternoon of the day mentioned he dropped dead without having executed a will, leaving as his only heir at law his mother, the appellant and plaintiff below, Kate Robbins, and who at that time, and for many years prior thereto resided on a farm in Bourbon county which belonged to her deceased husband, D. L. Robbins. They had seven children, four boys and three girls, but after Carl’s death the children were equally divided as to sex. Some of the children, including a maiden daughter, Mabel Robbins, lived with plaintiff at the time on the Robbins farm in Bourbon county. She managed it with the assistance of the advice of her brother, James Robbins, who lived at Lexington, Ky., and was a prosperous business man.

Mabel Robbins had also creditably filled for a considerable time the position of superintendent of public instruction in Bourbon county. Likewise she had taught school, the last time being in the State of New Jersey, after which she held a position in the government at Washington. While she was serving as superintendent, she did work in the county court clerk’s office of Bourbon county. Her brother James Robbins, as we have said, was a successful and prosperous business man, and both of them, as well as the other members of. the Robbins family, including plaintiff, were and are considerably above the average in intelligence, and that is especially true with reference to the daughter Mabel and the son James.

Carl Robbins left a widow with no children, and his printing outfit constituted the major part of his personal property, it being valued at about $30,000, if it could be continued as a going concern; but to sell it in the manner as would most likely have to be done by his administrator in winding up his estate it ^was clear to everyone interested, pecuniarily or otherwise, that it would be greatly sacrificed, and which fact was not only proven in the case, but also known to. be true from observation and experience.

The law firm of Jouett & Metcalf, with offices in Winchester, had long been the advisors of Carl Robbins in all legal matters, and, while both of them were his personal friends, Mr. Jouett of that firm was closely *413 attached to him as a personal friend and frequent associate. He was also acquainted and friendly with James Bobbins, as well as the appellee and one of defendants below, Mrs. Pearl Bobbins, widow of Carl. Some year or more prior to the death of Carl Bobbins he had consulted with Mr. Jouett about incorporating his plant, and had progressed so far as to execute articles of incorporation, but the scheme was never carried out by transferring the property to the corporation or the operation of the plant by it; nor had any stock been issued to any one. In other words, the scheme was at least temporarily suspended.

In March, 1929, circumstances developed requiring Carl Bobbins to move his plant out of the building that he had theretofore occupied, and he conceived the idea of buying it from its owner, and he consulted with Mr. Jouett-about that proposition. The latter advised him that any amount paid for the building above $25,000 would be excessive, but that the investment of that amount in the building would, perhaps, be justifiable. However, without further consulting Mr. Jouett, and in view of the fact of the cost of moving (to say nothing about the trouble of it), he finally agreed to and did take the property at the price of $27,500, $10,000 of which was paid in cash with a lien on it to secure the balance of $17,500; but the $10,000 paid was borrowed from a Winchester bank, and which in effect was the purchase of the plant entirely on credit. At the death of Carl less than two months thereafter that situation existed.

During the period of the negotiations and consultations about the purchase of the real estate in which the plant was located (the last time being on the very day of Carl’s death, and some two hours prior thereto), he revealed to Mr. Jouett, not only his desire to complete-the corporation, but also to put into it the purchased real estate in which his business plant was operated and which he had purchased for that purpose for the consideration stated. He, with the assistance of his wife, so far as this record shows, had accumulated every penny of property they possessed. He had not demanded or in any manner obtained his one-seventh interest in his father’s farm, but had left it in possession of his mother, who occupied the residence *414 thereon, and it was used and employed for her benefit and those of her children who resided with her.

On the very evening of Carl’s death, James Robbins consulted with Mr. Jouett about the continued operation of the plant and the publication of the paper, and either that day or the next day (Saturday) Mr. Jouett informed him that arrangements had been made for that week’s pay roll, and that at least for a temporary period the paper would be issued, except on the following Monday. Carl was buried on Sunday, and on the next day James Robbins again appeared for consultation about the situation and the best thing to be done to- preserve the estate, to prevent is sacrifice, and other steps looking to the handling of it in such a manner as would redound to the best interest of those upon whom the law of descent and distribution cast it. Mr. Jouett testified, and we are convinced that it is true, that James Robbins expressed on that or a later occasion, not only a desire to form or complete the corporation and continue the operation of the plant and the publication of the paper, but also to do it in the manner and as intended by his deceased brother.

In his conversations it was also stated by him that he did not believe that any part of the purchase price of the building should be defrayed out of the personal property of Carl Robbins, but that it should be borne by the real estate for the acquisition of which it had been created, and all of which had been very recently done by his deceased brother. On the next day, the 14th of May, he appeared in the office of the attorneys, and stated that whatever he did would be satisfactory to his mother, since he had been advising her all along in her affairs, and, after considerable additional discussion, an agreement was drafted whereby the corporation scheme might be carried out and the stock divided equally between the mother, Kate, and the widow, Pearl Robbins, with an agreed holding of enough shares in others to constitute the corporation with the necessary directors. It was stipulated therein that neither of the obligations for the purchase price should be paid out of the personal estate of Carl Robbins, but that it should be borne by the purchased real estate. But there was no provision in that agreement at that time for the real estate to be put into the corporation whereby either of those amounts would become its debt.

*415

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 31, 246 Ky. 411, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-robbins-kyctapphigh-1932.