Sanders v. Adams

128 S.W.2d 223, 278 Ky. 24, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 386
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 25, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 223 (Sanders v. Adams) 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
Sanders v. Adams, 128 S.W.2d 223, 278 Ky. 24, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 386 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This appeal involves the construction of paragraph seven of the duly probated will of L. R. Schooler, who died in 1887 a resident of Garrard county, Kentucky, when same is considered in connection with the will of his daughter (one of his devisees), Martha (Mattie) Schooler Route, by which she attempted to will the property devised her, with limitation over, by her father to the appellants, her children by legal adoption.

Testator by his will devised his home farm in Garrard county of a hundred and seven acres to his wife for life, together with certain personal property. He also bequeathed her the interest upon some eighteen shares of bank stock, with certain limitations named, which are not here material.

*25 By the second paragraph of his will, he provided that upon the death of his wife, his two daughters, Maggie and Lizzie Adams, were each to receive one-half of the 107 acres home farm for their special use and benefit, with the limitation that upon the death of each, their respective one-half interest in the land given them should go to the children of each respectively.

Paragraph five of the will provided that each of testator’s two daughters, Maggie and Lizzie Adams, should (after the death of his wife) have the interest on eight shares of the bank stock for their separate use and benefit and that upon their respective deaths, the stock should go to the children of each.

By the seventh paragraph of his will, with the construction of which we are here mainly concerned, the testator devised to a third daughter, Martha (Mattie) E. Schooler, his “Collier farm” of two tracts, containing respectively some eighty-seven acres and sixteen acres, more or less, of “flat'woods land” for her special use and benefit, with the limitation that “if Martha should have children, (the lands are) to go to them after her death” and “if Martha should die without children, then the lands so devised to Mattie shall he equally divided between my daughters, Maggie Adams and Lizzie Adams, trusteed to them as their lands were as above mentioned.” Also by this seventh paragraph he devised his daughter Martha, “the interest on two shares of my bank stock * * * after the death of my wife * * * in the same manner that the bank stock is devised to my two daughters, Maggie Adams and Lizzie Adams, in this will.”

It further appears that this daughter and devisee of the testator, Martha E. Schooler, did, some years afterwards, marry one J. B. Route and that, having no children born to them as the issue of their marriage, they on March 21, 1896, by a proceeding duly had, adopted the appellant, Dora Route Sanders, whose name at the time of adoption was Dora Elrod, and in May, 1897, also duly adopted the appellant, James Route, whose name at the time of his adoption was James Elrod.

Further it appears that on March 14, 1916, the adoptive mother, Martha Route, her husband having predeceased her and her adopted daughter, Dora Route, having married one Henry Sanders, executed her last *26 will, oy which she devised her lands (consisting of the sixteen and eighty-seven acre tracts willed her upon the limitation stated by her father, L. R. Schooler) to her adopted children, James Route and Dora Route Sanders, to be equally divided between them. o .

This will was upon her death duly probated as her last will in the Garrard county court.

Following the probate of the will, the appellees, Maggie and Lizzie Adams, filed this suit in equity (under the provisions of Section 11, Kentucky Statutes) in the Garrard circuit court on November 12, 1937, against Dora Sanders, her husband, Henry .Sanders, and James Route.

The petition alleged that the named defendants were casting a cloud upon the title of plaintiffs in the lands in controversy and asked that they be adjudged to be the owners of the lands and the holders of the fee simple title thereto.

The petition set out further that the plaintiffs, Maggie and Lizzie Adams, are the daughters and devisees of L. R. Schooler, deceased, who made his last will, which was duly probated, in June, 1887, and which was still in full force and effect; that the said testator had another daughter, Martha E. Schooler, to whom, by his will, he gave the two tracts of land referred to in the petition for and during* her natural life and the interest on the two shares of bank stock; that the will devising Martha the lands here involved further provided that “if Martha should have children, (the lauds are) to go to them after her death” and “if Martha should die without children, then the lands so devised to Mattie shall be equally divided between my daughters, Maggie Adams, and Lizzie Adams; ’ ’ that their sister, Martha Schooler, married J. B. Route; that she never had any children and her husband died before she did.

The defendants (here appellants), Dora Sanders, her husband, Henry Sanders, and James Route, answered, admitting that their adoptive mother, ‘Martha E. Schooler Route, never had any natural children, but that she and her husband had legally adopted the two appellants, Dora Sanders and James Route, as their children, and set out that their adoptive mother, Martha Route, had left a will, which was duly probated follow *27 ing her death in 1937, by the provisions of which she devised the land in question, absolutely and equally, to the appellants, her adopted children.

Further they claim that by reason of their legal adoption by their adoptive mother, under the provisions of Section 2071, Kentucky Statutes, they thereby took the legal status of children born to the said Martha Schooler Route and were given, by their adoption, in law and in fact, the same rights as if they had been born the natural children of their said adoptive mother and father, and were entitled to take the property devised them by their mother, as her children within the meaning of the limitation of paragraph 7 of the School-er will.

Further they pleaded that the adoption law, Section 2071, Kentucky Statutes, was the same as was in effect at the time L. R. Schooler executed his will and that the will of L. R. Schooler was made in view of and he was legally charged with knowledge of this said general statute law of the state, and in their answer they prayed that the court adjudge them to have such status and rights given them under the provisions of the said statute and the will of their mother, as having died, leaving ‘1 children ’ ’ — to whom’ it should go.

A general demurrer was filed by the plaintiffs to the answer and the cause being submitted thereon, the court sustained the demurrer. Whereupon, the defendants failing and refusing to plead further, the court adjudged the two tracts of land and the two shares of bank stock to belong to the plaintiffs and, further, that the appellants, the two adopted children of Martha School-er Route, though legally adopted, were not the children of Martha Schooler Route in the meaning, purpose and. intention of the will of L. R. Schooler.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 223, 278 Ky. 24, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-adams-kyctapphigh-1939.