Sandford's Administrator v. Sandford

20 S.W.2d 83, 230 Ky. 429, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 7, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 83 (Sandford's Administrator v. Sandford) 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
Sandford's Administrator v. Sandford, 20 S.W.2d 83, 230 Ky. 429, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 113 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

*431 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming in part and reversing in part.

Charles H. Sandford died testate and a resident of Shelby county. Before his death he executed his holographic will, and later he executed in the same way a codicil thereto. This equity action was brought by his administrator with the will annexed, and also as trustee under his will, against his devisees and heirs to obtain a judicial construction of the will and codicil and directions as to how plaintiff should proceed in the administration of the estate. The involved documents are much confused in their language and, at least in part, somewhat indefinite and obscure and present questions for solution of more or less difficulty. The learned trial judge concluded that, for the reasons stated, all of the devises and bequests contained in both papers were void for uncertainty, except the devise of a one-half interest in a tract of land in Shelby county to R. H. Sandford, the owner of the other half interest, for and during the life of the devisee; but the judgment confined that clause to only a portion of the entire jointly owned farm, which portion is known and was referred to in the will as “Caudill Bros.” farm. From that judgment these appeals are prosecuted.

For a proper understanding of the questions presented it will be necessary at the expense of some space to insert in full both the will and the codicil, the first of which says:

“I Charles H. Sandford now of Shelby Co. Ky. make this my last will and testament hereby revoking all other wills made by me heretofore. I direct that the Peoples Bank & Trust Co. of Shelbyville, Ky., be appointed Trustee under this will of all my property real, personal & mixed; the said Trustee to hold my estate as follows: except the farm which R. Hunter Sanford & I own jointly in Shelby Co. the farm being the land hot from Caudill Bros. & on which Hunter and I now reside, the said Trustee will pay to Mrs. Katherine Pendleton, my aunt now of Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio such sum as may be necessary to keep her in comfort as long as she lives, will pay to my uncles Hunte & Ballard Smith now of Jefferson Co. Ky. such sums as may be necessary to keep them in comfort during their lives; and will assist the two sons of Ballard — A. O. and Halla — in *432 any legitimate business which may be necessary for their support. I have planned to see that L. M. Sanford 3rd the son of my deceased brother L. M. Sanford is educated & graduated at the Boston School of Technology and have him & his mother consent to use any and all of the Texas property of which he owns an undivided 1/9 interest, to this end; if this property be not sufficient for the purpose the Trustee is authorized to use such a part of my estate as may be necessary for him to finish this school, provided however, that if the said L. M. S. Ill 3rd shows no disposition to keep up with his studies then my said Trustee is authorized to stop him from school & let him engage in some work or business, I shall direct that my Trustee advise with Judge Charles Gr. Marshall on the subject before taking any final action. My trustee is authorized and directed to use enough of my estate to assist any of my nephews & nieces to secure a collegiate education if the parents of either are unable to give them a college education.
“My Trustee is authorized and directed to assist any of my brothers and sisters & any of my nephews and nieces should any of them need financial assistance by reason of ill health, financial troubles or for any cause whatever they are in need of assistance.
“As to my undivided % interest in the farm hereinbefore mentioned on which Hunter Sanford & I live I will & devise my whole interest in said farm to Hunter Sanford for & during Ms life & at his death to pass to my said Trustee the Peoples Bank & Trust Co. of Shelbyville and upon the terms herein stated, that is the said Trustee is to take charge & control of it as the rest of my estate is directed and controlled by the said Trustee.
“After the death of Hunter Sanford the said Trustee may sell my interest in said farm and reinvest the proceeds in other good real estate or other property which may be approved by the Judge of the Shelby Circuit Court. It is the intention of this will for my Trustee & its successors to hold my estate in trust for the benefit of my brothers & sisters my nephews & nieces & their heirs so long as any of them are in existence & in the event the family as stated should become extinct then my estate is to be held in trust for the benefit & education of as many *433 orphans of the State of Ky. as the income thereof will support & educate.”

The codicil is in these words:

“I, Chas. H. Sanford now of Shelby Co. Ky. having written a will recently in which I directed a number of other provisions regarding the disposition of my property, that my brother R. H. Sanford take and hold the farm in Shelby County which we own jointly for and during his life, now hereby desire it to be understood as my intention and will that if this former will of mine heretofore referred to should by any chance be held to be unenforceable or be set aside by order of court, my brother R. H. Sanford is hereby given and bequeathed for and during his life my entire undivided interest in said farm & that a sufficient amount of my estate be used to pay one half of the entire indebtedness on said farm at the time of my death. This Nov. 8th, 1922.”

. We will first dispose of the question as to the particular land that the testator intended to be covered by the devise to his brother, R. H. (Hunter) Sanford. As stated, the trial court held that it extended only to that portion of the farm known as the “Caudill Bros.” tract, containing about 320 acres of the entire farm, consisting of something like 375 acres. The residence theretofore occupied by testator and his brother was located upon the Caudill Bros, tract, but the various parcels composing the entire farm were contiguous and had theretofore been operated by the owners as one entire .farm. In the original will creating the trusts, to be hereinafter discussed, in an exception therefrom for the life of R. H. Sanford, the testator said: “Except the farm which R. Hunter Sanford & I own jointly in Shelby Co. the farm being the land bought from Caudill Bros. & on which Hunter and I now reside. ’ ’ Further along in his will, and when disposing of his half interest in the farm, he refers to it as “my undivided half interest in the farm herein-before mentioned,” which he devised to his brother for his natural life, and after which it was to become a part of the trust estate.

The rule is universal that in the interpretation of wills the intention of the testator is the determinative fact influencing the courts, and his intention is to be gathered from the language he employed in his will from its beginning to its end. Those rules are so fundamental as *434

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 83, 230 Ky. 429, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandfords-administrator-v-sandford-kyctapphigh-1929.