Shoemaker's Ex'r v. Consorti

205 S.W.2d 697, 305 Ky. 866, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 927
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 7, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 205 S.W.2d 697 (Shoemaker's Ex'r v. Consorti) 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
Shoemaker's Ex'r v. Consorti, 205 S.W.2d 697, 305 Ky. 866, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 927 (Ky. 1947).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Siler

Never sing.

This case involves two appeals, but it appears to be necessary to treat only one, in view of the manner of onr final disposition.

In the beginning, this was a petition seeking a settlement of the estate of Chris C. Shoemaker, deceased, bnt a subsequent pleading made it a declaratory judgment action seeking a judicial interpretation of Shoemaker’s will.

Merrill Shoemaker and Willard Bartoe, nephews of the decedent and also beneficiaries under his will, are the principal appellants, while Silvio Consorti and Methodist Church of Wellston, Ohio, beneficiaries under the same will, are opposed to these two nephews. Both Consorti and the Wellston Church will be considered as if they were joint appellees for the purpose of this appeal.

The chancellor having interpreted the will in a manner favorable to Consorti and the Wellston Church but in a manner unfavorable to the two nephews and others of their group, the latter have appealed from the chancellor’s judgment and now seek its reversal "on the ground that it is contrary to the preponderance of all the evidence, that is to say contrary not only to the burden of the testimony of human witnesses bearing on the testator’s intention but also to that of the testimony of the will itself speaking forth as a living document.

The Shoemaker will, unwitnessed and holographic, was written on two pages of letter size paper and about one month before the testator’s death. We now give a copy of the verbatim contents of the two pages of this will, showing likewise approximate spacing of words and lines therein.

*868 THE SHOEMAKER WILL

(First page)

“Louisville, Ky.

April 26th. 1944

My last Will and Statement.

All obligations shall be paid in full.

1.000 Life Insurance with Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.

Mrs. Williard Bartoe. Sister

99 Monroe St. Nelsonville Ohio.

$3.000

Neal Shoemaker, Brother

815 Brener St. Saginaw Mich.

Thomas Shoemaker. Nephew.

Wellston Ohio.

3-$1.000 Government Bonds.

Merrill Shoemaker. Nephew.

Springfield. Ohio,

15—$1.000 Government Bonds.

Methodist Church,

$1.000,

Trinity Temple Methodist Church.

Louisville Ky.

$2,000.

(Second page)

Williard Bartoe Hulmesville; Pa.

$15. 1000 Government Bonds.

Silvio Consorti Louisville Ky.

$3,000, and all household goods and furnishings, and ward robe.

To remaining Nephews and Nieces $2.00,00 each.

$5.00.00 Kosair Childrens Hospital

$5,00,00 Deaconess. Hospital

If there is any other money, lift or Stocks, they shall be devided among Nephews and Nieces.

I desire a very simple funeral,

*869 Lead Kindly Light, Abide With Me, hymns, Twenty Third Psalm.

Bury me Wellston, Ohio, on family lot beside my Mother, who’es prayers, have been answered and I’m sure her children are at rest with her, with the Master.

Attorney.

Lewis Bradbury.

C. C. Shoemaker. Louisville, Ky. Executor.”

Now Chris C. Shoemaker, a 63 year old bachelor at the time of his death, was born and partly reared in Wellston, Ohio, but for 25 years preceding his death he had lived in Louisville, where he had followed the restaurant business. Through his individual thrift and industry, he had succeeded in accumulating an estate of about $71,000, mostly in cash and government bonds. He seems to have operated on a pay-as-you-go plan and accordingly owed practically nothing when he died. His life insurance amounted to $1000 and it was payable to his estate. He was survived by an only sister, Mrs. Willard Bartoe, Sr., an elderly woman living in Ohio, also by an only brother, Neal Shoemaker, an elderly citizen of Michigan, also by nephew Willard Bar-toe, Jr., a son of the only sister, also by nephew Merrill Shoemaker, a son of the only brother, also by nephew Thomas Shoemaker, mentioned specifically in the will, also by a number of other nephews and nieces not mentioned specifically in the will. All relatives lived in distant localities. During a period of about 15 years preceding death, Shoemaker had lived in an apartment with Silvio Consorti, a 70 year old bachelor, who is a native of Italy and who was both employee and close friend of Shoemaker. While the apartment seems to have been Consorti’s, yet its furnishings appear to have been Shoemaker’s. Shoemaker was a religious man, a member of Trinity Temple Methodist Church of Louisville, now one of the appellants, which, was named as a beneficiary under the will and which was a church where Shoemaker sang in the choir and where he made somewhat substantial and regular contributions. Shoemaker greatly revered the memory of his mother and the quality of her religion. Her church membership was in the Methodist Church of Wellston, Ohio, and she was *870 buried in that community, but not in any church cemetery.

Appellants, consisting of testator’s only sister, Mrs. Bartoe, and of his nephews, Merrill Shoemaker and Willard Bartoe, and of his membership church, Trinity Temple Methodist Church of Louisville, all want the will construed so as to give each the amount specified under the individual name rather than the amount specified ovet the name. Adherence to their theory of construction would add $2,000 to Mrs. Bartoe’s part, $12,-000 to Merrill’s part, $13,000 to Willard’s part, $1,000 to Trinity Temple’s part. The chancellor did not adopt that theory.

Appellees, consisting of the Wellston Church and Consorti, both want the will construed so as to give each the amount specified over the individual name rather than the amount specified wider the name. But it should be added that Consorti wants this construction to also include the bequests under his name. In other words, Consorti wants a general ovet construction followed, but he also wants both the over and the under constructions followed as to himself in view of the peculiar characteristics of the will as it reaches his own name. Adherence to their theory of construction adds $14,000 to the Wellston Church’s part and $12,000 to Consorti’s part. The chancellor adopted this theory.

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W.2d 697, 305 Ky. 866, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoemakers-exr-v-consorti-kyctapphigh-1947.