Skiles v. Bowling Green Trust Co.

171 S.W.2d 235, 294 Ky. 211, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 410
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 7, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 235 (Skiles v. Bowling Green Trust Co.) 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
Skiles v. Bowling Green Trust Co., 171 S.W.2d 235, 294 Ky. 211, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 410 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Tilpord

Affirming.

The seventh clause of the will of C. U. McElroy who died in June, 1928, is as follows:

“I give and devise to my wife, Litie T. McElroy, my farm in Warren County, Kentucky, known for more than an hundred years as ‘Rich Pond Grove’ situated about ten miles south of Bowling Green, and containing about six hundred acres, more or less, for and during her natural life and subject to my wife’s life estate therein. I do hereby vest the title to said farm in the Bowling Green Trust Company of Bowling Green, Kentucky, in trust for the following purpose and uses. After the death of my wife said Trust Company will take charge of said farm and will sell same at such time and upon such terms as will yield the best price. After payment of *213 expenses of sale said Trust Company will divide the net proceeds into seven equal parts and will pay over 1/7 of said proceeds to the children of my uncle, J. W. Skiles; 1/7 to the children of my aunt, Martha J. Flinn; 1/7 to the children of my aunt, Lou Ann McElroy; 1/7 to the children of my aunt, Ellen McElroy; 1/7 to the children of my aunt, Mary Murrell; 1/7 to the child of my aunt, Bell C. Howe; and 1/7 to the aforesaid four children of my brother, G. W. McElroy. Said farm originally belonged to my grandfather, W. H. Skiles, and became mine under the will of my uncle, H. H. Skiles. Now it is my purpose and desire that- the proceeds of said farm shall go back to the lineal descendants of my grandfather,. W. H. Skiles. All of his children are dead, but each of these named above left children, and it is my intention that the children of next of kin of each of «said children of my grandfather shall have one-seventh of the proceeds of said farm to be divided between them. As my mother-only left two children, to-wit: My brother, G. W. McElroy and myself and as he is dead leaving the above named four children they will take the one-seventh of the proceeds of said farm as the representatives of our mother just as the children or grandchildren of my said uncle and aunts above named will take 1/7 of the proceeds of said farm.
“I hereby vest in said Trust Company the power to sell and convey the title to said farm after the death of my wife, and will distribute the proceeds as above directed. But in the sale of said farm it shall be made upon the condition that the grave yard in the corner of the garden where my grandfather .and grandmother and my own mother and others of my family are buried shall never be disturbed or desecrated or molested and when said Trust Company sells said farm it shall insert in its deed of conveyance a covenant that said grave yard shall never be disturbed or desecrated and such covenant ‘shall run with the land’.”

The sole question presented by this appeal is whether the takers under the clause quoted are those persons who composed the designated classes on the date of the testator’s death or the individuals who composed *214 those classes on January 13, 1941, the date of the death of testator’s widow.

Prior to Mrs. McElroy’s death several- of the numerous lineal descendants of W. IT. Skiles, who were living at testator’s death, had died leaving next of kin or spouses not within the class of lineal descendants. Some of the lineal descendants living at testator’s death sold what they considered to be their vested interests in the property, and the present action was instituted by the executor to obtain a construction of the will and a determination of the rights of the respective claimants. The pertinent portions of the Chancellor’s decree are as follows :

“1. One-seventh of the net proceeds of the sale of said farm shall go to the lineal descendants of J. W. Skiles’ descendants per stirpes; one-seventh to the lineal descendants of Martha J. Flynn per stirpes; one-seventh to the lineal descendants of Lou Ami McElroy per stirpes; one-seventh to the lineal descendants of Mary Murrell per stirpes; one-seventh to the lineal descendants of Ellen McElroy per stirpes; one-seventh to the lineal descendants of Bell C. Rowe per stirpes; and one-seventh to the lineal descendants of Q-. W. McElroy per stirpes.
“2. The Court further adjudges that those persons entitled to share in such distribution are the lineal descendants of the seven persons named above who were living at the termination of the life estate of Litie T. McElroy on May 13, 1941.
“3. The Court is further of the opinion and so adjudges that by the terms of said will there was a conversion of said farm and land and that the' distributees under said will must take and share in said estate as personal property; that as personalty, the distributive share of any distributee who may have died, passed as personalty, and its distribution shall be governed by the law of the State of such decedent’s residence at the time of his death.”

Only so much of the decree as determines the class of takers to consist of the lineal descendants living at the termination of the life estate is complained of, all parties having agreed that the terms of the will worked a conversion of the farm into personalty.

*215 With, the exception of the bequests contained in the fourth and fifth clauses to the four children of testator’s deceased brother, Gr. W. McElroy, who compose the seventh group of takers under the seventh clause, the will contains little to indicate that the testator was concerned with the welfare of any individual who might take under the seventh clause, or that he was actuated by any motive Other than that therein manifested, namely, in veneration of or gratitude to an ancestor, to restore, by bequeathing to those who might represent him, after testator and his wife had finished with it, a benefit received.. We think that in composing the seventh clause the composer was group minded, to borrow a term from the American Law Institute’s Be-statement of the Law of Property (Yol. 3 “Future Interests”), and that all factors considered, the case falls within the rule expressed in the concluding paragraph of our opinion in Ford v. Jones, 223 Ky. 327, 3 S. W. (2d) 781, 786, in the following language:

“Where, under the provisions of a will, a gift to a class is postponed until after the termination of a preceding estate, as a rule, those members of the class, and those only, take who are in existence when such preceding estate terminates, and the time for distribution comes. The number of pieces into which the pie shall be cut and the parties to whom they shall be passed is determined by those of the class present when the time for cutting comes. ’ ’

We are fully aware that the majority of the appellate courts of this country, influenced by the maxim that the law favors • the vesting of estates at the earliest possible moment, have ruled that in the absence of a specifically manifested intention to the contrary, the time for the ascertainment of members of a class to whom an immediate gift is made is the date of the testator’s death, not only where the gift is presently effective, both in right and possession, but also where the gift is subject to postponed distribution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 235, 294 Ky. 211, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skiles-v-bowling-green-trust-co-kyctapphigh-1943.