Smiley v. Johnston

124 P.2d 482, 155 Kan. 272, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 11, 1942
DocketNo. 35,461
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 P.2d 482 (Smiley v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smiley v. Johnston, 124 P.2d 482, 155 Kan. 272, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 90 (kan 1942).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court affirming a judgment of the probate court on a final accounting of a trustee which directed her to deliver a certain trust fund to the administrator of the estate of the deceased cestui que trust.

The facts which gave rise to the legal controversy, although undisputed, will require to be stated at some length. The late Melville C. Aye died testate in Manhattan, Kan., in 1928. In 1913 and prior thereto and for sometime thereafter he had been a resident citizen of Ohio. He had a wife, a daughter named Dale Aye Smiley, and an infant grandson named James Aye Barker, son of his daughter Gertrude, Mrs. Harry D. Barker, who had died a short time previously.

Melville C. Aye was a man of means; among his possessions were nearly four thousand acres of land in the counties of Riley, Geary, and Wabaunsee, in Kansas. In April, 1913, when his grandson James Aye Barker was less than five months old, Melville C. Aye made his will, some of the terms of which will require critical attention, but first it will serve our convenience to summarize all its terms thus:

First. The testator gave all his personal property to his daughter Dale Aye Smiley, likewise all his real property except as otherwise specifically devised, but charged her with the payments of all his debts, costs of administering his estate and the expense of a suitable monument for his grave.

Second. Subject to other provisions of the will and particularly of item four, the testator devised a life estate in some 1,900 acres of land in Riley and Geary counties to his grandson, James Aye Barker, and devised the remainder estate therein and its accumulations to the heirs of the body of James in fee simple, with the pro[274]*274viso that if he died without such heirs, then all of said real estate was to devolve on Dale Aye Smiley, if living, and if not then living to the heirs of her body in fee simple.

Third.. Subject to the provisions of item five, the'testator devised to Dale Aye Smiley a life estate in some 1,820 acres of land in Wabaunsee and Geary counties, and devised the remainder estate therein to the heirs of her body, in fee simple, but provided that if vhe died without such heirs, then all of said real estate was to devolve on James Aye Barker, if living, but if not then living, to the heirs of his body living or born thereafter, in fee simple.

Fourth. The testator appointed Dale Aye Smiley as trustee to take charge of all the lands described in item two of the will and to care for, operate, farm, and manage them until James Aye Barker reached his majority. Out of the gross income of the lands devised to the grandson, Dale Aye Smiley was to retain five percent of the gross annual income as her compensation. (A charge of one-half the net income of the lands devised in item two to James Aye Barker, and a similar charge of one-half the net income of the lands devised in item three to Dale Aye Smiley were made for the benefit of the testator’s wife, mother of Dale Aye Smiley and grandmother of James Aye Barker, but as she died before the testator that feature of the will may be ignored.)

The fourth item of the will also provided that the net income of the lands devised to the grandson should be applied, as far as necessary in the judgment of Dale Aye Smiley, to the support and education of James Aye Barker until he attained the age of twenty-one years; and any excess of such income not so required for the grandson’s maintenance, support and education should be carefully invested and reinvested by Dale Aye Smiley, according to her best judgment, in real-estate mortgage loans, or in farm lands to which she should take title as trustee for James Aye Barker, until he arrived at the age of thirty years, at which time the trust should be terminated and any lands so purchased by Dale Smiley, together with the fund itself, should be conveyed to James Aye Barker, his heirs and assigns in fee simple absolute. Upon James’s arrival at the age of thirty, Dale Aye Smiley “shall pay and turn over to him any and all sums and securities out of said trust funds remaining in her hands.” From the time James Aye Barker would- arrive at twenty-one years until he became thirty years of age, Dale Aye Smiley was to continue as trustee of all funds and accumulations [275]*275from the lands devised to James, whether personal or real estate, or to which she might have title when he arrives at the age of twenty-one years. She was to continue to act as trustee thereof as theretofore, but with this discretion vested in her—that from time to time she could turn over and convey to James “any part or all of either the income or principal or both in her hands as such trustee.” This paragraph of the will also authorized Dale Aye Smiley, at her discretion, to pay $50 per month out of the trust funds in her hands to the testator’s son-in-law, Harry D. Barker, father of James Aye Barker, if he remained a single man and should become incapacitated before James Aye Barker attained the age of thirty years.

Fifth. This item provided that the discretion vested in Dale Aye Smiley in the latter part of item four to turn over and convey to James Aye Barker' (after he attained his majority) any part or all of the income or principal or both arising or accumulating from the lands devised by item two, should not be vested in any person who might succeed her as “trustee of the trust in item four created.”

Sixth. This provision is of no present importance.

Seventh. This paragraph made provision for another trustee in the event of the death of Dale Aye Smiley or her refusal to serve.

Eighth. In this paragraph the testator named his wife as executrix, but in the event she predeceased the testator, then his son-in-law John J. Smiley should be executor.

James Aye Barker attained his majority on December 27, 1933, and on that date he came into full legal control of the lands devised to him; but as he had not yet completed his education his aunt, Dale Aye Smiley, continued to manage his lands for him about as she had done during his minority. She collected the rents, paid the taxes and delivered to him the full net income of the property.

During the minority of James, between the death of his grandfather in 1928 and the time he became of age in 1933, there accumulated in the hands of Dale Aye Smiley out of the net income of the lands devised to James, not necessary for his support and education, a substantial amount of money, also a quarter section of land purchased with part of that money. The aggregate value of this fund in money and land was about $9,939.97.

James Aye Barker died on February 14, 1939, when he was about twenty-six years of age—some four years before the time when the fund and its accumulations amassed by his aunt as trustee during his minority should be delivered to him under the terms of his grandfather’s will.

[276]*276The question in this lawsuit is what disposition should be made of this fund with its accumulations. The probate and district courts held that it should be delivered by the retiring trustee Dale Aye Smiley to the administrator of James Aye Barker’s estate. Dale Aye Smiley, trustee, contended that she personally should be adjudged to be the owner of the fund, and the rejection of that contention and the judgment in favor of the administrator form the basis of this appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 P.2d 482, 155 Kan. 272, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smiley-v-johnston-kan-1942.