Smith v. Smith

173 S.W.2d 813, 295 Ky. 50, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 196
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 28, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 813 (Smith v. Smith) 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
Smith v. Smith, 173 S.W.2d 813, 295 Ky. 50, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 196 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sims

Affirming in part, reversing in part.

These two appeals have been heard together and both will be disposed of in this opinion.

At the time John and Ida Smith married on Nov. 30, 1910, he was a widower past 50 years of age and she was just a few months under 21. He was the father of six children and possessed an estate of about $23,000, while it was her first marriage and she had no property. On Nov. 25, 19.10, they entered into a prenuptial contract by which the wife, in case she survived her husband, was to receive $2,000, the household goods and was to have a homestead in the house and 15 acres so long as she remained his widow; all of which she agreed to accept in lieu of her distributable share of his estate.

Six children were born to their marriage and they adopted a grandchild. Mrs. Smith was industrious and frugal and her husband possessed the same traits, but.his frugality developed into miserliness and when he died on Aug. 12,1940, at the age of 84, he left an estate of approximately $200,000, consisting of about $165,000 personalty and the remainder in realty.

On Sept. 11, 1937, Mrs. Smith filed suit against her husband averring that she was an infant when the prenuptial contract was entered into and that her signature thereto was procured by fraud and deception practiced by her husband, and she asked that the contract be set aside. H-is answer was a traverse followed by a counterclaim asking a divorce upon the ground of lewd and lascivious conduct, to which latter plea the court sustained a demurrer. On Dee. 4, 1937, while the suit to cancel the antenuptial contract was pending, she filed an action against him for $300 per month maintenance. Mr. Smith filed suit for divorce on Jan. 5, 1938, averring abandonment and cruel and inhuman treatment. She made her *52 answer to this action a counterclaim and asked a divorce mensa et thoro and $100,000 alimony.

On or about July 1, 1938, an agreed judgment was entered in the action to set aside the prenuptial contract which reads:

“By agreement of the parties and their counsel, this case is dismissed settled, at defendant’s cost, pursuant to the terms and the conditions of an indenture duly made and executed between the parties on June 30, 1938, and which is in words and figures as follows:
(Copy)
“Field, Judge.”

Immediately following is the contract dated June 30, 1938, reciting that the parties are living together but that due to the increase in the husband’s estate the antenuptial agreement is not fair and it is set aside and the. wife is given immediately $25,000 cash in lieu of all interest she might otherwise have taken in the husband’s estate, and he relinquished all interest he might take in her estate as surviving husband. The husband agreed not to discriminate against the children of his second marriage in distributing his estate and that all children of both marriages would share equally in the distribution of his property. The agreed judgment further provided that the action involving the antenuptial contract should be dismissed settled and that all other actions between the parties are to be dismissed without prejudice; that the husband recognized his obligation to support his wife and infant children and agreed to do so.

Mr. Smith died intestate and his widow and the Pikeville National Bank & Trust Company (hereinafter referred to as the bank) qualified as his personal representatives. On Feb. 20, 1941, Mrs. Smith individually filed a petition in equity against the bank as administrator of her husband, also naming his heirs-at-law as defendants, wherein she sought a cancellation of the post-nuptial agreement of June 30, 1938, on the ground that it was void, and she asked to be adjudged a widow’s distributable share in her husband’s estate. The petition is voluminous and attacks the antenuptial agreement on the grounds that she was an infant when it was executed and her signature was obtained by fraud on the part of her husband; that by threats to disinherit her children *53 the husband forced her to sign the postnuptial agreement; that although Mr. Smith agreed in the postnuptial contract to support his wife and infant children, he deliberately refused to do so in order to make same void and often said it was of no force or effect; that as the parties were living together as husband and wife at the time the contract was executed it was void; that after paying her attorney’s fees she had $21,000 left of the $25,000 received under the contract, a considerable portion of which was consumed in payment of obligations incurred in supporting her husband and family before the postnuptial contract was executed, and the balance {except $300) of this $25,000 was expended in supporting her husband and family between the date the contract was executed, June 30, 1938, and the husband’s death on Aug. 12, 1940. Her purpose, we presume, in pleading that she supported her husband and family .since receiving the $25,000 was to show that Mr. Smith had abandoned the postnuptial agreement.

The answers traversed the allegations of the petition and pleaded affirmatively that the postnuptial agreement was incorporated in and became a part of the judgment referred to above, which judgment it averred had never been appealed, vacated or modified and is now in full force and effect and is a bar to plaintiff’s action. Replies completed the issue.

.Much proof was taken and the cause was submitted to the chancellor who adjudged that the contract of June 30, 1938, was valid and that same was entered and made a part of the judgment above referred to and that the judgment is valid and binding upon Mrs. Smith.

She asks a reversal because: 1. The consideration was inadequate to support the contract; 2. it was obtained by duress; 3. the husband abandoned the contract ; 4. the contract was unfair to a degree not permitted between husband and wife. Defendants insist that this agreement became a part of the judgment of the court and as Mrs. Smith’s pleadings merely attack the contract and do not charge fraud or duress in obtaining the judgment, no cause of action was stated by her.

It is not disputed that Mr. and Mrs. Smith could enter into a valid postnuptial contract wherein each relinquished his or her respective interest in the property of the other, if it is fair and equitable, and supported by *54 an adequate consideration. Smith’s Adm’r v. Price, 252 Ky. 806, 68 S. W. (2d) 422; Redwine’s Ex’r v. Redwine, 160 Ky. 282,169 S. W. 864, Ann. Cas. 1917A 58. Without going into details, the record shows that the antenuptial contract was cancelled, and Mrs. Smith immediately received $25,000 in cash in which her husband released all interest in the event she predeceased him; she was furnished a true and accurate itemization of her husband’s estate on March 21, before the agreement was signed on June 30, 1938; her children were to share equally in the estate with the children of the former marriage, which they did. But it is not necessary for us to decide whether the contract was supported by adequate consideration and was fair and equitable, and we do not do so, because it became a part of a valid judgment which was not attacked by Mrs. Smith’s pleadings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 813, 295 Ky. 50, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-kyctapphigh-1943.