Thurman v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance

53 S.W.2d 568, 245 Ky. 281, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 592
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 14, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 568 (Thurman v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance) 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
Thurman v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance, 53 S.W.2d 568, 245 Ky. 281, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 592 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry —

Affirming.

In May, J888, Nancy Jane Little, then a widow, executed her will containing some six clauses. Only clause 4 of this will is material to the controversy here presented, and for the determination of which our construction of the said clause of the will is asked. Clause 4 of the will is as follows: ■

“I give my farm in Jefferson County, Kentucky, on the waters of Floyd’s Fork to my granddaughter, Laura Della Beard, for her sole and separate use, free from the control or debts of any husband she may have, and in case of her death *283 without issue, then said land, or its proceeds, to pass to my two sons, Alexander A. and Charles M. Beard, and their heirs and assigns.”

At the time Nancy Jan'e Little executed this will in 1888, she had two sons, Alexander A. Beard and Charles M. Beard, the latter being the father of her granddaughter, Laura Della Beard, named as devisee in this clause of the will.

In 1896 Laura Della Beard married Robert Lee Thurman, and four children were born as the issue of their marriage, to wit, Margaret Thurman, born August 8, 1897; Charles B. Thurman, born October 22, 1898; Robert L. Thurman, Jr., born February 11, 1901; and "William A. Thurman, born March 29, 1902, all of whom are now living and joined as coappellants herein with their mother, Della Beard Thurman.

The testatrix, Nancy Jane Little, died in December, 1906. One of her sons, Alexander A. Beard, predeceased his mother, having died April 10, 1906, intestate and without issue. Her other son, Charles M. Beard, survived her, dying intestate August 10, 1910, leaving-surviving him his only child and heir at law, Della Beard Thurman, the appellant.

The appellee, the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, has an unsatisfied judgment against the appellant, Della Béard Thurman, and has caused an execution to be levied upon her interest in the land devised her by clause 4 of her grandmother’s will, as above set out.

Alexander A. Beard and Charles M. Beard, the sons of the testatrix, who by the devise over were to take the property in the event of Mrs. Thurman’s death without issue, are both dead, leaving- the appellant, Mrs. Thurman, as the sole heir at law of each of them. The insurance company claims that in this way, upon the death of the two sons of the testatrix, the defeasible interest which they took under the will descended to Della Beard Thurman, and that such inheritéd interest, added to that taken by her under the will, makes her now the owner in fee simple of this devised property it has levied on, and that it is entitled to have the same sold for the satisfaction of its unsatisfied judgment against her.

*284 Upon the other hand, Mrs. Thurman, claiming, as do also her children, that she took under the will only a life estate in the property and her children remainder interests therein, filed her action under the Declaratory Judgment Act (Civil Code of Practice, sec. 639a-l et seq.), seeking a construction of the will and that appellee be restrained from proceeding under the levy.

The lower court, holding that Della Beard Thurman was the owner in fee simple under this devise, dismissed the petition.

From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

There is thus presented for our determination only the question of' what title the appellant Mrs. Della Beard Thurman took in the property under clause 4 of the will. A determination of this question requires our construction of the will.

The learned chancellor below, in his disposition of this question in a very clear and ably written opinion, used this language:

“ (1) In the ease of a devise to A, with a gift over to B, if A should die without issue, there being no particular estate, two defeasible fees (interests, parenthesis ours) are created, one in A and the other in B. A’s estate is one in fee simple, subject to be defeated only by his death without issue surviving him. His issue take nothing under the devise. A can sell the- property and the purchaser will take an estate in fee, subject to be defeated only by the death of A without issue surviving him. Moran v. Dillehay, 8 Bush, 434; Hood v. Dawson, 98 Ky. 285 (33 S. W. 75, 17 Ky. Law Rep. 880); Eakins v. Eakins, 191 Ky. 61, 229 S. W. 130.
“The second defeasible fee (executory devise) created by such devise is that in B, to whom the property is given in the event A dies without issue surviving him. That is an estate in fee in remainder, subject to be defeated in the manner described.
“(2) If A can sell his estate, so his creditor, who has obtained an execution lien upon it, can have it sold, for the satisfaction of his judgment. The purchaser, at such judicial sale would take A’s estate, that is to say, an estate in fee simple *285 subject to be defeated by A’s death without issue. Deboe v. Lowen, 8 B. Mon. 616.”

We are of the opinion that the chancellor has, in these apt words, clearly stated the rule of construction applicable to the clause of the will under consideration (with our parenthetical modification of terms). By the language of the devise, the testatrix clearly evidenced her desire and intention to give her Jefferson county land to her granddaughter, the appellant, and to her two sons, Alexander A. and Charles M. Beard, in the way and manner therein directed, which is that she gives her farm to her granddaughter, Laura Della Beard, for her sole and separate use, free from the control or debts of any husband she may have, but, in ease .of her death without issue, then the said land, or its proceeds, is to pass to her two named sons, their heirs and assigns.

The gift is thus one to her granddaughter with the one qualification that, upon the event of her dying at any time without issue, then the devised land is to pass over to her two sons.

In such a devise, as stated in the quoted opinion, where the property is given to A with a gift over to B, if A should die without issue, and where there is no intervening particular estate, two defeasible interests are created, the one in Laura Beard Thurman and the other in remainder to the two sons of the testatrix.

In the case of Atkinson v. Kern, Trustee, 210 Ky. 824, 276 S. W. 977, the court had before it a similar question of will construction as that here presented. In that case, the testator, by the third clause of his will, said:

“I will to my son, John and my daughter Mary Lou, all the rest of my estate of every description, to their own separate use and benefit. If my daughter should marry and die without heirs then her portion of my estate is to go to her brother.”

The court, in construing this clause of the will, after an exhaustive review of the authorities therein considered, declared:

“We conclude # * that the correct rule is, that where an estate is given or conveyed directly to the devisee, without any intervening particular *286

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Related

Wilson v. Wilson
109 S.W.2d 607 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 568, 245 Ky. 281, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurman-v-northwestern-mutual-life-insurance-kyctapphigh-1932.