Todd v. Gentry

60 S.W. 639, 109 Ky. 704, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 30, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 60 S.W. 639 (Todd v. Gentry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todd v. Gentry, 60 S.W. 639, 109 Ky. 704, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 34 (Ky. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE HOBSON

Reversing.

The will of Madison Todd, Jr., which was duly probated after his death, is in these words: “I this day make a will of my property as follows: I give to my father, T), F. Todd, $2.00 in gold; and to his sis children, Nannie, Jnlia, Sallie, William, Maggie, and Rutherford Todd, $1.00 [705]*705each in gold; amd it is to be prescribed on it, by some jeweler, it is my interest in M. Todd’s estate, and said jeweler is to be paid out of my estate, and this dollar in gold is to be defaced so it can’t be passed as currency any longer. I also give to Minnie B. Gentry and heirs my one-edghth interest in my mother’s estate, which must be equally divided in the land, and the land is not to be sold by her. My father’s $2.00 in gold is to be fixed like his six children, and at his death it is to be given to Minnie B. Gentry. I also want my‘just and honest debts paid. I want the Tudor land, which I now own, to be rented, or sold, if I am in debt so renting it won’t pay my debts. I don’t owe my sister Minnie Gentry anything, or her four sisters or two brothers anything, or my father either. They are in debt to me in large sums, and if it can be collected I give it to Minnie B. Gentry. I want to be buried by the side of my mother, and the tombstone is to be put up at the cost of all the cash that ds on hand after my debts are paid, and. if none are on hand, I want the Tudor land sold, if it can’t be rented, and the rent of it for two years shall be the cost of the tombstones. I will leave this with the county judge, and he shall wind up my business. I have no debts against me now, only where notes exist, and one for $25.00 to J. C. Ohenault. The Tudor land, if not sold, must be, at Minnie Gentry’s death, given to her heirs. In three years after my death, if no tombstones are not put up over my mother, they must be done at my expense, and prescribed on them, so this my last request, this the 2oth day of February, 1893. ■ Madisou Todd, Jr. Witness: David Ohenault, Jr., T. A. Chenault.”

In addition to the one-eighth interest in his mother’s estate and the “Tudor land,” referred to in the will, the [706]*706testator owned at hi-s death another tract of about fifty-five acres, which he had purchased, but which had not been conveyed to him, a small balance of the purchase money being unpaid. For this tract he held a title bond. His father, D. F. Todd, survived him, and was his heir at law. The question involved in this case is whether the' fifty-five acre tract passed under the will, or to his father, D. F. Todd, as his heir at law, no allusion being made to it in the will. The court below seems to have held that by implication all the estate of the testator passed under the will to Minnie B. Gentry, his remaining sister, who was not excluded by it. The testator was unmarried. The will contains no residuary clause, and there is absolutely nothing m it devising the fifty-five-acre tract to her, or showing any intention on the part of the testator that she should have it. It 'does appear, however, from the will, that the testator devised to his father and six of his brothers and sisters certain gold coins, and directed that it should have inscribed on it by some jeweler that it was their interest in the estate, and that at his father’s death his gold coin, which was to be defaced so that it could not: be passed as currency, was to be given to Minnie B. Gentry. The' question, therefore, arises, does this expression of an intention to limit his father’s share of his estate to two dollars exclude his father, as heir at law, from all interest in property which was not disposed of by the -will?

In Clarkson v. Clarkson, 8 Bush, 658, this court said: “Mr. Jarman’s sixth rule of construction is ‘that mere negative words are not sufficient to exclude the heir or next of kin; there must be an actual gift to some other definite object.’ This rule is in accord with the spirit of the law of this State regulating the testamentary right.”

[707]*707In Philipps v. Philipps, 93 Ky., 498, (20 S. W., 541), the testator devised to his ñve daughters $200 each, and added: “All I intend for nrv ñve daughters to have of my estate.” He died intestate as to a part of his estate, and it was held that the daughters could only be excluded by a disposition of his whole estate.

In 29 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 510, it is said: “Interests undisposed, of in realty and personalty pass to the heir at law or next of kin, as the case may be, who can only be excluded by express words or by plain and necessary implication. directions excluding them from any share in the testator’s property will, ás a general rule, be taken to have been inserted only for the purpose of the dispositions made by the will, and will not exclude them from taking property undisposed of.”

These conclusions are supported by a great many authorities. In Boisseau v. Aldridge, 5 Leigh, 222, (27 Am. Dec. 590), the following paper had been duly probated as the will of the testator: “Not having made any will to dispose of my property, and two of my sisters marrying contrary to my wish, should I not make one I wish this instrument to prevent either of their husbands from having one cent of aiy estate,- — -say the husbands of my two sisters, Martha Aldridge and Dorothy Aldridge, — nor either of them to have one cent, unless they should survive their husbands. In that case I leave them, to be paid out of the collection of any of my money, $500 each. Given under my hand and seal this 27th August, 1829.” The testator left a considerable estate and several brothers and sisters. The two sisters named in the will sued for their share of the estate, and it was held that they were entitled to it. Judge Brooke said: “To give to a testator power to disinherit his heirs whom the law has appointed to [708]*708take the estate, unless be devises it to some other person, would be, in effect, to give Mm authority to repeal the statutes of descent and distribution. That a testator may disinherit his heirs by giving his estate to somebody else can not be doubted; but if, in every case in which he intends to exclude his heirs from the inheritance, it is to be implied from that alone that he devises his estate to those who (some of his heirs being excluded) would take the inheritance, the principle that to disinherit his heirs he must devise his estate to somebody else would be of no consequence, because every exclusion of his heirs would be a devise to somebody else.” In this case Judge Tucker dissented, and one of the judges who concurred in the judgment in some measure rested his opinion on the peculiar language of the instrument.

But in the subsequent case of Coffman v. Coffman, 85 Va., 459, (8 S. E., 672), (2 L. R. A., 848), the entire court adopted the view of Judge Brooke. The will in that case was in these words: “I, Hiram Coffman, of Rockingham county, State of Virginia, do make and ordain this to be •my last will and testament, hereby revoking all other wills heretofore made by me. It is my will that my son William H. Coffman be excluded from all of my estate at my death, and have no heirship in the same, he having become the heir to his mother’s interest in her father’s estate; and I, his guardian, having paid him, and am now about to make a final settlement with him, which will make as much to him, and probably more, than my estate will pay to each of my other legal heirs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.W. 639, 109 Ky. 704, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-gentry-kyctapp-1901.