Trevathan's v. Dees' Executors

298 S.W. 975, 221 Ky. 396, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 731
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedSeptember 30, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 975 (Trevathan's v. Dees' Executors) 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
Trevathan's v. Dees' Executors, 298 S.W. 975, 221 Ky. 396, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 731 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

This action involves the settlement of the estate of S. IT. Dees, who died in Calloway county on the 16th day of April, 1923. He left no children or lineal descendants surviving him. His wife had died some 3 or 4 years prior to his death. By his will executed in October, 1922, he made a number of specific bequests, aggregating about $32,000, among which was a legacy of $6,000 to be paid to his niece, Mrs. Ella Cortelyou, and another of $5,000, payable to his sister, Alice E. Trevathan, at the rate of $25 per month, with the provision that should she die before the principal amount was exhausted the remainder should become a part of the residue of his estate. Mrs. Treva *399 than was a sister of the whole blood. The only other heirs or distributees at law that survived him were a great number of descendants of his half brothers and sisters who had died before he did. These descendants are scattered all over the country. By his will, he appointed Jake Mayer, Ben Grogan, and his brother-in-law, A. D. Thompson, executors of his estate. At the time of his death, Mr. Dees was 77 years of age. Starting in life as a poor boy, he had through his efforts and business ability acquired an estate of approximately $100,000. Most of his business life had been spent in connection with banks, and especially with the Bank of Murray, in Murray, Ky., and the Dees ’ Bank, in Hazel, Ky. He was an officer of both these banks. His sister, Mrs. Trevathan, who died while this suit was pending, it being revived in the name of the appellant as her executor, was an invalid and not in a very g’ood financial condition. She lived in the county adjoining that of Mr Dees’ residence. The record shows that Mr. Dees visited his sister on the average of about once a year, and that he sent her from time to time, small checks of $20 or so as presents. His relations with his niece, ‘Mrs. Cortelyou, who lived in Illinois, were very cordial and pleasant, but the record fails to show that he had very much, if anything, to do with any of his other relatives. Mr. Dees, as this record shows, was very much attached to the appellee Ben Grogan, whom he had taken as a young boy into the bank at Murray, and whose business career he had helped to supervise and direct. He was also very much interested in the appellee Jake Mayer, who was associated with him in the Dees’ Bank. So much confidence did Mr. Dees place in Mayer that for the last couple of years of his life he had Mayer under a recorded power of attorney attend to practically all of his business for him. After Mr. Dees died, Mrs. Cortelyou, his niece, presented a claim against his estate for the sum of $24,983.48. She asserted that she had sent her uncle money from time to time to invest for her, and that he had not accounted to her in full for such sums and the interest. The appellee Jake Mayer also claimed that during Mr. Dees’ lifetime the latter had made him a present of a certificate of deposit in the sum of $19,200. The appellee Ben Grogan claimed that Mr. Dees had on the Saturday preceding his death, which occurred on Monday, given him 86 shares of bank stock. It is on these three claims, to *400 gether with some minor ones, which we will notice later in the opinion, that the battle of this action was waged. We will consider them separately.

I. The Cortelyou Claim.

The record shows that in the year 1907 oil was discovered on the farm of Mrs. Cortelyon, in Illinois. The money which Mrs. Cortelyou obtained as the cash payment for her lease, together with the royalties thereafter paid her, she sent to her uncle in Kentucky, to be by him invested for her, as she was not versed in matters of business and knew very little about the investing of funds. There is practically no dispute in the record but that this was the arrangement between Mrs. Cortelyou and her uncle. The controversy in this case arises over how much Mrs. Cortelyou furnished her uncle to be invested by him, and whether or not Mr. Dees had fully accounted during his lifetime to Mrs. Cortelyou for such sums as were so intrusted to him. Partly by searching the records of a bank in Illinois from which she had purchased the drafts she sent to her uncle, and partly by the books of the bank with which Mr. Dees was connected, Mrs. Cortelyou undertook to establish her claim. An analysis of this eiddence would extend this opinion beyond measure and would be of no benefit to the profession. Suffice it to say that we are convinced that the lower court correctly adjudged the amounts advanced by Mrs. Cortelyou to her uncle, with the exception of an item in her account of $1,500- bearing date, June 3, 1909. As to this, wé are convinced that the appellant is correct in his contention that this is a duplicate of the item in that account of May 5, 1909. On this last-named date Mrs. Cortelyou secured from the Crawford County State Bank, at Robinson, Ill., a draft for $1,500 on the American Trust & Savings Bank of Chicago, Ill., payable to S. B. Dees. The back of this draft bears several indorsements, those of S. H. Dees, the Bank of Murray, the Louisville National Banking Company of Louisville, Ky., and the Continental National Bank of Chicago. It also bears an indorsement that it was paid through-the Chicago clearing house June 5, 1909, which is just two days after an entry was made on the books of the Bank of Murray showing that $1,500 had been deposited to the credit of S. LI. Dees, the money belonging to Mrs. Cor *401 telyou. On the 14th day of May, 1909, Mr. Dees wrote Mrs. Cortelyou, among other matters, as follows:

“I received your check for $1,500. I have not found a note that suited me. I will I think in a short time. ’ ’

It is conceded that this letter is an acknowledgment of the remittance of the draft dated May 5, 1909, and it will be noted that on the 14th of May, when Mr. Dees acknowledged its receipt, he then stated that he had not as yet found an investment for it. On June 30, 1909, Mr. Dees wrote Mrs. Cortelyou, in part, as follows:

“Well, Ella, I expect you thought it was a long time hearing from about your notes but it’s so hot down here I have not done much of anything. I ■send you a good note secured by a good piece of land worth $2,500 for $1,000. $88. Leaves $400. Yet I will send you a good note for that in a short time. ’ ’

This letter is quite incompatible with the position taken by Mrs. Cortelyou that between May 5th and June 30th she had sent him $3,000. On the other hand, this letter indicates that Mr. Dees did not deposit the draft of May 5th until June 3d. The date of the indorsement on the back of the draft substantiates this view. Mr. Dees writes in May that he had not yet found an investment for Mrs. Cortelyou. On June 30th he writes that he had invested $1,100, apologizing for not having written before, and says that he has $400 of her money still left. If Mrs. Cortelyou is correct in her contention, Mr. Dees should have then had $1,900 still left. But he only says that he has $400 still left. Further, on the 2d day of September, 1909, Mr. Dees wrote Mr. Cortelyou acknowledging receipt of a check for $1,000. In this letter he says:

“Well, I got the last check for $1,000. It makes $1,400.”

This statement clearly means that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 975, 221 Ky. 396, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trevathans-v-dees-executors-kyctapphigh-1927.