Walker v. Milliken

150 S.W. 71, 150 Ky. 12, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 866
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 16, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 71 (Walker v. Milliken) 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
Walker v. Milliken, 150 S.W. 71, 150 Ky. 12, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 866 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Winn —

Reversing.

[14]*14One James L. McGoodwin died prior to 1883. He left surviving Mm a wife, Delia P. McGoodwin, and six children, Mrs. Eva Walker, J: A. McGoodwin, W. H. McGoodwin, Hattie McGoodwin, Fannie McGoodwin and Mrs. Bird McGoodwin Finn. He left a will, wMcli was probated in 1883. Tbe third clause of his will is as follows :

“I also will that my executors hereinafter named shall invest, in good safe bonds, a sufficient amount of money to yield an anual income or interest of $500, which said bonds shall be taken and held in the name of my son, James Albert McGoodwin who shall pay said income or interest over to my .said wife, Delia P., as soon, and at all times, when collected during her natural life.”

The seventh clause of the will is as follows:

“It is my will that at the death of my wife, Delia P., that the real estate together with the personalty, including the money directéd to be invested in bonds in paragraph 3rd herein be equally divided between my six children aforesaid. And for this purpose the real as well as the personal estate herein may be sold and conveyed by my son, James Albert, as my other real estate is directed in paragraph 6th to be sold and conveyed.”

The eleventh and twelfth clauses of the will nominate the wife, Delia P., and the son, James Albert, as executors without bond. Upon the probate of the will the nominated executors qualified without bond.

The testator owned at the time of his death six one-thousand-dollar Logan County bonds. Shortly after the probate of the will, J. A. McGoodwin, the executor, carrying out the provisions of the third clause of the will, bought three additional one-thousand-dollar bonds, which together with the six Logan County bonds named made an investment of $9,000 in bonds. These were six per cent bonds, yielding a net revenue of about $500 per annum, the amount directed by the third clause of the will to be paid annually to Mrs. Delia P. McGoodwin during her life. These nine bonds were held by the son, J. A. McGoodwin, and the annual income of $500 from them was paid to his mother as provided by the will, down until the year 1893 or the early part of 1894, when they were sold by J. A. McGoodwin and the proceeds of them were turned into the general estate of J. A. McGoodwin and used by him in his individual business ventures. His mother was apprised of his purpose to sell [15]*15them at the time of the sale and seems to have made no objection. After the sale he continued to pay his mother $500 per annum down until the time of his assignment for the benefit-of his creditors, post.

On January 16, 1894, J. A. McGoodwin prepared in his own handwriting the following document:

“$1,500. Jany. 16, 1894.

“For value received I promise and agree to pay to Eva McG. Walker Fifteen Hundred Dollars being the one-sixth of the annuity fund provided for by the will of J. L. McGoodwin interest from which to be paid to Mrs, D. P. McGoodwin. It is agreed and understood that this obligation is not due or does not bear interest until the death of Mrs. D. P. McGoodwin, at which time the fund is to be distributed equally to the six heirs of J. L. Mc-Gpodwin.

“J. A. McGoodwin.”

This document was delivered by J. A. McGoodwin to the husband of Mrs. Walker. The husband took the document to his wife. She read it and without comment or observation returned it to her husband. At the time of the execution of this document, J. A. McGoodwin executed four others of like import, one each in favor of his brother, W. H. McGoodwin, and his listers, Hattie McGoodwin, Fannie McGoodwin and Mrs. Bird McGoodwin Finn. This brother and these three sisters were all living at the time at distant points from the home of J. A. McGoodwin. He did not deliver any of the four documents named, but put them and kept them among the papers appertaining to the settlement of his father’s estate. Within the course of a few months hu seems to have advised each of the four, as he would see them time from time to time, of his sale of the bonds.

In January, 1905, J. A. McGoodwin executed a deed of voluntary assignment of all of his property to theappellee, J. J. Milliken in trust for the benefit of his. creditors. Milliken accepted the trust and duly qualified as the.assignee.

Mrs. Delia P. McGoodwin died on October 9, 1910. In March, 1911, in an action theretofore brought by Mil-liken as assignee in the Simpson Circuit Court for the settlement of J. A. McGoodwin’s assigned estate, an order was entered permitting Mrs. Walker to file a sepa[16]*16rate action against the assignee upon her claim asserted against him for $1,500, one-sixth of the $9,000 fund devised in the third clause of the will to Mrs. Delia P. McGoodwin for life, with remainder to the testator’s six children. Following the privilege granted by this order, Mrs. Walker filed such an action on March 29, 1911. She sought in the action to have her claim adjudged to be a preferred claim under that portion of section 74 of the Kentucky Statutes, a part of the chapter upon voluntary assignments, which reads as follows: “Debts- due by the assignor as guardian, committee, trustee of an express trust created by deed or will, or as personal representative, shall be paid in full before the general creditors receive anything.” The principal defense interposed by Milliken, the assignee, was that Mrs. Walker had acquiesced in the sale of the bonds and in the trustee’s use of the money in his individual business; that the execution and delivery of the paper above quoted had worked an alteration of Mrs. Walker’s relation of a cestui que trust to that of an individual or general creditor of J. A. McGoodwin; and that her claim, therefore, was not entitled to a preference over the claim of the general creditors of J. A. McGoodwin. Upon preparation and trial, the trial court held with the assignee and refused to allow the claim as a preferred claim under the statute, supra. From the trial court’s judgment Mrs. Walker appeals here. Other matters of defense were interposed by the assignee and will be treated of later. The main question is upon her right to the preference.

In the first place, it is to be observed that there is no pleading by the assignee of any state of fact such as would suffice to work an estoppel in the general sense of that term, against Mrs. Walker and in favor of the creditors. It is nowhere alleged nor shown that their position or that of J. A. McGoodwin was altered to their or his hurt by any position affirmatively taken or negatively indulged in by Mrs. Walker. The defense is rather based upon that lesser form of -the law of estoppel known among the writers as an election; that is, that having had an opportunity to elect to insist upon a continuance of the bond investment upon the one hand and the personal use of the money by her brother upon the other, and having elected the latter by her silence upon the receipt of the paper — and the record shows no action by her other than silence — she will not now be heard to say [17]*17that the trust provided for in the will yet stands as a; trust and that the fund provided for in the will is yet a trust fund. As we understand the appellee’s position, it is that her silence was an acquiescence, and that, having acquiesced, she cannot gainsay that in which she acquiesced.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 71, 150 Ky. 12, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-milliken-kyctapp-1912.