Warfield v. Brand's adm'r

76 Ky. 77, 13 Bush 77, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 30, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 76 Ky. 77 (Warfield v. Brand's adm'r) 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
Warfield v. Brand's adm'r, 76 Ky. 77, 13 Bush 77, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 13 (Ky. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

JUDGE GOFER

delivered the opinion oe the court.

William M. Brand, by his last will and testament, published November 10, 1845, and admitted to probate in the county court of Fayette County during that year, devised to his wife, Harriet W. Brand, his house and adjacent grounds, consisting of about twenty-four acres, situated in the suburbs of Lexington ; also his household furniture, all the personal property used about the house, and his household servants, for and during her natural life or widowhood; and in case she should marry again, she was to have one third of his estate for life. He gave to his four sons each one ninth of his estate, and the remaining five ninths to his executrix and executors in trust for his five daughters. He directed that the shares of his sons should be paid to them as they respectively arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and that his daughters should receive their shares at the time of their respective marriages or when they should leave their mother. But it was provided that the shares of the children in the estate devised to the widow for life should not be allotted to them until her death. Then follows this clause:

"It is my will, and I do hereby direct, that my executrix and executors shall have the right, and I do hereby empower them, or those of them who shall qualify as such, to sell and dispose of and convey any part of my real or personal estate, and to vest the same in any other estate; and I do direct that the profits of my estate shall be left in the hands of my executrix and executors, to rear and educate my children, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient and necessary, and for the support of my wife for life, or during her widowhood; and that in distributing to my nine children, to each a ninth part, a due proportion of each ninth shall be retained out of each ninth to support my wife for life or during her widowhood, except William’s ninth, who shall have his full ninth, as he will render many services to his brothers and sisters and mother.

[85]*85“ If my executrix, or any of my executors, shall die, the survivor or survivors shall have full power to act as if all were living and concurring.”

The clause appointing his executrix and executors is as follows:

“ I do hereby appoint my beloved wife Harriet M. Brand executrix; my beloved and respected father John Brand, my son W. H. Brand, my brother George W. Brand, and my brother-in-law Edward MacAlister, executors of this my last will and testament; and I do direct that they shall not be required to give bond and security by the county court of Fayette County for the due execution of their duties as such, as I have the fullest confidence in their faithful discharge of their duties as executrix and executors.”

All those nominated executors qualified; but Mrs. Brand did not. "William H. Brand was, however, the sole active executor.

The homestead devised to the widow, having upon it a large and expensive house, the executors, the Avidow, and five children, then adults, and the guardians of the infants, in August, 1854, filed, in the Fayette Circuit Court, under chapter 86 of the Revised Statutes, a petition for the sale of the homestead, in which they said, that “the executors, doubting whether their general power to sell was intended to embrace the dwelling-house proper, submitted the matter to the court.”

The court decreed a sale of the homestead, and appointed the executors and Mrs. Brand “a commission to make the sale, and gave them a discretion to sell the whole or only a part.” They sold the house and twelve acres of the land for $15,000, which was paid to W. H. Brand, who, in making his settlements, mingled it with other money in his hands as executor.

At some time, but precisely when or why the record does not show, W. H. Brand ceased to act as executor, and Wm. [86]*86E. Burr was appointed by the county court of Fayette County administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed.

The last items of debit and of credit in W. H. Brand’s last settlement are dated March 14, 1856, and the first in that of Burr bears date December 9, 1859.

We assume therefore that Brand ceased to act, and that-Burr was appointed between those .dates.

After his appointment, Burr sold the residue of the homestead for $3,000. He made settlements in August, 1861, August, 1863, and again in April, 1866, in none of which is there any trace to be found of the particular fund arising from the sale of that part of the homestead first sold.

It appears from those settlements that Burr received the purchase money for that part of the homestead sold by him, and paid out large sums, and that there was in his hands, when he made the last settlement, the sum of $37,909.47, consisting of real estate, cash, bank-stock, and notes.

Burr having resigned his trust at or about the time of making his last settlement, Isaac W. Scott was appointed his successor, and gave bond, with the appellant as his surety, and Burr turned over to him the estate in his hands.

In December, 1872, Scott resigned, and the appellee John W. Barr was appointed and qualified as his successor.

Barr thereupon instituted this suit against Scott and the appellant, upon their bond to recover an alleged balance of $26,081.92 in the hands of Scott, as shown by his last settlement with the county court.

Scott failed to answer. Warfield set up various defenses, only a part of which are now insisted upon. The court rendered judgment in favor of Barr for the amount claimed; and from that judgment Warfield has appealed.

Taking the questions presented by appellant’s counsel in their natural order, the first to be disposed of is, whether the appellee can maintain this suit.

[87]*87It is insisted, upon two grounds, that he can not. The first is, that it does not appear that at the time of the appointment of Burr, or, indeed, at the time of the appointment of the appellee, the executors who qualified, or some of them, were not still in office, and therefore that it does not appear there was a vacancy; and if there was no vacancy, the appointment was void.

The second ground is, that conceding the appointments of Burr, Scott, and the appellee were valid, and that there are assets in the hands of Scott for which he and the appellant are liable on the bond, the appellee has no right to recover such assets.

The petition contains distinct allegations that Burr, Scott, and the appellee were each, in succession, appointed administrator, with the will annexed, of William M. Brand. There are no allegations of the death, resignation, or removal of the original executors, or of Burr or Scott. The only allegation as to the executors is, that they all qualified except Mrs.. Brand; that W. H. Brand was the active executor; that the executors named having died or declined to act, Burr was appointed administrator; that he afterward ceased to act, when Scott was appointed by the Fayette County Court.

We think the allegation that the county court appointed an administrator de bonis non is, prima facie, sufficient to show that there was a vacancy (Jacob’s adm’r v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 10 Bush, 263), and that the orders appointing Burr, Scott, and the appellee are valid.

But if this were otherwise, the appellant’s answer cures the defect, if any existed in the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Ky. 77, 13 Bush 77, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warfield-v-brands-admr-kyctapp-1877.