Whittaker v. Chenault

232 S.W. 391, 192 Ky. 81, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 17, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 391 (Whittaker v. Chenault) 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
Whittaker v. Chenault, 232 S.W. 391, 192 Ky. 81, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 27 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

— Affirming.

Anderson Chenault disposed of a large estele by will, devising 160 acres of land to his son W. 0. Chenault for life with contingent remainder to the latter’s children and their descendants i'f any .such survived the life tenant but subject to the further provision that if the testator or his estate should be required to pay a certain note for the life tenant upon which the testator was surety, then a defined portion of the west end of the 160 acres should not pass to W. 0. 'Chenault and his descendants in the manner above described but should go to three named daughters of the testator for life ¡with remainder to their children.

In this ex parte action instituted pursuant to section 491 of the Code by W. O. Chenault and his children, four sons, and their wives all of whom were adults, for the sale for reinvestment of 99 1/3 acres of the 160 acres, the sale was ordered and U. S. Whittaker became the purchaser. He filed exceptions to the report of sale which were overruled and the sale confirmed and he appeals.

The first question raised is one of practice and involves a construction of section 491 of the Code under which the action was prosecuted. It is contended that in all proceedings under this section it is necessary that the suit be brought by the life tenant against the contingent remaindermen and that such remaindermen, even though adults may not be plaintiffs. By the Cod© provision only the remaindermen “in whom title would have vested if the contingency had happened before- commencement of the action” are required to be made .parties. Hence only W. O. Chenault, the life tenant, and his four sons were necessary parties to this action and the question for decision is whether the latter being adults could join as plaintiffs or must have, been sued a§ defendants.

[83]*83In Goff v. Renick, 156 Ky. 588, 161 S. W. 983, just as here the life tenant and contingent remaindermen joined as plaintiffs in an action brought pursuant to this same section of the Cod© for the sale of land for reinvestment and the sale was upheld, which could not have been done if the contention now made with reference to this section of the Code were sound. It is insisted, howiever, by counsel for appellant that this question was not there presented or considered by the court. It is only true however that the question was not discussed with reference to the first set of contingent remaindermen who only of several successive sets of remaindermen were necessary parties to the action, but it was presented and was discussed with reference to the second remaindermen who were proper but not necessary parties thereto; and with reference to the contention that they could not be plaintiffs but must be defendants in an action under this provision of the Code the court said:

“We find no merit in appellant’s contention that the remaindermen, brothers of the life tenant, should have been made defendants to the action. If it would have been proper to adjudge the sale and reinvestment prayed, by making the remaindermen in question defendants, their voluntary act in making themselves plaintiffs to the action and joining in the prayer for the relief asked could have no other than the same legal effect and served to reduce the cost of the proceedings.”

This reasoning not only applies with equal force to the first remaindermen but the judgment of necessity would have been reversed instead of affirmed unless it had been so applied. This opinion must therefore be accepted as construing section 491 of the Code to mean that the contingent remaindermen required to be madia parties to an action thereunder who were adults, could join with the life tenant as plaintiffs if they so desired.

It is also true this court in McClure v. Crume, 141 Ky. 361, 132 S. W. 433, said with reference to this section of the C!ode that the “person in being who has a contingent interest in the property is required to be joined as the defendant in the proceeding in order that not only his own interest may be protected by his own watchfulness and judgment but by their exercise the interest of the unborn contingent remaindermen, identical in its character, may also be protected.” But in that case the contingent remainderman was made a defendant and the question as to whether or not he could join as plaintiff [84]*84'was not presented. Besides the purposes there stated for his being a defendant are as fully conserved by his being a plaintiff and then© is nothing in that case, in its reasoning or questions decided, conflicting in the least with the reasoning and conclusions of the court in the Renick case.

The case of Wyatt’s Trustee v. Grider, 158 Ky. 440, 165 S. W. 420, cited by counsel has no application to the case at bar, since that proceeding was under .section 489 of the Civil Code which refers to the sale only of vested estates in lands of infants or incompetents and is without analogy even with reference to contingent estates of adults involved here. So also with the case of Hartman v. Fast, 145 Ky. 402, 140 S. W. 549, cited by appellant, which considers and discusses only sections 489 and 490 of the Civil Code with reference to infants when they are necessary parties and are required by the Code to be made defendants. We are therefore of the opinion that appellant’s first contention is without force.

2. Appellee’s second, third and fourth exceptions to the report of sale rest finally upon a single contention, namely, that 41 5/6 aeries of the 99 1/3 acres sold herein did not pass under the will to W. O. Chenault and his descendants, but passed to the three daughters of testator for life with remainder to their descendants because of the alleged failure of W. O. Chenault to pay the' note upon which the testator was surety and the consequent payment thereof by his executors.

The will provides:

“If at the end of two years from the date of my death he (W. O. Chienault) has not paid all such surety debts aforesaid for which my estate shall be bound, then enough shall be taken off said west side of said 160 acres as will be equal at $60.50 per acre, to the amount my estate may be bound and have to pay for him. ’ ’

By another clause of the will it is provided that a devise of adjoining lands to the testator’s three daughters Molly, Maggie and Lucy for life with remainder to their descendants shall “lembrace any part of the 160 acres devised to my son William O. for life that may be taken off it in consequence of my or my estate having to pay any debts for which I am now or may be .surety for him at the time of my death. ’ ’

It will be noticed that while William O. Chenault is given by the will out two years in which to pay any indebtedness upon which the testator was surety, and he [85]*85did not pay a note for some $3,000 upon which the testator was surety within that time, it is clear that the will do.es not divert any part of the 160 acre tract from W. O. Chenault and his descendants to the three daughters and their descendants except as a consequence ‘ ‘ of my or my estate having to pay any debts for him” as stated in the one clause and as stated in the other, ‘ ‘ to the amount my estate may be bound and have to pay for him.”

Manifestly therefore the whole of the 160 acre tract passed to W. O.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 391, 192 Ky. 81, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittaker-v-chenault-kyctapp-1921.