Schaeffer v. Vogt's Trustee

Opinion of the court jby

JUDGE BURNAM'

Reversing.

Andreas Vogt was twice married. He had by his first Wife three children, Amelia Schaefer, Sophia Frederick, and John Vogt; by his second wife, Catherine, he had also three children, Andreas Vogt, Jr., Albert Vogt and Katie Vogt. Tn 18S6 his second wife procured a divorce from him, and in ■settlement of her claims for alimony and dower he executed his note to A. A. Stoll, as trustee for her and her infant children, for the sum of $5,000, due eight years after date, with annual interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent., which was secured by a mortgage on a tract of 60% acres of land- lying in Jefferson county. On the day following *45the execution of this note and mortgage, Vogt made' the following will: I, Andreas Vogt, being of sound mind and memory and knowing the certainty of death and the uncertainty of life, do hereby make this, my last will and testament: First, T devise to my daughter Amelia Schaefer, wife of Joseph Schaefer, the land and real estate on which she now resides, being (2814) twenty-eight and one-half acres of land, near Taylorsville turnpike, adjoining the farms of Smyser and Ivramer, and being the same conveyed to me by William Vernon, etc., -by deed recorded in Ueed Book No. 175, page 542, Jefferson county clerk’s office, to her heirs and assigns forever. Second, I devise to my ■daughter Sophia Frederick, wife of Alois Frederick, the real estate on which she lives, being (3314) thirty-three and one-fourth acres of land, on the Louisville and Taylorsville turnpike road, in Jefferson county, Kentucky, being the same conveyed to me by deed recorded in Ueed Book No. 216, page 639, Jefferson county clerk’s office, to have and to hold unto her heirs and assigns forever. Third. I devise unto my son, John Vogt, (40) acres of land I purchased of I). Lavielle and wife by deed recorded in Ueed Book No. 103, page 271, Jefferson county clerk’s office, the tract containing sixty and one-fourth (6^14) acres. The forty acres 1 give to my son John adjoins immediately the lands of Jacob Roederer and James McCurdy, and includes the dwelling house end improvements, to his heirs and assigns forever. Fourth. 1 desire that the child Theresa Frederick,, daughter of my deceased daughter, Maria Frederick, shall have paid to her one' thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Fifth. I desire that the remaining tract of (2014) twenty and one-fourth acres, which is .the remaining part of the (6014) sixty and one-fourth acre tract of which forty acres was conveyed, to my son, John, by this will, be sold by my executor for*46.tlje purpose of paying off the mortgage debt 'which I now have on my lands. Sixth. If the proceeds of said sale of twenty and one-fourth acres be1 not’ enough to pay off the mortgage debt, and also the one thousand dollars devised to my grandchild Theresa Frederick, then my children, Amelia, Sophia Frederick and John Vogt, shall pay over the balance of said debt, each one shan1 and share alike. Seventh. If at my death any cash money, or any property, real, personal or mixed, not devised in this will, remains, it shall be given in equal shares to my three children. Eighth. I desire that a nice tombstone be erected on my grave. Ninth. I appoint Alois Frederick executor of this, my last will and testament, without bond, in testimony whereof, I have hereunto placed my signature this twenty-first day of January, 1887. [Signed] Andreas Vogt.” The forty acres of land devised by the third clause of this will to his son, John Vogt, constituted a part of the 60*4 acres which he had mortgaged on the previous day to secure the payment of the $5,000 note executed to Stoll as trustee. And on the tenth day of June, 1889, Andreas Vogt executed and delivered a general warranty deed to his daughter Amelia Schaefer for 28% acres of land devised to her in the first clause of his will, and put her in possession thereof, for the recited consideration of $G,000 jiaid in cash. During the life of Andreas Vogt the interest on the note executed to Stoll was paid. lie died on tlw 21st of April, 1893, and the will of January 21, 1887, was found among his papers unchanged, and was duly pro'bated. In addition to the real estate disposed of by the will, flie decedent owned personal property, consisting in the main of household furniture, of the value of about $1,000. After .his death, a meeting was held by the devisees and heirs at law, and the will' was read to them by *47Frederick, who was named as executor in the will. At this meeting, the executor and.John Yogt notified Mrs. Schaefer that the 28% acres of land deeded to her by her father was liable for one-tliird of the note for $5,000 ex-, cub'd by decedent to Stoll, and the interest -¡thereon until maturity, and that the deed was invalid unless she could demonstrate that she had actually paid the consideration recited therein. A number of depositions'have been taken to prove what occurred at this meeting, and the statements of the witnesses are quite conflicting; but we think it fairly appears that Mrs. Schaefer insisted that her deed was good, and that she intended to claim under it, and complained that she did not receive a full share1 with the other children under (he will. She accepted, however, one-third of the personal property devised in the seventh clause of the will, and paid one-third of the interest dm1 on the note. to Stoll for three or four years. Iu August, 1897, the trustee, Stoll, instituted this suit upon the $5,000 note, and asked that the mortgage be enforced and flic1 property sold to satisfy Uio principal and unpaid interest of the debt. In the meantime, .John Yogt. had dic'd, leaving a widow and two infant children. The Louisville ■ Trust Company qualified as .guardian for the infants. Subsequently Sophia Frederick, her husband, the executor of Andreas Yogt, and the .trust company as guardian of the infants, filed their answer, and asked that tjie court should first decree a sale1 of the 20% acres of land directed to be1 sold-in the sixth clause of the will of testator to satisfy the mortgage, and that, if the proceeds derived from the.sale1 of this tract of land should bo sufficient to pay the1 debt, the three children of testator, Mrs. Schaefer, Mrs. Frederick and Mrs. Yogt, shodld be compelled to pay their proportion of the difference, as required by the seventh clause of the will of *48Andreas Yogt. The 20% acres realized $2,000, which was credited upon the mortgage debt, leaving unpaid thereon $4,100. Mrs. Frederick paid one-tliird of this amount, $1,39(5, into court. Mrs. Schaefer, for reply to the cross petition, of Mrs. Frederick and the trust company, denied that she owed any part of the $4,190 due on the note to Stoll; that the 28% acres of land devised to her by the will ■could be charged with any part thereof, and alleged that she owned the 28% acres of land by virtue of the deed made to her by hew father in his lifetime, and that he had, by mistake and oversight, failed to correct his will; alleged that the bind constituted no part of the estate of Andreas Vogt at his death, and that he had no power to charge i'lio land with the payment of any ¡tart of his debts, and tlial he did not intend to do so. The pleading being’ made up, upon final submission the trial court adjudged that Mrs. Schaefer was liable for one-tliird of the balance due upon the deed to Stoll as trustee, and adjudged a lien against her land- to that amount; and, in the opinion filed by him, he rested his decision upon the provisions of sections, 2068, 4833 and 4835 of the Kentucky Statutes, and upon the opinion of Hazlewood’s Ex’r v. Webster, 82 Ky., 409 (6 R., 376).

It was a rule of the common law that a sale by the testator, subsequent to the making of his will, of land or chattels devised by it, was an ademption or extinguishment of it as a legacy, so that the legatee’s right or claim to it was lost. To change this rule of the common law, section 2068 and 4835 of the Kentucky Statutes were enacted. Section 2068 is as follows: “The conversion, in whole or in part, of money or property, or the proceeds of property devised to one of the testator’s heirs into other property or thing, with or without the assent of the testator, shall not be an *49ademption of the legacy or devise unless the testator so intended; but the devisee shall have and receive the value of such devise unless a contrary intention on the part of the testator appear from the will, or by parol or other evidence.” And section 4835 further provides that “no conveyance or other act subsequent to the execution of a will shall, unless it be an act by which tlig will is revoked as aforesaid, prevent its1 operation with respect to such interest in the estate comprised in the will as the testator may have power to dispose of by will at the time of his death.” There is nothing in either of these sections of the statutes which was intended to prevent the transfer of property previously devised by will during the life of the testator. In the case of Hazelwood’s Ex’r v. Webster, supra, it was decidéd that the mere sale of real estate devised by will diid not create a presumption that the testator intended to revoke the devise, but that the burden of proof was upon the party claiming against the will to show that the testator intended a revocation or ademption of the devise by the will. The case of Duncan’s Trustee v. Clay, 13 Bush, 48, is to the same effect. In that case it was held that a gift to a devisee by the testator after making his will disposing of his entire estate, it not appearing by parol or other evidence that the gift was intended - as a satisfaction in whole or in part of the devise, is not chargeable against the •devisee as an advancement or ademption, in whole or in part, of the devise. Section 4839 of the Kentucky Statutes provides that “a will shall be construed with reference to the real and personal estate comprised in it, to speak and take effect as if it had been executed immediately before the death of the testator, unless a contrary intention shall «appear by the will.” Neither the sections of the statute *50nor llie case relied on have any application to the facts of the case at bar. They would apply if Mrs. Schaefer were contending that the devise to her under the first clause of the will was not revoked by the deed, and she was therefore' entitled to participate with the other devisees to the extent of the value of the estate' disposed of by the will. In this state of case the burden would be upon appellees to allege and prove that by the deed the testator intended to satisfy the devise to 'the appellant.. By the execution and delivery of the deed to Mrs. i&chaefer in 1881), testator parted with all of his interest in the land conveyed, and it was no longer in his power to charge it with the payment of any sums of money, by will or otherwise. These conclusions are fully sustained by the opinion in Marshall v. Rench, 3 Del. Ch., 240, which was a case very much like this. In response to the contention that the will and deed were one, and should be construed together as one instrument, the court, on page 253, said: “A will can operate only on such lands as the testator may hold at his decease, in this case the testator so expressly directed. Afterwards, by these conveyances, the legal effect of which he must be presumed to have understood, he withdrew part of his lands from under the devise, leaving it to apply only to the residue. Nothing but the residue, then, can be included in the petition by force of the will.” And in response to the contention that rhe conveyances should be held to be a satisfaction of the devise in the will, the court, on page 258,-said: “‘The testator and grantor either mistook the legal operation of these conveyances, or through ignorance or inadvertence omitted to make a codicil to his will. But for this there is no remedy. 'Where a party makes just such an instrument as he intends to make, without fraud, surprise, or mistake in fact, an error as to the legal effect *51■of the instrument can not be corrected. After a full con'sideration of the whole subject, I am unable though disposed to. do so, to bring the lands conveyed to the defendant into the partition. This result disappoints the testator’s expectation, and works great inequality among his children, but this is a mischief, far Jess than it would bo to relax rules of law settled upon great consideration for the protection of rights of property. Instances, -like this, or hardship, or even of injustice, are unavoidable. It is tnot possible by any system of jurisprudence to administer exact justice in every case. The best system is that which •affords such rules as will secure justice in the ordinary coarse of human transactions, and to such rules, once settled, it is the duty and the part of wisdom for the court to adhere.”

A Ye therefore conclude that the judgment of the trial ’court can not be sustained upon the theory advanced in the opinion. But counsel for appellees contend that after the death of her father the appellant was put to an equitable election either to take under the will or against'it, and that, as she elected to receive her part of the personal property advanced by the seventh clause of the will, she bound the land previously conveyed to her by her father for the payment of one-tliird of the mortgage, as provided for in the sixth clause of the will. The law is well settled in this State that a person can not claim both under and against a will, and the acceptance by the devisee under a will of a legacy is, by operation of law, an abandonment of all claim to other property devised by the will. But we are amable to perceive how this doctrine can have any application to the case at bar. It is true that appellant accepted her part of the personal estate devised by the third clause of the will, but she claims the land, not under the will, but *52under (he deed. Sections 2084 to 2088 of the Kentucky Statutes, inclusive, provide that a devisee or heir shall be personally liable for the debts of the ancestor to the! extent of assets received; and, by the acceptance of one-tliird of. tire personal estate disposed of in the seventh clause of the will, appellant became liable for the debts of her father to the extent of the personalty so received by her, but the acceptance of this property did not have the effect of making either her .personally-or her estate liable for the debts of the testator beyond the amount of the property so received by her. Whilst there is testimony in this case conducing to show that appellant did not in fact pay the full consideration for the land recited in the deed, there is no charge in the pleadings that the deed of appellant was obtained by fraud or mistake, or any prayer for its cancellation; nor is there any evidence to support the averment that there was an understanding between appellant and testator that she should hold the land for the benefit of the testator during his life, with remainder over for the benefit of his estate. And in our opinion, the doctrine of election does not arise under the facts.

For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instruction to dismiss the. cross proceedings by appellees in so far as they attempt to subject the real estate of appellant to the payment of any part of the mortgage debt due to Stoll as trustee.

Whole court sitting.