McClure v. Crume

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Nunn —

• Reversing,

*746The judgment appealed from is for the sale of real estate in Kentucky and the investment of the proceeds in real estate in Minneapolis, Minn. This action was brought by appellee, George P. Crume, who is the owner of a life estate in the land, against appellants Martha L. McClure, Josie A. Lloyd, and Letitia McClure, the owners in being in remainder. Two questions are presented: First. Has the owner of the particular estate in real property the right to have a sale for the purpose of reinvesting the proceeds in other real estate against the will and consent of the present owners in remainder, they being adults? Second. If the power is vested in a court of chancery to decree a sale for the purpose of reinvestment at the instance of the owner of the particular estate, can the proceeds be invested in a foreign state?

The life estate of appellee, as well as the remainder interests of appellants, was acquired under the will of Nancy J. Foxworthy, which was probated in the county court of the county in which the land is situated. By the first clause of her will she devised the property to her husband, T. S. Foxworthy, for and during his natural life. After the termination of T. S. Foxworthy's life estate, she disposed of the property by the second and third clauses of her will, which are as follows:

“2nd. At the death of my said husband same to pass to my nephew, George P. Crume, for life, remainder to his living issue in fee.
“3rd. Should George P. Crume die without issue surviving him, or should he have surviving issue, but all such issue should die before arriving at the age of twenty-one years, then said estate shall pass in fee, to Martha L. McClure, James Crume, Josie A. Crume and Letitia Crume, share and share *747alike; should any one die without issue before the happening of said event the survivor to take the whole estate; my intention being’ that my said, nephew and nieces shall enjoy said estate in default of living children or grandchildren of said George P. Crume; but the estate of each child not to be indefeasible on the arrival at the age of twenty-one years.”

T. ' S. Foxworthy died before the institution of ■ this action, and'appellee, George P. Crume, came into possession of his life estate, as provided in the second clause of the will. He has been married four years, is 39 years of age, and his wife 34. He has always been and is- now without issue. Therefore there is not now nor has there ever been any person to take in remainder under the second clause of the will. James Crume, mentioned in the third clause of the will, died without' issue, and his sisters, appellants, took whatever interest he had in the land, and they as well as appellee, are all adults. The sale in this action was sought and ordered by the lower court under section 491 of the Civil Code of Practice, which is as follows: “In an equitable action by the owner of the particular estate or freehold in possession or by his guardian or committee if he be an infant or of unsound mind, against the owner of the reversion or 'remainder, though he be an infant or of unsound mind, and against-the owner of the particular estate if he be an infant or of unsound mind; or, if the remainder be contingent, against the person if in being, in whom it would have vested if the contingency had happened before commencement of the action, though he'be an infant or of unsound mind, and against the owner of the particular estate if he be an infant or of unsound mind — real property may be sold for in*748vestment of the proceeds in other real property.” The other sections of the Code authorizing the sale of real property have no application to a case like the one at bar. If section 491 of the Code did not authorize the court of chancery to make a sale of this property, then the sale was void. In the case of Liter v. Fishback, 75 S. W. 232, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 260, this court said:

“The law is well settled in this state that the powers of courts of equity to sell and reinvest infants’ real estate are not inherent, but statutory (here citing many cases); that the jurisdiction of the chancellor to sell infants’ real estate is derived solely from the Code or statutes, and any other mode is void, and passes no title. * * * The statutes regulating proceedings of this kind are clear and explicit. They are designed for the protection of the class of persons who are unable to protect themselves, and, unless rigidly adhered to by the courts, the persons who are the peculiar objects of the chancellor’s care will constantly be made the victims of injustice and wrong.” In the case of Hess v. Deppen, etc., 125 Ky. 430, 101 S. W. 363, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 16, this court said; “The rule is elementary that in a judicial sale the court is the vendor and that in selling it acts as the agent of the defendant, compelling him to do what it determines he ought to have done. In making a judicial sale the court does not act as the agent of the plaintiff. The court acts by authority of the law of the land, and the plaintiff is in no sense his principal.”

Under section 491 of the Code a court of chancery can act only as the agent of infants or of persons under disability. It cannot act for adults who are not under disability. In the ease at bar none of *749the persons in being who have any interest in the property sought to be sold are under disability, and under the section- of the Code referred to the court did not have authority to decree a sale of it. The language used in section 491 of the Code seems to authorize a court to act as agent for adults and decree a sale when, in its judgment, it is to the interest of the parties. This court, however, in the case of Gossom, etc., v. McPerran, 79 Ky. 236, determined this question against a sale under such circumstances, and said: “The only question we will consider is whether section 491 of the Civil Code, in so far as it authorizes the sale of the property of an adult, not under the disability of infancy, and not of unsound mind, is unconstitutional. After a careful consideration and full investigation, we have concluded that the section referred to and to the extent indicated is unconstitutional. It operates in effect to take the property of one individual and transfer it to another, when neither is under such disability as to require the guardianship of the court. Where any of the citizens are incapacitated to act for themselves, it be- ^ comes the duty of the state to protect their interests, and it is upon this idea and for this reason that jurisdiction had been conferred upon the courts to sell and reinvest the proceeds of property belonging to such persons when in the judgment of the court it is to their interest. The court acts and consents for them because they cannot act and consent for themselves. But, so long as the citizen is under no legal disability to act for himself in the management of his property, he is protected by the Constitution from interference on the part of the state, whether that interference comes directly by legislative act, operating *750immediately upon the property, or intermediately through the courts.”

Under the authorities cited, we are of the opinion that the lower court was without power or authority to decree a sale in the case at bar, as all the parties in interest in being were under no disability whatever and needed not the agency of the chancellor. This may appear to be a hardship upon appellee, but it results from the fact that neither the will of Mrs. Foxworthy nor the law authorizes the sale.

Having answered the first question in the negative, we deem it unnecessary to determine the second.

For these reasons, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.