Alexander v. Prescott's Exor.
Alexander v. Prescott's Exor.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Mfery E. Prescott, a resident of Bourbon County, died in 1908 testate. Sbe left no children, but was survived by her husband, the appellee, J. W. Prescott. Her will, including its five codicils, was duly admitted to- probate' in the Bourbon County Court, and the husband, named therein as executor, duly qualified as such.
The testatrix a-t the time of her marriage with J. W. Prescott, which occurred in 1875, was a widow, her first husband, John G-rimes, having died about 1870. At the time of her last marriage she owned, in addition to a considerable personal estate, two hundred and sixty acres of land in fee, and dower of two hundred acres in a tract of land of which the first husband was the owner at the time of his death. In 1880, five years after her second marriage, Mrs. Prescott, by deed, conveyed to her husband, J. W. Prescott, the two hundred and sixty acre tract of land of which she was the owner in her own right; the deed, however, reserved to her a right to revoke the conveyance, but the right was never exercised. On the contrary, the gift was confirmed by. her will.
The will, in addition to providing for the payment of the testatix’ debts and making provision for the husband, contains various legacies to her nephews and nieces. Among the legatees appear the names- of Nathan Bayless, Jr., Nathan Bowles, John Bowles, Thom
After the will'had been probated by the county court, Nathan Bayless, Jr., by an appeal from the judgment of probate to the circuit court, entered upon a contest to break' and set it aside, in which, it appears, he was joined by the Bowles and perhaps other legatees. The appellants, Mary E. Alexander and Hannah A.' Butler, took no part in the contest, but were made apellees in the circuit court. Before a trial of the contest in the circuit court was had Nathan Bayless, Jr., died, leaving as his only heir an infant daughter; Silas Bedford was thereupon appointed and qualified as administrator' of his estate and guardian of his infant daughter, and the proceeding in the matter of the contest over the will having been revived, and he made a party appellant, both as administrator and guardian, he and the Bowles proceeded with the prosecution of the contest.
At this juncture, Nathan Bayless, Sr.; a cousin of Nathan Bayless, Jr., and also related in about the same degree to all the nephews and nieces of the testatrix Mary E. Prescott provided for by her will, took it upon himself to bring about a settlement of the contest over the will; and to this end he held conferences with all the parties. He first obtained of the contestants in the will case, an agreement on their part to dismiss the contest and permit a judgment to be entered in the circuit court sustaining the will, if the executor, J. "W. Prescott, would pay the Bowles, administrator of Nathan Bayless, Jr., and guardian of the latter’s infant daughter, $7,-000 in satisfaction of their claims under the will of Mary E. Prescott. After repeated interviews between Nathan Bayless, Sr., and J. W. Prescott, the executor, the latter agreed to settle the case upon the basis proposed by the
“This agreement made and entered into March 9, 1910, by and between J. W. Prescott and J. W. Prescott, executor of Mary E. Prescott, of the first part, and Hannah A. Butler and Mary E. Alexander and the undersigned legatees and devisees under the will of Mary E. Prescott, witnesseth: Whereas a suit is pending in the Bourbon Circuit Court under the style of Bayless v. Prescott, to break the will of Mary E. Prescott; and whereas the said J. W. Prescott is about to enter into and carry out a compromise with the contestants in said action; and whereas the undersigned are interested in avoiding the delay which will result from litigation over the will. Now in consideration of the premises and one dollar, and to induce J. W. Prescott to enter into and carry out said compromise, the undersigned, Hannah A. Butler and Mary E. Alexander agree and' bind themselves unto the said J. W. Prescott that if the said J. W. Prescott will enter into and carry out said compromise of the suit of Bayless v. Prescott in the Bourbon Circuit Court, and cause said action to be dismissed, that the undersigned, Hannah A. Butler and Mary E. Alexander, will never institute or prosecute any suit to break the will, or to set aside the deeds from Mary E. Prescott to J. W. Prescott. It is agreed by the parties hereto that the will of Mary E. Prescott shall be carried out as though no suit had ever been brought to break the will. Witness the hands of the parties the day and year first above written.
“Ma.ry E. Alexander,
“Hannah A. Butler,
“J. W. Prescott, Exor.,
“J. W. Prescott.”
The petition set forth the provisions- of the will, its various legacies, the personal estate received by the executor, the debts against the estate paid by him, alleged that the amount left in his hands was not sufficient to pay the legacies in full, and asked a reference of the cause to a commissioner for the settlement of his accounts.
The appellants, Mary E. Alexander and Hannah A. Butler by answer, which was made a counterclaim, controverted such of the averments of the petition as pleaded an insufficiency of assets to pay the legacies in full; and in addition alleged that they were induced to execute the writing delivered by them to appellee, through Nathan-Bayless, Sr., upon his (appellee’s) representation and promise that they should at once be paid in full the $2,000 legacy bequeathed each of them by the will of Mary E. Prescott, and $1,000 each in addition, which he, after the execution of the will and before the death of the testatrix had, in writing, promised her to pay them.
As evidence of their right to the additional $1,000 each, appellants made a part of their answer and counterclaim the following writing:
“Mr. J. W. Prescott,
“My dear Husband:
“Bemember that I have told you to give Mary E. Alexander and Mary A. Butler one thousand dollars ($1,000) apiece whenever you sell your two hundred and sixty-four acres of land, or at your death, if you do not
“December 29th, 1896.
“Mart E. Prescott.
“The undersigned holds the original paper, of which this is a true copy, and I hereby promise to fulfill the above request of my wife, Mary E. Prescott.
“J. W. Prescott, Exr.
“Witness: E. M. Costello.”
It was further averred in the answer and counterclaim, that the original of the above writing was in appellee ’s possession; and that the agreement of the latter to pay them at once the $1,000 each, and the legacy of $2,000 each, bequeathed them by the will of Mary E. Prescott, was by mistake on the part of Nathan Bayless, Sr., draftsman of the writing by which appellants consented to the compromise of the case involving the contest as to the will, omitted therefrom, which mistake was not known to appellants when or before they signed the writing. Appellants filed an amended answer and counterclaim, wherein it was alleged, that appellee, after the institution of, the action, sold the two hundred and sixty acres of land which had been conveyed him by his wife, and that a part of the purchase money had not been paid him. The purchaser was made a party to the action and process of garnishment served on him for an amount sufficient to pay appellants’ claims.
By further responsive pleadings filed by the parties, the issues between them were completed; and following the taking of proof by the commissioner, the filing of his report and the submission of the case upon exceptions thereto and upon the merits, judgment was rendered by the circuit court whereby appellants recovered of appellee, on the obligation imposed upon him by the writing between him and Mary E. Prescott, $1,000 each, to be paid by the garnishee out of the unpaid purchase money owing by him to appellee upon the land bought of him. With respect to the legacies of $2,000 each, claimed by appellants, the judgment expresses the following con-i elusion:
“While the court is of the opinion the evidence shows the plaintiff, J. W. Prescott, agreed to pay the defendants, Mary E. Alexander and Hannah A. Butler, their legacies of $2,000 each, immediately and without
Appellants complain of so much of the judgment as refused them recovery of the full amount of the legacies claimed, viz.: $2,000 each, hence this appeal.
The record manifests no error in the judgment. There can be no doubt from the evidence that appellee, in order to procure appellants’ signatures to the writing prepared by Nathan Bayless, Sr., intended to and did obligate himself to pay them at once the $1,000 each for which they obtained judgment against him. But each of these amounts was an individual indebtedness growing out of an obligation imposed by his wife, the testatrix, and which he voluntarily assumed. This he confessed to Nathan Bayless, Sr., and also to appellants to whom he furnished a copy of the writing signed by himself and wife, soon after the contest over the will was instituted and before they were asked or expected to sign the' paper prepared by Bayless. It is true the obligation as to the $1,000 agreed to be paid each of the appellants, was not by its terms or meaning, payable until appellee sold the land his wife had conveyed him, or, in case he did not sell it, until his death; but there was nothing in it which forbade his paying it sooner. But if no promise of early payment had been made by him, the sale he made of the land, to which the attention of the court was called by appellants ’ amended answer and counterclaim, caused the obligation to mature and entitled appellants to the judgment rendered in favor of each of them for the $1,000.
Bayless at no time testified that appellee said he would pay the legacies out of his own estate, or that he would, as an individual, make himself liable for them. His only liability for the legacies, therefore, was as executor and such liability went no further than to bind him to the extent of the assets in his hands as executor. If such assets were not sufficient to pay all the legacies in full, it only remained for him to pay them pro rata, and this the judgment requires him to do.
It may, therefore, be conceded, for the purposes of this decision, that appellants have sustained their contention that appellee promised immediate payment of their legacies, as well as the $1,000 claimed by them;
The record furnishes sonle reason for appellee’s delaying the payment of appellants ’ legacies. In addition to other debts, he was compelled to satisfy a judgment, amounting, interest and costs, to more than $4,000, which the heirs of Mary E. Prescott’s first husband recovered of him as executor for waste committed by her to the dower lands. This, and other debts paid out of the estate of the testatrix, together with the costs of administration, so reduced the assets as to make it impossible for the executor to pay all the legacies of the will in full; and if the court had required him to pay the legacies of appellants in full, the judgment would have been a preference and unjust to the other legatees.
Being of opinion that the judgment appealed from properly determined the rights of the parties, it is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.