Cambron v. Pottinger

Citation219 S.W.2d 401,310 Ky. 70
PartiesCAMBRON v. POTTINGER et al.
Decision Date03 December 1948
CourtKentucky Court of Appeals

Rehearing Denied April 29, 1949.

Appeal from Circuit Court, Union County; M. L. Blackwell, Judge.

Action by George L. Pottinger and others as heirs of Mrs. W. T Wathen, deceased, and L. P. Clements, administrator with the will annexed of Mrs. W. T. Wathen, deceased, against the heirs of W. T. Wathen, deceased, for the sale of realty, and for interpretation of will of W. T. Wathen, deceased, deeds and contracts, and other relief, consolidated with action by Joseph W. Cambron against the heirs of Mrs. W. T. Wathen deceased, L. P. Clements, administrator with the will annexed of W. T. Wathen, deceased, and others for cancellation of deed, construction of will of W. T. Wathen, deceased, and other relief, wherein the majority of the heirs of W. T Wathen, deceased, intervened. From an order denying motion of Joseph W. Cambron for allowance of an attorney's fee, Joseph W. Cambron appeals.

Affirmed.

See also 310 Ky. 768, 193 S.W.2d 412.

Jos. W. Cambron, of Louisville, for appellant.

Harris & Drury, of Morganfield, for appellees.

REES Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of the Union Circuit Court denying the appellant, Joseph W. Cambron, a fee for services claimed to have been rendered by him in certain litigation involving the settlement of the estate of his great-uncle, W. T. Wathen, deceased. Appellant has filed a brief, two additional briefs, and two reply briefs. It is his contention that he performed services beneficial to the estate and, therefore, is entitled to a fee to be charged against the general fund.

A proper understanding of the issue requires a brief history of the case. W. T. Wathen, when about 62 years of age, married Miss Mayme Pottinger. They had no children, and on March 3 1941, when he was 81 years of age, all of his real estate, consisting of a 281-acre farm in Union County and a house and lot in Morganfield, was conveyed to a trustee who immediately conveyed it to Mr. and Mrs. Wathen to be held by them as joint tenants, and upon the death of one the whole was to go to the other for his or her natural life and upon the death of the survivor one-half of the property was to go to the heirs of Mr. Wathen and one-half to the heirs of Mrs. Wathen. By a writing executed on the same day, a like disposition was made of Mr. Wathen's personal property. On February 16, 1934, Mr. Wathen executed a will which gave all of his property, real and personal, to his wife for life, and at her death, after the payment of a specific bequest of $1,000 to St. Anne's Church, one-half of the remainder to his heirs and one-half to the heirs of his wife. He had purchased a lot in Morganfield subsequent to the execution of the deed on March 3, 1931. W. T. Wathen died in 1935, and a contest of the will was instituted by some of the Wathen heirs, but the will was sustained by a jury verdict. Mrs. Wathen died in 1944, leaving a will substantially the same as her deceased husband's will, and L. P. Clements qualified as the administrator with the will annexed of her estate. L. P. Clements had qualified and was acting as the administrator with the will annexed of W. T. Wathen's estate. Mrs. Wathen left four heirs; a sister, two nephews, and a niece. Mr. Wathen left more than sixty heirs, consisting of nephews, nieces, great-nephews, and greatnieces, many of whom were nonresidents of Kentucky. On March 29, 1945, the four Pottinger heirs and L. P. Clements, administrator with the will annexed of the two decedents, brought an action for the sale of the real estate on the ground of indivisibility, for an interpretation of the will, deeds, and contracts referred to in the petition, and a determination of the heirs and the respective shares to which they were entitled. The W. T. Wathen heirs were named defendants. On April 25, 1945, Joseph W. Cambron, the appellant herein, brought an independent action in which he asked that the deed of March 3, 1931, be canceled; that the will of W. T. Wathen be construed; that the Wathen heirs be adjudged the owners of all the property, real and personal; and that the heirs of Mrs. Wathen be adjudged to have no interest in the estate of W. T. Wathen. He named as defendants the four heirs of Mrs. Wathen, L. P. Clements, administrator with the will annexed of W. T. Wathen, deceased, and Rt. Rev. John A. Floersch, Bishop of the Louisville Diocese of the Roman Catholic Church. He named as plaintiff 'Joseph W. Cambron, who sues for himself as an heir and individually, and for the use and benefit of all other individuals or heirs who are similarly situated.' The court, apparently on its own motion, consolidated this action with the pending action filed by Mrs. Wathen's heirs and the administrator. On September 13, 1945, an intervening petition was filed by a large majority of the W. T. Wathen heirs in which the intervenors, in effect, adopted the allegations of the petition of Mrs. Wathen's heirs, and asked that the property be sold and the proceeds divided among the two sets of heirs. The intervenors were represented by King & Fluornoy, a firm of attorneys in Morganfield. The administrator and the heirs of Mrs. Wathen were represented by...

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9 cases
  • Raisor v. Burkett
    • United States
    • Kentucky Court of Appeals
    • 21 Julio 2006
    ...attorney was entitled to fees from the heirs for his work that resulted in eventual order of distribution of the estate. In Cambron v. Pottinger, 219 S.W.2d 401, 204 [403] (Ky.[] 1948), the Court held KRS 412.070 applies where parties have a common interest and a suit is brought for their c......
  • Estate of McCoy v. Commissioner
    • United States
    • U.S. Tax Court
    • 21 Febrero 1961
    ...the general fund where other parties on the same side are represented by their own attorneys in the same litigation. Cambron v. Pottinger, 310 Ky. 70, 219 S. W. 2d 401; Collins v. Hudson's Adm'x, 282 Ky. 810, 820, 140 S. W. 2d 365, Our attention has not been called to any Kentucky cases whe......
  • Johnson v. Johnson, True & Guarnieri, LLP, No. 2008-CA-000653-MR (Ky. App. 2/5/2010)
    • United States
    • Kentucky Court of Appeals
    • 5 Febrero 2010
    ...by attorneys for the estate, the JTG Law Firm was foreclosed from claiming a fee in equity against the fund. See Cambron v. Pottinger, 310 Ky. 70, 219 S.W.2d 401, 402-403 (1949) ("The rule is firmly established in this jurisdiction that the court will not allow attorney fees to one party to......
  • Cambron v. Pottinger
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court — District of Kentucky
    • 29 Abril 1949
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