191 Ky. 710 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1921
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
This action was brought by the appellants, Robert Adams and others, named in the petition as plaintiffs, against the appellee, Robert Bates, seeking to recover of the latter damages for the alleged wrongful cutting and appropriation by him of valuable standing timber on and from a tract of land in Knott county, particularly described in the petition. It is alleged in the petition that •one John B. Adams, then domiciled in Knott county, died
It appears from other averments of the petition that Lucy Craft and Jason Craft, by a joint deed, executed in 1890, sold and conveyed to the appellee, Robert Bates, their joint and several interests in the land described in the petition, that cf Lucy Craft being her dower or life estate therein, and that of Jason Craft the undivided seventh in remainder conveyed him by Margaret Adams. The deed from the Crafts to the appellee Bates also conveyed him whatever right, actual or potential, either of the grantors might have had in the interest of the other in the land. The deed thus executed was accompanied by the delivery to Bates of the possession of the land thereby conveyed. He thereafter purchased of another child and heir at law of John B. Adams, deceased, his undivided one-seventh interest in remainder in the dower land, and received of the vendor a deed therefor. Appellee remained in exclusive possession of the land in question from the date of its conveyance to him in 1890, certainly until the death in 1917 of Lucy Craft, which had the effect to terminate the life estate she conveyed him in the land. Whether he is yet in possession thereof the petition fails to disclose. It does allege, however, that he no'w is the owner in fee simple of an undivided two-sevenths of the land and that the appellants as children and heirs at law Of John B. Adams, deceased, own, by like title the remaining five-sevenths, or, more accurately speaking, an undivided interest of one-seventh each. It also alleges, in substance, that the appellee unlawfully cleared and destroyed timber from much of the land,
The defense interposed by the appellee to the cause of action alleged in the petition was set forth in 'an answer of five paragraphs, the first of which traversed substantially the averments of the petition, except such as alleged the sale and conveyance to appellee' by Lucy Craft and Jason Craft of their respective interests in the land in question, including the remainder interest therein acquired by the latter of Margaret Adams. In the second paragraph it was alleged that the land described in the petition never belonged to John B. Adams, but was a part of a large tract formerly owned by one Robert Hamilton, the father of Lucy Adams, later Lucy Craft, and in the division of Bobert Hamilton’s lands among his heirs at law after hi's death was alloted with another parcel to his son James Hamilton, who, in 1893, sold and conveyed it to the appellee; and that his claim of title to and possession of the land, notwithstanding his previous purchase of the interest of Lucy Craft and that of her daughter Margaret therein, from and since the execution to him of the Hamilton deed, has been under and by virtue of that deed. In the third paragraph divers patents were set forth granting to various persons, assignors or grantors as claimed, of Bobert Hamilton, lands alleged to have embraced, in whole or in part, the tract described in the petition. This paragraph also alleges that the land in controversy had been held in actual possession by appellee under claim of the title conveyed him by the James Hamilton deed, adversely to appellants and all others, for more than fifteen years before the institution of their action, and pleaded the statute of limitations of fifteen years as a bar to the latters’ claim of title thereto, and
The fourth paragraph of the answer admits the cutting by appellee of sixty-five poplar trees on and from the land in question, and alleges that it was done in the necessary clearing of a small part of the land actually required for its reasonable cultivation and improvement, and that the material from trees so cut was necessary for use, and was used, in inclosing the land. In the fifth paragraph it was alleged that the clearing of land and cutting of timber complained of in the petition was done and committed more than five years before the institution of the action, and that any right of action the appellants may have had for the recovery of damages therefor, was and is barred by the statute of limitations of five years, which was formally pleaded.
The appellants filed a general demurrer to the answer and each paragraph thereof and, without waiving their right to insist upon the demurrer, also filed a joint and several reply which, after traversing the affirmative allegations of the ans'wer, substantially avered that all matters pleaded therein in support of appellee’s claim of title to the land in question through James Hamilton and others, alleged to be superior to that conveyed him by Lucy and Jason Craft, and also to that asserted by appellants, were put in issue, litigated and determined in an action brought against him by appellants in the Knott Circuit court to quiet their title as heirs at law of John B. Adams to a remainder interest of five-sevenths then asserted by them in the land, in which action, as also alleged in the reply, every contention as to title now urged by appellee in the case at bar was decided by the judgment of the Knott circuit court against him and in behalf of appellants, and which judgment, as further alleged, declared the appellants the owners in remainder of five-sevenths of the land in controversy, and awarded them their costs expended in the action; moreover, that the appellee prosecuted an appeal from the judgment to the Court of Appeals, and it was by that court' affirmed, all of which occurred before the death of Lucy Craft. The judgment ref erect to was. pleaded in the reply in estoppel of and as a bar to the claim of title to the land attempted to be asserted by appellee in the present action. Following the filing of the reply the case was submitted on the appellants’ demurrer to the appellee’s answer, where
While the petition is in some respects, awkwardly expressed and some of its averments of fact barely sufficient to present the full meaning of the pleader, we have reached the conclusion that, Considered as. a whole, it reasonably well states a cause of action for voluntary waste as allowed by Kentucky Statutes, sections 2328 to 2336, inclusive.
Section 2328 provides:
“If any tenant for life or years shall commit waste during his estate or term, of anything belonging to the tenement so held, without special license in writing, so to do, he shall be' subject to an action for waste-, shall loose the thing wasted, and pay treble the amount at which the waste shall be assessed.”
Section 2329 permits, the bringing of such action by one who has the remainder or reversion in fee simple after an intervening estate for life or years, and also by one Who has a remainder or reversion for life or years, each being entitled to recover such damages as it-shall appear he has suffered by the waste complained of. Section 2330 gives an heir the; right to bring and maintain an action for waste done in the time of his ancestor, as well as in his own time. Section 2332 makes a tenant in common, joint tenant or parcener who commits waste liable to hi-s cotenants, jointly or .severally for damagés, while section 2334 provides:
“If, in any action for waste, the jury find that the waste was wantonly committed, judgment shall be entered for three times the amount of the damages assessed.”
We do not, however, agree with the circuit court that the failure of the petition to allege that the cutting of timber on the land causing the waste complaine.d of occurred within five years before the institution of the action, made it bad on demurrer. It is true the petition does not state when the timber was cut, whether five or twenty years before -suit. Its averments go no farther than to say the cutting Was- done- before the termination of thiei life estate purchased by appellee of Mrs. Craft, and though her death is alleged to have occurred at a date much less than five years next before the institution of the -action no inference can bel drawn from that averment as to when the timber was out or the statute began to run. Besides, we- time and again have held that it is unnecessary for the plaintiff to allege in the petition
It is claimed in the brief of appellants’ counsel that the running’ of thg statute has been obstructed in the case at bar by the.infancy of the appellants, or seme of them, and that by reason thereof the statute was suspended during the time' their disability prevented them from suing. We have failed to find in any of the pleadings an averment or intimation that the appellants or any of them were infants when the waste sued for was committed, and if -such infancy existed or is intended to be relied on it must, like the statute of limitations, be- pleaded. It follows from the conclusions we have expressed that the ruling of the circuit court sustaining the demurrer to the petition was error.
As all claims of title asserted by appellee in his answer to the land involved in this action, except as admitted in the petition, were rejected by the judgment in the previous action between the parties, it is only necessary to refer to the opinion of this court in Bates v. Adams, etc., 182 Ky. 100, to ascertain the rights both of appellants and appellee in the land.. That opinion settles every question of title raised in the case at bar and fixes it in the parties respectively as we have already stated. Hence the circuit court should have sustained appellants ’ demurrer to all of the answer, lexcept the paragraphs pleading the statute of limitations' of five years', the paragraphs putting in issue the quantity of timber cut by ap^pellee, its value to the land as standing trees at the date of the cutting, whether it was; used in fencing the land and such use was reasonably necessary for that purpose, and whether or not appellants had knowledge of and acquiesced in the cutting of the timber when it was done. Upon the return of the case to the court below it should require the pleadings to be so reformed as to properly present the issues as above stated.
For the reasons stated the judgment appealed from is reversed and cause remanded with directions to the cir-