120 Ky. 151 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion by
Affirming.
This action was instituted under sec. 490, Civil Code Prac., for the sale of property on the southwest corner of Chestnut and Fourth streets, in the city of Louisville. The property can not he divided without materially impairing its value. It belongs to the estate of L. L. Warren, who died leaving a widow and nine children. Each child took an undivided one-ninth interest, subject to the widow’s dower. The widow is dead, and a daughter died before her mother, leaving her husband, Eugene W. Lee, Sr., and four children, two of whom, Eugene W. Lee and George P. Lee, were infants. W. B. Warren, a son of L. L. Warren, conveyed his one-ninth interest to his mother, Mary A. Warren. Mary A. Warren died intestate, and the one-ninth interest conveyed to her by her son descended to her eight surviving children and her grandchildren, the Lees. One son, Cary I. Warren, conveyed his undivided one-ninth interest to his sister, Ella M. Warren. Eugene W. Lee, Sr., is tenant by the curtesy in one-ninth interest inherited by his wife, and his four children hold the remainder interest. And they each inherited from their grandmother, Mary A. Warren, one-fourth of one-ninth of one-ninth
Sec. 490 of Civil Code of Prac. reads as follows: “ A vested estate in real property jointly owned by two or more persons may be sold by an order of a court of equity, in an action brought by either of them, though the plaintiff 'or defendant be of unsound mind or an infant: (1) If the share of each owner be worth less than one hundred dollars. (2) If the estate be in possession and the property can not be divided without materially impairing its valué, or the value of the plaintiff’s interest therein.”
This court has been called upon frequently to construe the above section of the Code. In the cases of Berry, &c. v. Lewis, &c., 118 Ky., —, 82 S. W., 252, 26 Ky. Law Rep., 530; Liter v. Fishback, 75 S. W., 232, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 260, and Swearingen v. Abbott, &c., 99 Ky., 271, 18 Ky. Law Rep., 184, 35 S. W., 925; and Malone v. Conn, &c., 95 Ky., 93; 15 Ky. Law Rep., 421; 23 S. W., 677 — the court had this section of the Code under consideration. In each of these cases it appeared that there was either a life estate in the property sought to be sold, or that there was a life tenant or tenant by the curtesy of the entire property sought to be sold, and the court held that it could not be sold for one or the other of these reasons, as it was not an estate in possession jointly owned by two or more persons who are in possession thereof. In Dineen v. Hall, 112 Ky., 273, 65 S. W., 445, 66 S. W., 392, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 1615, the court
Our conclusion is that the proceeding under which the appellant, Atherton, made the purchase, is regular, and the court can vest him with the fee-simple title to the property.
The judgment is affirmed.