198 Ky. 25 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
In April, 1899, Mollie Carrier and tlie heirs of her body, being several children, became the owners of a tract of farming land in Garrard county, containing 119 acres, she taking a life estate and the children a fee in remainder. W. S. Carrier is the husband of Mollie Carrier and the father of her children. In November, 1917, Mollie Carrier and her husband, W. S. Carrier, as plaintiffs, instituted an _ action in the Garrard circuit court against their five infant children for a sale of the said farm for reinvestment of the proceeds in other real property on the alleged ground that the said farm lay in an out of the way part of the county and a long distance from the home of the Carriers and was not for said reasons a productive investment. The suit was prosecuted to judgment and a sale of the land ordered. The land brought something more than $5,000.00, which sum the court directed to be reinvested in real property for the use and benefit of Mollie Carrier and the heirs of her body in the "same manner the farm was held. W. S. Carrier, owned a tract of about four (4) acres of land with a house on it in the city of Lancaster, which he de
The court adjudged A. W. Kavanaugh the holder of the fee simple title to the land and adjudged that the $5,500.00 owing by Kavanaugh be paid, with six per cent interest, into court, and it was adjudged that the said sum, when so paid into court, be reinvested in other real property under the orders of the court. The court adjudged that the infants have no interest whatever in the land sold to Kavanaugh and no interest in the fund derived from its sale, except in the $5,500.00 and interest owing by the said Kavanaugh, which was ordered to be and was paid into court.
If Kavanaugh was an innocent purchaser of the land he took a perfect titlelo the same even against the infants. 22 Cyc. p. 528; Hardin v. Harrington, 11 Bush 367. He was an innocent purchaser because there was no deed or other title paper of record showing that the title to said property had passed from Carrier to anyone else and he had no information of any kind concerning the sale by
■ “No deed or deed of trust or mortgage conveying a legal or equitable title to real or personal estate shall he valid against a purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice thereof, or against creditors, until such deed or mortgage shall he acknowledged or proved according to law and lodged for record.”
The proceedings in the equity action for the sale of the farm belonging to Mollie Carrier and her children did not afford Kavanaugh, who later came on the scene, reasonable opportunity of knowing of the equity of the infants in the said town property and he did not in fact know thereof. There was no lis pendens notice filed in the office of the county clerk. Mrs. Carrier who received the $5,500.00 paid by Kavanaugh to Carrier at the time of the purchase of the land, had spent the said sum and was unable to restore it. She had, therefore, largely exhausted her interest in the fund.
The infant children are entitled to have the $5,500.00 and interest paid in by Kavanaugh reinvested in real property, to he held by them and their mother as was the original property, with the mother’s interest reduced by the amount actually received by her from Kavanaugh.
Upon the whole the judgment of the chancellor seems ■to he substantially correct, and is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.