Reversing.
Subsequently, on February 25, 1930, Debbie Smith and Rufus Smith, her husband, by outright deed conveyed to D.D. Morgan this 38 acre tract, the stated consideration being "exchange of real estate." The description in this deed is a detailed one by metes and bounds, apparently resulting from an accurate survey. No back reference is given in this deed except this "being the same land inherited from the estate of John W. Morgan." This deed is properly signed and acknowledged.
Subsequently, on December 19, 1931, Debbie Smith and Rufus Smith, her husband, executed a third deed conveying the same 38 acre tract, this time the grantees named in the deed being D.D. Morgan and Mary Morgan, his wife, the consideration stated in this deed being "one dollar and other land in hand paid." This deed was properly signed and acknowledged and the back reference given was "being the same land conveyed by John Morgan's heirs and the court to grantor Debbie Morgan in John Morgan's estate herein by deed dated May 8, 1930, and recorded in Deed Book 58, page 167, Perry County Court Clerk's Office."
This is all the information we have in the record *Page 715 to show that Debbie Smith was not of age when she executed deed No. 2, dated February 25, 1930, and that she executed deed No. 3, dated December 19, 1931, on her 21st birthday, as is also stated as a fact in appellants' brief.
The Chancellor dismissed appellants' petition on the ground that they had no interest in the property in question as heirs at law of Mary Morgan and held that Mary Morgan acquired no interest in this property by virtue of the deed executed to D.D. Morgan and Mary Morgan under the deed from Debbie Smith and Rufus Smith, dated December 19, 1931. The Chancellor seems to base his decision on the validity of the bond for deed, dated April 11, 1929, (No. 1), and on the deed of February 25, 1930, (No. 2), and holds that this gives D.D. Morgan complete title, as shown from the following excerpt from his opinion: "The Court finds from the evidence that prior to the execution of this deed (No. 3, dated Dec. 19, 1931) the defendant, D.D. Morgan purchased this land from Debbie Smith and Rufus Smith with his own money and Mary Morgan did not pay any part of the purchase price and that on the 11th day of April, 1929, they executed and delivered to D.D. Morgan a writing which is headed 'Bond for deed from minors when they reach their maturity.' This writing, however, is not a bond for a deed but is a straight out deed of conveyance from Debbie Smith and Rufus Smith to D.D. Morgan for the same land described in the petition and in the deed above referred to of date Dec. 19th, 1931. Then again on February 25th, 1930, Debbie Smith and her husband, Rufus Smith, executed and delivered to D.D. Morgan another deed for the same land and the name of Mary Morgan is not mentioned as grantee in this deed. * * * The court is of the opinion that D.D. Morgan already had the title to this land or the title which Debbie Smith and Rufus Smith possessed on Dec. 19th, 1931, at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed to D.D. Morgan and Mary Morgan, and that this latter deed did not pass any title to Mary Morgan, and the Court is of the opinion that the execution of the latter deed of date Dec. 19th, 1931, was not disaffirmance by Debbie Smith of her former deeds to D.D. Morgan on account of her minority." (Parenthesis ours.) *Page 716
But assuming that she had title to the 38 acre tract when she executed the bond for deed of April 11, 1929, and the deed of February 25, 1930, both deeds, while not void because of her infancy, were clearly voidable upon her becoming of age, a principle of law well settled in Kentucky as elsewhere. Forsee's Adm'x v. Forsee,
Certainly a new deed executed to the same person to whom the other voidable deeds had been made but including his wife in the new one and the acceptance by that person of the new deed with the additional grantee would be a disaffirmance of the old voidable deeds and the affirmance of the new one. Indeed, under the facts in this case the disaffirmance of the old voidable contract and the affirmance of the new one can be sustained on the basis of mutual agreement. "If a new agreement be made, which is inconsistent with the former agreement, so that they cannot subsist together, the old one is impliedly discharged by the new one." Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, 1st Ed., Vol. 3, p. 891. In Warvelle on Vendors, Vol. 2, p. 970, it is said: "One of the most common forms of rescission by mutual agreement consists of what is termed novation; that is the entering into a new contract which takes the place of the original one and in which it is merged and extinguished. If the new contract in express terms rescinds the old one, no question can be asked; yet the same result follows, as a necessary implication, and takes place by operation of law, without any express agreement to that effect, whenever the new contract is manifestly in place of or inconsistent with a former one, or which renders a former contract impossible of performance."
In this case as a sort of binder D.D. Morgan had first secured what he designated as a bond for deed of a minor for Debbie Smith's 1/4 interest in the property. Then to further secure himself he got from her while she was still an infant a deed in due form for the specific 38 acres she was supposed to get from her father's estate at the same time obtaining from her an affidavit that when she became of age she would execute still another deed for the same property, which she later did. How could it be said, with any show of reason, that Morgan acquired title by either of the first two deeds or that the last deed was not a rescission of the old agreements and an affirmance of the new agreement by mutual contract and to carry out the very arrangement he, himself, had made? *Page 718
In the light of other evidence in the case and the surrounding circumstances we do not give great weight to Mr. Morgan's testimony that he did not intend that the name of his wife, Mary Morgan, be placed in the last deed of December 19, 1931. The property had come to her daughter, Debbie Smith, through Mary Morgan's former husband, John Morgan. It was the home place in which she had lived and raised her children. What is more natural than that she should insist that this property be placed partly in her name so that she would have an interest in her home? Nor do we give great weight to his testimony that he did not even know that his wife's name was on the deed. He arranged for the deputy county clerk, Lige Feltner, to draw the deed and come to his home for its execution. Is it reasonable to believe that the clerk would have inserted the name of the wife without Mr. Morgan's suggestion? Furthermore at the same time and place Mr. Morgan had Lige Feltner draw a joint will whereby he and his wife, Mary Morgan, willed this particular property to their only child, Harold B. Morgan. Both Mary and D.D. Morgan executed this will. Was there any reason for Mary Morgan to execute this joint will leaving this property to their only child if Mary had no interest in the property? It is true the will was not probated after Mary's death and it is now too late to probate it as to her, she having died in 1936, and it has no effect on this property now, but it does indicate that D.D. Morgan knew that his wife's name was put in the deed which was executed on the same day as the will. It is also shown by the evidence that Mr. Morgan had this last deed recorded, got the original deed from the clerk's office, has kept it all these years in a leather case in which he keeps his papers about his home and store and has sold off part of this property, at which time this deed would likely be used in drawing the deeds to the property he sold off. Is it reasonable to suppose that all this could have been done without his knowing his wife's name was on the deed even though his eyesight was poor and he is now almost blind, as he testifies? We can accept Mr. Morgan's testimony that his wife Mary did not put any money of her own into this property but that he traded for it other property which he owned and which was in his own name. This does not change our conclusion *Page 719 that she had a joint interest in the property under the deed, since her title and interest in the property may rest on other considerations.
In their answer appellees set up a plea of adverse possession but make no reference to such claim in their brief. Clearly there could be no adverse possession as against his co-owner Mary Morgan, and since her children acquired no interest in the property until after her death in 1936, appellees could claim no title by adverse possession as against them.
Judgment reversed.
