388 S.W.2d 131 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1965
This condemnation case presents questions touching the effect of a prior settlement by the appellant-condemnor with appellee Schmehr (relating to other property than now being condemned). A corollary question arises as to whether appel-lee Goehring should have been precluded from participation in the condemnation proceeds ■ this point involves the assertion that the deed to Goehring was ehampertous.
In 1947 appellee Goehring acquired title to Lot 9. He did not record his deed until 1956. Appellee Goehring said that he supposed he was buying a vacant lot when he acquired Lot 9, and that he did not know that the building occupied by Schmehr was chiefly situated on Lot 9. In fact, Goehring did not gain such knowledge until negotiations were begun to obtain the right of way presently involved.
The appellant Department negotiated with appellee Schmehr for Lots 6, 7 and 8. One of its appraisers offered $24,497.10 to Schmehr, but the offer was declined. The appraiser said that he had considered the entire value of the residence (although he knew that most of it was on Lot 9) when he made the offer. In fact, he testified that he had furnished an appraisal “breakdown” to Schmehr, in which the item for the residence was listed at $3,850. Schmehr denied receiving such “break-down.”
At any rate, the compromise efforts collapsed. Thereupon the Department instituted condemnation proceedings in the Henderson County Court, seeking to acquire all of Lots 6, 7 and 8. Before that action came to trial there was a settlement agreement between the litigants, by the terms of which the Department paid Schmehr $24,497.10 (exactly the amount of the prelitigation appraisal) in return for which Schmehr executed and delivered a deed conveying Lots 6, 7 and 8 to the Department.
The deed to the Department recited a consideration of $24,497.10. After the recitation of the consideration, the granting clause and the description, etc., the following words and figures appear in the deed:
“Of the consideration mentioned above, $24,497.10 is for the value of the property conveyed by this deed, and the balance thereof is for all other damages to the remainder of the grantors’ property.”
The Department argues that this language clearly imports that the Department was buying something else — or at least that it was paying Schmehr for all damages to “the remainder” of his property. Then, it is reasoned that this must be held to mean the damages to the' “remainder” of the house over on Lot 9.
In this the Department is, we believe, in error. In the first place, fairly read, the deed shows that $24,497.10 was all of the consideration, so that there was no “balance thereof” to apply toward compensating “for all other damages to the remainder of the grantors’ property.” (Though it is not particularly pertinent here, it is common knowledge that the impact of capital gains taxes may be different as between resultant damages and the price paid for the land taken; hence, the quoted sentence, “rubber-stamped” into the Department-prepared deed, probably appears as a routine procedure, even though meaningless in this particular transaction.)
The Department insists that even if the parol evidence rule inhibits a showing» that the entire residence was included in the deed from Schmehr, there is such an ambiguity in the deed as will permit parol evidence to show payment for the residence and to describe what was conveyed. We doubt that the deed does contain such an ambiguity; but even if so construed, the short answer to that argument is found in the fact that there was no evidence that the deed was intended to include anything other than Lots 6, 7 and 8.
We do not find it necessary to determine whether the deed to Goehring was cham-pertous by reason of Schmehr’s open adverse possession of Lot 9 when Goehring received the deed. For the purposes of this condemnation proceeding the Department very properly included Goehring and his wife, along with Schmehr, as condemnees, so that the entire title could be acquired. It is shown that as between Goehring and Schmehr an agreement has been reached as to the distribution of the proceeds of the condemnation award. The Department’s concern is that it acquire all of the title for one — and only one — payment of the award; it is of no moment to the Department as to how Schmehr and Goehring divide the award.
We have examined the related arguments presented by appellant, but conclude that all of them fall when it is determined that Schmehr did not convey any of the residence on Lot 9 by the terms of his deed for the other lots.
The judgment is affirmed.