95 Ky. 367 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1894
delivered the opinion op the court.
Jeremiah Yewell, in December of the year 1840, executed a deed to his son Algernon S. Yewell, to a tract of land in Daveiss County “for and during his natural life, and the remainder in fee-simple to the children, heirs and legal representatives of the said Sidney, to have and to hold the said tract of land and appurtenances to the said Algernon Sidney Yewell for and during his natural life, and remainder in fee-simple to descend to and belong and appertain to the children, heirs and legal representatives of the said Sidney Yewell at his death as their absolute estate forever.” His son Sidney, at the date of the conveyance, had neither wife nor children, and died childless without ever having had a child born to him. His father died before Sidney, and after the father’s death his brothers and sisters, with á view of vesting in Sidney the fee, granted unto him by a regular conveyance all their right, title and interest, reversionary or otherwise, to this land. John Yewell, one of the brothers of Sidney, died before the latter, leaving children. Sidney, the life tenant, then died, and having sold and conveyed this land to the appellant, the children of John Yewell brought this action to recover their interest' in the land, claiming to have derived title by descent from their grandfather, and that their father had no interest in it. The court below held that us John Yewell died before the life tenant (his brother) his (John’s) children took from or through their grandfather and were entitled to recover as his heirs at law.
Mr. Eearne says the title must remain in the grantor as there is no one to receive it. Where the devisee takes upon a contingency the title is in the heir, says Mr. Kent, subject to be defeated when the devise takes effect. (Kent’s Com., vol. 4, p. 257.)
If a contingent remainder be created in conveyance by way of use the inheritance in the meantime remains in the grantor or his heirs, or descends to the heirs of the testator until the contingency happens. (Kent’s Com., vol. 4, p. 257.) See Herbert’s G’d’n v. Herbert’s Ex’or, 85 Ky., 147.
To a petition for rehearing filed by counsel for appellees, Judge Pryor delivered the following response of the court:
While the court may have failed to understand the theory upon which the recovery was permitted below, still it presented-the real question involved. It is claimed that the title passed out of the grantor at the date of the grant, A. 8. Yewell taking a life estate and the remainder interest being in abeyance waiting for some one to come into existence who could take it. The life tenant had no children, and he could have no heirs, in a legal sense, until his death, and dying without children it is claimed that the title then in abeyance went to the heirs of the life tenant.
It is manifest the remainder went to the children and not to the heirs of the life tenant in the event he had no children. This is the plain purport of the deed — “ remainder in fee-simple to descend to and belong and appertain to the children, heirs and legal representatives of the said Algernon S. Yewell at his death as their absolute estate forever.” The words “ heirs and representatives ” had direct reference to the children of the life tenant, and the language of the conveyance does not in express terms or by fair inference authorize the conclusion that it was the intention of the grantor to pass the fee to the heirs of the life tenant in the event he died without children. It is a plain deed to one for life, remainder to his children, and the contention that the heirs of Algernon took as purchasers, in the event the life tenant died child
Petition overruled.