185 S.W.2d 949 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1945
Reversing.
Wallace E. Crady and Catherine M. Crady were husband and wife in 1922 when an improved lot in Louisville, Kentucky, was conveyed to them during their joint lives as tenants in common, with remainder in fee to the survivor. On May 5, 1926, Wallace E. Crady, through an intermediary, conveyed his interest in the property to his wife, thus vesting her with the fee-simple title. On October 13, 1936, Catherine M. Crady instituted an action for divorce in the Jefferson circuit court, and on November 25, 1936, a judgment was rendered granting the plaintiff a divorce from the defendant, Wallace E. Crady. The judgment, pursuant to section 425 of the Civil Code of Practice, contained an order restoring any property not disposed of at the commencement of the action which either party may have obtained, directly or indirectly, from the other during marriage, in consideration or by reason thereof. The plaintiff in the divorce proceeding asked for no alimony, and the defendant made no defense to the action. They had occupied as a residence the property conveyed to Mrs. Crady in 1926, and she continued to occupy it after the divorce. Mrs. Crady died intestate December 16, 1942, and on January 27, 1943, Wallace E. Crady filed this action against her heirs and the administrator of her estate. In his petition he set out the facts concerning the marriage and the divorce and the manner in which Mrs. Crady acquired title to the property conveyed to her on May 5, 1926. He alleged that the judgment granting her an absolute divorce was in full force and effect, and that she had never complied with the provision of the judgment that each party to the action should restore to the other all property received from the other not disposed of before the commencement of the action. He alleged that, by virtue of the judgment in the divorce action and the death of Catherine M. Crady, he was the owner in fee of the property in question, and he asked that he be so adjudged and that the defendants be compelled to execute a deed in compliance with the judgment in the divorce action restoring the title to the property to the plaintiff. A demurrer to the petition was overruled, and the defendants filed an answer which was in seven paragraphs. The first paragraph admitted certain facts alleged in the petition and denied all others. Paragraph 2 was a plea of laches based on the plaintiff's failure to bring an action for restoration of *463
the property during Catherine M. Crady's lifetime. Paragraph 3 pleaded in bar of plaintiff's cause of action section
The chancellor filed a written opinion giving his reasons for the ruling, and it is obvious that he was influenced by the allegations of the answer, particularly of paragraph 2. He stated in his opinion that the facts constituting laches appear in the petition but we are unable to concur in this view. The petition discloses that appellant purchased the property here involved in 1922, and that he vested his wife with the legal title in 1926. In 1936 Mrs. Crady obtained a judgment granting her an absolute divorce. The judgment provided that each party restore to the other all property received from the other not disposed of at the commencement of the action. Six years later Mrs. Crady died without having complied with the order, and Wallace E. Crady immediately brought this action for restoration of the property conveyed to his wife during their marriage. In this jurisdiction the defense of limitations cannot, as a general rule, be raised by demurrer but must be pleaded. Gabbard v. Gabbard,
The petition in the instant case merely shows a delay *465 in bringing an action to enforce the provision of the divorce judgment concerning property rights, but as to who was at fault in this respect or whether the delay worked to the disadvantage of the defendants to such a degree as to constitute laches should not be determined on the bare statements contained in the petition; the circumstances, if any, operating to destroy the plaintiff's right of action, should be brought forward by way of defense.
We express no views on the questions raised by the demurrers to various paragraphs of the answer, since they have not been passed upon by the lower court.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer to the petition.