115 Ky. 639 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion of ti-ik cotntr by
Affirming.
John I. Jacob, by Ms last will and testament, devised to his son, Charles D. Jacob, a large estate in fee simple, and also real estate in , the city of Louisville, Ky., worth the sum of $30,000, in trust to him for life, with remainder to his children living at the time of his death. At the time of the death of his father, Charles D. Jacob was an infant, and Ms guardian, in order to improve his trust estate, instituted an action in the Louisville chancery court, and therein obtained a decree authorizing the -sale of a portion of his ward’s fee-simple estate, and the right to invest the
Under the deed from Charles D. Jacob, W. Y. Davis took such estate as the grantor had power to dispose of, which was a life estate. The life tenant’s holding is not adverse to the remaindermen, but, on the contrary, is amicable to them; the possession of the life tenant being the possession of the remaindermen. At common law a remainder could not be created without a particular estate to support it, the reason being that an estate of freehold of inheritance could not be created without livery of seisin or delivery of possession; and therefore it was necessary that there should be a tenant of the particular estate to whom livery of seisin could be made, the possession of the tenant of the particular estate being the possession of the remainderman. That the life tenant does not hold adversely to the remainder-man is so elementary as hardly to need citation of author
As the interest of the remaindermen was subject to mortgage appellant had constructive notice of the existence of appellee’s lien from the time of the recording in the county clerk’s office. Undoubtedly, the general rule is that a pendente lite purchaser is bound by the judgment rendered in the case pending at the time of purchase; but this rule is subject to this modification: that the right of the purchaser is subservient only to the cause of action pending at the time of his purchase, and is not affected by a cause of action set up subsequent to his purchase. Van Fleet, in his. work on Former Adjudication, vol. 2, section 586, p. 1116, declares the rule as follows: “A lis pendens purchaser is not affected by a decree made on new matter incorporated into the bill by way of amendment after his purchase.” See, also, Freeman on Judgments, Sections 199 to 202, inclusive. In the case of Stone & Warren v. Connelly, 1 Metc. (Ky.), 652, 71 Am. Dec., 499, in discussing the precise question involved here, it was said, in the opinion: “It is argued on the part of the appellants that a lis pendens was created by the filing of the original petition and the service of the process thereon; and that, as the object of the action, from its commencement to its conclu
The judgment obtained in this action was not based upon the ground for equitable relief set up by appellant in his action' against the remaindermen; on the contrary, this court decided adversely to him on the issues raised by his pleadings. It is true that the court in the opinion said that if, when the case went back to the lower court, it could be shown that the trust estate of the remaindermen was in statu quo (that is, that it remained intact with its natural advancement in value), then, in that case, a judgment quieting the title might be rendered; but this state of facts was never set up by amended pleading, nor was it attempted to be shown by the evidence. Instead of doing-this, appellants purchased the interest of the remainder-men by the payment of money, and the agreed judgment entered in pursuance of this contract was, in effect, nothing more than the purchase of a quitclaim deed from them. This newly purchased title to the land of the remaindermen can not be allowed to relate back as so to defeat the claim of appellee acquired years before.
We think the chancellor adopted the correct basis in estimating the value of the interest of Mrs. Caldwell. Appellee could not acquire a greater interest than Ms mortgagor, and as the parties, by their own agreement, fixed the value of the interest of both the remaindermen at $1,000, Mrs. Caldwell’s interest was justly placed at $500. It does not alter the status of matters to show that Mrs. Caldwell actually got the whole sum of $1,000 paid for the
Wherefore the judgment of the chancellor, both upon the original and cross appeals, is affirmed.