DeHaven v. DeHaven's Administrator

104 Ky. 41 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1898

JUDGE BUKNAM

delivered the opinion oe the court.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Oldham Circuit Court in favor of appellee as administrator with the will annexed of S. E. DeHaven, deceased, awarding him possession of a certain tract of land. Appellee brought his suit in that court for the settlement, distribution, and partition of his testator’s estate, alleging that at his death 5. E. DeHaven owned individually a tract of land in Jefferson county; that for some years before his death his brother, Christopher DeHaven, by permission of the testator, had occupied and used this land, and that he remained in possession after the death of testator until his own death, in 1894; that since his death his widow, Annie DeHaven, and her son-in-law, Chamberlain, and family “had been and are now occupying and using the farm without contract of lease or rent, and have planted the present season,"’ — praying process against them, and that they be required by proper order, to surrender the possession of the land so held not later than January 1, 1895, to plaintiff. Summons issued on this petition, directed to the sheriff of Jefferson county, and was duly executed upon appellant in that county, and, after service of summons upon her, appellant filed this plea to the, jurisdiction of the Oldham Circuit Couurt: “Annie DeHaven, without entering her appearance generally, but only for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of *44the court as to her, states that at the time this action was instituted, and long prior thereto, she was, and has ever since continued to be, and is now, a resident of Jeffersoh county; that the summons against her to answer herein was served upon her in Jefferson county on the -day of May, 1895; that the land in the amended petition referred to, which is in her possession, is held and claimed by her as her own, and was so held and claimed by her at the time and prior to the institution of this action; that said land and every part thereof lies in Jefferson county, and that no part thereof lies in Oldham county. Wherefore she says this honorable court has no jurisdiction over her person, or over the subject of this action, so far as she is concerned, with reference to her, or to the land aforesaid in Jefferson county now held by her; and for this cause she asks that the process against her, and the return thereon, be quashed, and that she be dismissed hence.” To this plea plaintiff filed a general demurrer, which was sustained by the court below, and, appellant declining to plead further, judgment was rendered against her in favor of appellee for the land, and awarding him a writ of possession therefor, and from that judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal.

Sections 65 and 66 of the Civil Code provide that actions to settle the estate of a deceased person, for the distribution of his personal estate, and for the partition of his real estate among his heirs and devisees, or for the sale for payment of his debts of property descended from or devised by him, must be brought in the county in which his personal representative qualified, and the court of such county has jurisdiction to decree a sale or make partition among the heirs or devisees of the land owned by decedent in counties other than that in which the suit *453s pending, and, as a necessary incident of jurisdiction, has authority to issue such writs' as are necessary to put purchasers or those entitled thereto in possession thereof.

See Fishback v. Green, 87 Ky. 107 [7 S. W. 881]; Phalan v. L. S. V. & T. Co., 88 Ky. 24 [10 S.W. 10]; Willis’ Admr. v. Roberts’ Admr., 90 Ky. 122 [13 S. W. 358]; Walker v. Yowell’s Admr., 14 Ky. Law Rep. 829 [21 S. W. 873] and Mechanics’ Trust Co. v. Cobb, 18 Ky. Law Rep. 444 [20 S. W. 391].

It is alleged by appellee that his testator held the legal Title to the land in contest, and was the owner thereof; that by his permission his brother occupied it during his life; and that appellant, as his widow, simply continued in the occupancy of the land after the death of her husband, who died subsequently to testator, and before the institution of his suit. None of these material allegations are ■controverted by appellant, nor does she aver, that she is the owner of the land. ■ The allegation of her answer that it “is held and claimed by her. as her own, and was so held and claimed by her prior to the institution of this action,” is not a sufficient averment of either title or ownership of the land to support a defense to the action, or to divest the Oldham court of jurisdiction herein, and the demurrer was therefore properly sustained; wherefore the judgment is affirmed.

To a petition for a rehearing by the appellant the following response was delivered by the court:

Several points are suggested in the petition for rehearing which were not discussed in the original brief. It is insisted: First, that plaintiff was not vested with either the title or the possession of the land of testator, ’and was therefore not authorized to institute the action; second, that the petition failed to describe the land, as *46required by section 125 of the Civil Code; third, that subsection 2 of section 125 of the Code only requires, in an action for the recovery of land, that the answer of defendant shall state that he claims it, and that, as the answer contained this averment, it presented a complete defense to the action.

Plaintiff was the administrator with the will annexed, and, under the.proA’isions of section 3892 of the Kentucky Statutes, was clothed with all the duties and powers of an executor. By the terms of the will the testator directed that his estate be divided among his four sisters and his brother, and that at the death of either of the principal devisees it should be diA’ided among his nephews and nieces, and that the property deAdsed to his sisters and brother be safely preserved during their lives; so that it should not be squandered or wasted before the right of enjoyment accrued to his nephews and nieces. Testator further provided that his lands were not to be sold during the lifetime of any of his sisters or his brother, but that it might be sold by his executor for the purpose of division among his nephews and nieces. The chancellor held that the executor' was entitled to hold possession of the real and personal property, and to pay over to each of the devisees the income upon their respective shares, and this construction of the will was not objected to by any of the parties in interest. Besides, under the provisions of section 92 of the Civil Code, to enable appellant to take advantage of the fact that idaintiff had not legal capacity to sue, or that there was a defect of parties plaintiff or defendant, it was necessary that he should have filed a special demurrer on that ground, and by failing to do so this objection is waived, and can not be taken advantage of in this court.

*47In response to the second objection of appellant, it maybe observed that the original petition, after asserting claim to the tracts of land held by appellant and others, recites that “a description of all said tracts of land, by metes and bounds and courses and distances, will be found herewith, marked ‘Exhibit X,’ which is made a part of the petition.” The transcript of the record brought to this court does not contain this exhibit, but, as the judgment appealed from describes the land in possession of appellant by metes and bound and courses and distances, -we think the presumption must be indulged that it was made up from Exhibit X. It was not incumbent upon appellant that her answer should set up her title fully and in detail, but it was essential that it should have put in issue the affirmative allegations of the petition, which alleged title in plaintiff’s intestate, and that defendant occupied the land only by permission.

Section 62 of the Civil Code provides that actions must be brought in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated, for the partition of real estate, except as provided in section 66, which requires actions for the partition of real estate of a deceased person to be brought in the county in which his personal representative qualified; and, in order to divest the Old-ham court of jurisdiction, it was necessary that appellant should have put in issue the averments of the petition which gave that court its jurisdiction. For these reasons the petition for rehearing is overruled.