194 Ky. 335 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing
In 1905 W. Pink Dunbar died intestate the owner of and domiciled on a large and valuable tract of land on Green river in Adair county, Kentucky. He was survived by his widow and eight children. The widow departed this life in 1918. Some of the children reside on the farm, others in that vicinity, while yet others live in distant states. This action was commenced shortly after the death of the widow by Mrs. 'Cordia Gabbert, one of the daughters of Dunbar, and her husband, against J. V. Dunbar and the other Dunbar children for a sale of the real property belonging to the estate of W. Pink Dunbar and a distribution of the proceeds among the joint owners according to their interests. It was alleged in the petition that the lands were not susceptible of division- without injury to the interests of the plaintiffs -and the other joint owners, the averment being: “Plain
On this evidence the trial court adjudged the lands indivisible and directed a sale of the whole and a division, of the proceeds according to the interest of the several joint owners. From this judgment the two sons owning three-fourths of the land have appealed.
The law favors a division of land in kind rather than a sale in gross and a division of the proceeds. King v. King, 182 Ky. 665; Kirk v. Crutcher’s Admr., 145 Ky. 52; Prewitt’s Committee v. Hurt, 178 Ky. 528. It is contrary to our public policy to require a landowner to relinquish his title and take the value of his land in money against his will. Moreover, sound public policy favors and encourages the owning of homes by all citizens, and this policy' can be advanced and promoted by division of large tracts of land into small farms of sufficient size and fertility to maintain a family in comfort.
Aside from the evidence it would be hard to believe that a tract of practically eight hundred acres of land, through which there were several roads, could not be advantageously divided among four joint owners. The evidence convinces us that it can be so divided with advantage-to all of them. It is- clear that an eighth of the
Judgment reversed.