81 Ky. 16 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action .in the nature of an ejectment seeking the recovery of a tract of land in Garrard county by' Francis and wife against Rice G. Wood and others. The plaintiffs, who are appellants in this court, claim to have derived title through Thomas Kennedy, jr., who died in the year 1840, and who was the father of Mrs, Francis, she being the only child, and inheriting her father’s estate. The action was instituted in the year 1874, mofe than thirty years after the estate descended to Mrs. Francis. It is insisted, however, that the statute of limitation has not been pleaded, and that the land sued for was the dower estate of the wife of Thomas Kennedy, the mother of the appellant, and that no cause of action accrued to the appellant until the termination of the life estate.
It is plain, if this was the only fact in the case affecting the cause of action, that the right of entry must exist in the one in remainder or reversion before the statute can begin to run. Ordinarily, an adverse possession during the continuance of the particular estate will not affect the one in remainder; but we do not understand that this is the question upon which the right of recovery was' denied, or the demurrer to appellants’ petition sustained. At the time of the death of the ancestor of the appellant, Mrs. Francis, he had sold or exchanged a large tract of land, including the
Bridges sold the land to the appellee, Wood, and, shortly after the dower was allotted, the widow sold the dower to Wood also, and he was in possession, except some small portions that he had sold, at the institution of the action. The conveyance was made to Bridges by the, commissioner in the year 1842, and the judgment and proceedings under it by which he acquired title remains unreversed. The appellant cannot maintain her ejectment unless this judgment, under which Bridges acquired title and his vendees
In the opinion affirming that judgment, this court said:
‘ ‘ The charges set up in the pleadings, if true, would have been available for a vacation of the judgment in the case of Kennedy v. Bridges. If Mrs. Francis had seen proper, within twelve months after she became twenty-one years of age, to have filed her petition in the proper court,\and asked such relief, admitting everything in her pleadings to be true, no court in this state has the right to treat it as void, nor has the Garrard circuit court the power to vacate or modify it.”
The action referred to was to impeach and vacate the judgment under which appellee claims. It is true the case referred to went off on demurrer, but the facts alleged showed, as the opinion states, whether right or wrong is not necessary to discuss, that relief might have been granted if the appellant had not been guilty of laches in the prosecution of her claim. It is true that it was held in that case that the charge as to the fraudulent procurement of the judgment was too indefinite to authorize the interposition of the chancellor for that reason, still other facts were alleged showing the party entitled to relief; but for her failure to
Upon a careful review of the record, we must concur with the court below, and, for the reasons indicated, the judgment is affirmed.