21 S.W.2d 818 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1929
Lead Opinion
Affirming.
This action was instituted by Grace Hargis, a granddaughter, and some of the other heirs, of Amanda Helen Hargis, to recover a tract of land located in Lee county and mesne profits accrued thereon. The heirs that did not join as plaintiffs were made defendants. The plaintiffs alleged in the petition that on March 22, 1869, the land in question was conveyed to Amanda Helen Hargis by a fee-simple deed with covenant of general warranty; that she was in possession thereof at the date of her death and had held it as general estate. It further alleged that Amanda Helen Hargis was the wife of James Henderson Hargis, and had not been authorized to act as a feme sole or empowered to dispose of land by will. Amanda Helen Hargis died in 1873, and at the March, 1874, term of the Lee county court a paper purporting to be her will was probated. The will provided:
"First: I do hereby make and appoint James H. Hargis, my husband, my executor and that he shall not be required to give any bond.
"Second: I hereby authorize and direct him at his own will and pleasure to sell any lands or other property that I now own and apply the proceeds in *444 any way or manner he may seem fit after paying any just debts that I owe — and leave all the lands and property that I now own at his disposal and give all right and title to the same and full and complete power to make title to the same which shall have full force and effect and be binding as though I had done the same myself. I make this my last will and testament and trust that he will maintain and educate my dear children and he believing it to their interest."
The petition charged that the will was void under the statute then in effect, which permitted a married woman to make a will of any estate secured to her separate use by deed or devise, or in the exercise of a written power, but not otherwise. General Statutes 1888, p. 1280, c. 113, sec. 4; Payne v. Pollard, 3 Bush, 127; Mitchell v. Holder, 8 Bush, 362; Crains v. Edwards,
The position of the plaintiffs is that the will of the married woman was void and vested no rights in the devisee; but as the devisee was the surviving husband, and entitled to a life estate as a tenant by curtesy (Rose v. Rose,
There is an established rule that a life tenant holds amicably with the remainderman, and indeed for him, and no limitation runs against the remainderman until the death of the life tenant. Jeffries v. Butler,
The opinion in Rose v. Ware,
The void act of the remainderman or his ancestor must be treated as notice that the possession is traceable to that act, and is maintained upon the assumption and assertion that it is valid. Such possession is adverse, and not under the life tenant alone. Com. v. Clark,
In Tucker v. Price, 29 S.W. 858, 17 Ky. Law Rep. 11, there was a life estate derived from a dowress and the remainder interests were acquired by void contracts as to some and void deeds as to others. It was held that the existence of a life estate did not intercept the operation of the statute of limitations, but that the remaindermen were barred at the time fixed by statute after the execution of the void instruments. In Watkins v. Pfeiffer, 92 S.W. 562, 29 Ky. Law Rep. 97, it is held that the period within which an action for the recovery of real property may be brought shall not be extended beyond thirty years, and the court said: "Ordinarily, during the continuance of a life estate, the statute does not run against the remaindermen; but, as the daughter and her trustees held a fee-simple estate, the statute commenced to run at the time the original purchaser, through whom appellant claims, took possession, and continued to run until after the expiration of 30 years, when it ripened into an indefeasible title." Cf. Com. v. Clark,
The case of Webber v. Gibson, 8 Ky. Law Rep. 125 Id., 13 Ky. Op. 603, affords an apt and effective illustration *449
of the operation of the principle. In that case two remaindermen sued to recover land from a vendee who held possession under a void title bond. One of the remaindermen had signed the void title bond, and the other had not done so. As to the one that had signed the court said: "Mrs Shirley, having united in the sales made more than 30 years before the bringing of this suit, is not entitled to recover under the ruling in the cases of Medlock v. Suter,
But it may be suggested that the heirs could not recover the property during the life of a tenant by the curtesy, and for that reason the statute did not run against them. Stillwell v. Leavy,
In any event, when his interest is adversely held, the remainderman must sue within the time allowed by the statute of limitations to vindicate his right and to establish the character of interest which he claims. Bankston v. Crabtree Coal Mining Co.,
In Treadway v. Pharis,
When the ancestor of these plaintiffs died leaving a will which purported to convey the fee-simple title, and the devisee proceeded to have the will probated and claimed the land, not as a tenant by the curtesy, but as absolute owner, their cause of action then accrued. When it was not instituted within the period fixed by the statute of limitations, it could not be maintained thereafter. The will was an act of the ancestor, albeit a void one, which was made the basis of a claim of the entire estate adverse to the heirs. It was not valid at first, but it purported to be effectual, and at the end of the statutory period the title passed to the vendee in possession. Mantle v. Beal,
A brief quotation from an opinion of this court is pertinent: "The proposition that the trustee of an express trust cannot throw off his allegiance to his beneficiary, and acquire a right to the trust property, by adverse holding, for the period prescribed by the statute *452
of limitation, unless his acts in that regard are so open and notorious as to take notice home to the beneficiary, is not denied. But the case here does not come within that rule. Here Mrs. Fleming, as the deed shows, believed that she had the right under the will to sell the land. She did sell it by deed of record. She disposed of it, as she believed she had the right to do. The rights of the beneficiaries were immediately affected by it. It was their duty, therefore, to look after their interest, and to take immediate action when their rights under the will were violated." Stillwell v. Leavy,
Notice was brought home to plaintiffs and those under whom they claim by the probate of the will, by the recordation of the deed from James Henderson Hargis showing his absolute reliance upon the will (Com. v. Clark,
An interesting question respecting the admission of certain evidence is made, but the conclusion we have reached renders it unnecessary to determine it.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Whole court sitting.
Concurrence Opinion
I think the evidence establishes an adverse holding upon the part of appellee for more than the statutory period of limitation and concur in the conclusions upholding its title to the land in controversy. This is predicated on the facts that when James H. Hargis conveyed the fee in the land to the St. Helen's Land, Coal Iron Company on May 7, 1887, by deed in which the will of *453
Amanda Hargis was referred to as the source of title and placed his grantee in possession, both parties to that deed asserted a title and possession adverse to that of the remainderman, and thereby the statute of limitation was started against them. But I cannot agree with that part of the opinion which holds that the mere probate and recordation of the will of Amanda Hargis, together with the occupancy of the land by James H. Hargis is in itself sufficient evidence to establish an adverse holding upon the part of James Hargis. I fear the view thus expressed in the majority opinion may produce confusion in our decisions and for that reason feel impelled to dissent from such holding. It is a well-established rule that the possession of a life tenant is amicable to the remainderman. Fish v. Fish, 184, Ky. 700, 212 S.W. 586; Shutt's Admr. v. Shutt's Admr.,
Judge Dietzman authorizes me to say that he concurs in this opinion.