80 Ky. 186 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee, a married woman, sold and. conveyed a tract of land to the appellant.
Her husband-did not join in the deed.
The appellant occupied the land for fourteen years, and. erected lasting and valuable improvements on it — more valuable than the land itself.
Then the appellee brought this suit to set aside the conveyance she had made, on the ground that she was a femecovert when and ever since she executed it, and sought to> recover the land and the rents thereof.
The appellant resisted her prayer, and asked that he be reimbursed the purchase-money he had paid to her, with interest from the date of payment, ánd that he be adjudged the value of the lasting improvements, with interest thereon.
The court adjudged to her the land and canceled the deed, and referred the cause to the master to audit and report the rents and improvements.
The master reported in favor of appellant the consideration he had paid and six per cent, interest thereon; the taxes, nnd the enhanced vendible value of the land by reason of the improvements, but rejected his claim to interest on the last two named items. And he reported in her favor yearly rent to the amount of the united annual interest on the consideration, and the prime cost of the improvements, which brought her in debt to the appellant in the sum of $818.60.
Upon her exceptions the court set aside the commissioner’s report, and rendered judgment in favor of appellant for $232.60.
This result was reached by first stating the account thus
Consideration.............;........ $750 00
Interest on same...................... . 588 00
Taxes paid on land.................... 54 60
Improvements...................... 1,200 00
Total................ $2,592 60
IN BEHALF OF APPELLEE.
Rent for six years at $60 per year......... $360 00
And eight years at $250 per year......... 2,000 00
Total........................ 2,360 00
Amount due Hawkins, appellant..... $232 60
The sum allowed appellant for the improvements was their prime cost, and the rent was fixed in favor of appellee at the value estimated from the opinions on that subject of the witnesses.
From the judgment giving to her the land there is no appeal, and the only question, therefore, for our consideration involves the propriety of the criteria upon which the court based its judgment.
In all cases of rescission of contract, the object of the chancellor should be to place the parties, as far as possible, in the condition they occupied before making the contract. And the facts of each particular case must, in some degree, control the equitable adjustment of the rights of the parties.
. In this case the appellant knew the appellee was a married Woman when he contracted with her, and, as a matter of law, he is presumed to have known that she was incapable of contracting, but, as a matter of fact, he did not know she was so disabled by her coverture.
Shall he, as contended by appellee’s counsel, be denied anything for his improvements because her disability was known to him? We think not.
So in the case of Thomas v. Thomas' ex’r, 16 B. M., 400, it was held that the widow was in equity bound to account for improvements by which the vendible value of the land was increased, although when she- signed the deed she was a feme covert, and was incapable of imposing a charge upon her property, or of disposing of it except in the mode and with the solemnities prescribed by law.
And in Barlow v. Bell, 1 Marsh, 246, the land of the wife was sold by the agent of her husband, and after the death of the latter she sued and recovered the land, on the ground that she did not join in the sale or conveyance. The court refused the purchaser pay for his improvements, because he was shown to have had a perfect' knowledge of the feme covert's title, and was advised of the consequences of a purchase from her husband’s agent before he made it; yet it was said by the court that “we should have no hesitation in relieving the possessor for improvements' made upon the land whilst he bona fide considered it his own. The possessor, by bestowing his money and'labor in meliorating the land, advances its value, and consequently the rightful owner, unless liable to the claim of compensation, is so much the gainer by the loss of the possessor, contrary .to the maxim 11 nemo debet locupletañ aliena jactura."
These principles apply to the facts of this case. It appears that these improvements were not, in fact, made mala fide, but under the mistaken belief that the wife had the right to sell her own land without the conjunction of her
And the rule as to the quantum of rents laid down in Morton’s heirs v. Ridgeway, &c., 3 J. J. M., 258, is, in our opinion, applicable to this case. There it was said: ‘ ‘ The rents should be regulated by the interest on the consideration and on the value of the improvements, being neither greater nor less than their united amount.”
This was the criterion by which the master was governed in his report, which should have been confirmed.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to overrule appellee’s exceptions to the master’s report, and render judgment in conformity thereto.