163 Ky. 192 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
This action was brought by appellees in the Carter Circuit Court to quiet their title to a small tract of land, described in the petition, in which was alleged their ownership and possession of the land, and that the appellant, A. T. Henderson, was claiming to be the owner of a part of the land, setting up claim thereto, and slandering and casting a cloud upon appellees’ title, but that his claim was without right, and. that he had “no estate, right, title or interest whatsoever in the land or any part thereof.”
The answer of appellant traversed the averments of the petition and alleged that he owns an undivided one-half interest in what is known as the Williams tract of land, of which the parcel described in the petition is a part. The affirmative matter of the answer was. controverted by reply.
Following the taking of depositions and the submis-. sion of the case the circuit court adjudged appellees to be the owners of the land in controversy, quieted their title to same, enjoined appellant from asserting any claim thereto, and awarded appellees their costs expended in the action. Appellant’s dissatisfaction with that judgment resulted in this appeal.
The parcel of land in controversy is a part of a twenty-acre tract originally owned by Hr. Morton Wil
On the day these two deeds were executed, viz., March 16, 1897, Susan Clark, her husband, W. G. Clark, Florence Williams, her mother, Mary Susan May, Parker May, husband of the latter, and Mary J. Williams, orally agreed upon a partition of the Williams twenty-acre tract of land between Susan Clark and Florence Williams, and the division was then made by adopting an agreed line separating the land of the one from the other, pursuant to which division the appellee, W. G. Clark, for his wife, Susan Clark, forthwith erected a fence upon the agreed line dividing the two. parcels, of land, the timber for this fence- being furnished by Mary J. Williams. By the division thus made the land allotted to Florence Williams included the Williams residence and all other buildings which had belonged to the twenty-acre tract, and the remainder of the land was allotted to Susan Clark. Each of the parties took immediate possession of the parcel of land thus allotted her and such possession in each continued unchanged.
It is insisted for appellant that the judgment of the circuit court was unauthorized for the reasons: (1) That the petition is fatally defective and insufficient to support it; (2) that the attempted partition of the Williams land, if made at all, was and is void, because Florence Williams, one of the parties thereto, was an infant and incapable in law of agreeing to the partition; and that as the partition was orally agreed to and made, it was not even binding upon the adult parties to it.
We regard appellant’s first contention untenable. In order to maintain an action quia timet, the plaintiff must describe the land in his petition, allege both his title and possession thereof and the nature of the claim asserted
For several reasons furnished by the record appellant’s contention that the appellees acquired no right to the parcel of land in controversy from the partition made between the then joint owners of the twenty-acre tract, cannot be sustained. The evidence clearly proves that the partition was made March 16, 1897, according to a marked line agreed on by the parties, that Susan Clark immediately took possession of the parcel described in the petition, which was the land allotted her, and Florence Williams, advised and assisted by her mother and grandmother, at the same time took possession of the remainder of the twenty-acre tract, including the residence and other improvements, then allotted her. It also clearly appears from the evidence that within a few days after the partition was effected W. G. Clark,
According to the evidence, the possession thus acquired by Susan Clark to the land received by her in the division continued until her death, and thereafter in the appellees, her husband and children, down to the date of the institution of this action by them, more than fifteen years from the date of the partition. During the whole of this time the possession was actual, continuous, and adverse to Florence Williams, her mother as her heir-at-law, her grandmother and all others. The same, according to the evidence, is true as to the possession of Florence Williams and her mother, and successor in title, to the parcel of land received by her in the partition; and never, until after appellant on March 23, 1910, obtained from the latter the deed relied on by him, which was more than fifteen years after the partition occurred, was there ever a claim from any source that appellees’ title to and possession of the land described in the petition was not good and exclusive. It is true that neither Susan Clark nor appellees have lived on the land received by the former in the partition, for they all the while- resided on an adjoining tract, but their possession of it since the partition has, nevertheless, been actual and continuous, by its enclosure and cultivation year by year in person or by tenants. It is also true that during the last five or six years a small part of the division fence enclosing the land has been allowed to get out -of repair or fall down, but the evidence shows that this resulted from the negligence of tenants thereon and that the greater part of the fence is still standing as erected for the separation of this tract from that received by Florence Williams in the partition, and that appellees’ actual possession and cultivation of the land received by Susan Clark in the partition has all the time -extended to the fence as originally erected.
It must be admitted that an oral partition of lands is within the statute of frauds and by reason thereof unenforceable as a contract or agreement. The same is also true of an oral or parol sale of land, but cases are numerous holding that such sale or partition will not be disturbed by the court if followed by the actual, continuous and adverse possession of the land by the purchaser or joint owner receiving an allotment,' for more than
In Helton, et al. v. Campbell, et al., 155 Ky., 257, the plaintiffs sued for the partition of a tract of land alleged to be jointly owned by them and the defendants as heirs-at-law of Jesse Campbell. The defendants, resisted the partition upon the ground that their actual, adverse possession for more than fifteen years of a part of the land sought to be partitioned, then claimed and occupied by them, entitled them thereto. The lower court entered judgment in favor of the defendants. In affirming the judgment on the plaintiff’s appeal we, in part, said:
“In the present case Eliza and her husband took possession of the sixty acres in 1866. They held separate, adverse possession of that until her death, since which time it has been occupied by her husband and plaintiffs. On the other hand, Sallie Campbell and the defendants took possession of the remainder of the Jesse Campbell farm and have held separate possession thereof for almost fifty years. Under these circumstances the law will presume that a partition was made. It is likewise well settled that an oral partition of land by joint owners, followed by the separate, adverse possession of each, and acquiesced in by all the parties, for more than fifteen years, will vest in each the title to that portion of the land allotted to him. * * * In the present case the partition has been followed by separate, adverse possession and has been acquiesced in by the parties for over fifty years. ’ ’
It is, however, insisted for appellant that the principle announced in the case, supra, should not be applied here, because Florence Williams, one of the parties to the oral partition of the land, being an infant, was incapable of agreeing thereto; and that the statute of limitations did not run against her during the five years she lived after the oral partition, for which reason 'it should not be counted against appellant, her remote grantee. An infant’s contract is not void, but merely voidable at his or her election after reaching the age of twenty-one years. We, however, waive decision of the question whether the infancy of Florence Williams could under different circumstances be relied on as here attempted by appellant, as, in our opinion, the defense interposed by 'him must be held bad on the ground of estoppel.
It will thus be seen that appellant’s status is not that of an innocent purchaser for value of an undivided half interest in the Dr. Williams twenty-acre tract of land, but that of a purchaser of the part allotted Florence Williams in the oral partition; and to hold otherwise would ignore the statute against champerty, as well as the rights of appellees. Equitable as well as legal estoppels bind privies in estate as well as parties, and a grantee will be estopped by any act or conduct of his grantor affecting the title conveyed, of which he has notice at the time of .accepting the conveyance. In our opinion the facts presented constitute an estoppel to the interest attempted to be asserted by appellant in the land claimed by the appellees and described in their petition; whereforh; the judgment is affirmed.