86 Ky. 572 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion oe the court.
July 11, 1868, Mary Miller, entitled, under the will of her husband, John Miller, to a life estate, and his sons, Winchans, Ambrose and Charles L. Miller, entitled to the fee in remainder, by a joint deed conveyed their respective interests in a lot of land, for the recited consideration of three hundred dollars, to William Hoffert and John Pletsclier, who then entered into possession.
This action was instituted August 19, 18S4, by Ambrose Miller and Charles L. Miller, against Hoffert, Pletsclier and the wife and children of the latter, to whom a conveyance of an interest in the lot was made subsequent to 1868, to set aside and cancel the first-mentioned deed, and also the one made to Catherine Pletscher and her children, and to recover two-thirds of the lot, Mary Miller, the widow of John
First. That the deed was procured by the fraudulent representations of the vendees and ignorance of the plaintiffs of the condition and value of the estate inherited from their father.
Second. That the plaintiffs were, at the date of the deed executed by them, infants.
As both the plaintiffs were of full age more than, ten years before the commencement of this action, recovery for the alleged fraud is barred by the statute of limitation in such case provided. The evidence clearly shows that Ambrose Miller was more than twenty-one years of age when the deed of 1868 was executed, and the petition was as to him properly dismissed. But appellee, Charles L. Miller, as is both shown and admitted, then lacked about twenty days of being twenty-one years of age, and judgment was rendered in his favor for one-third of the lot.
The deed of an infant conveying real estate, where any valuable consideration passes to him, is, as well-settled by this court, not absolutely void, but voidable merely. (Phillips v. Green, 3 A. K. Mar., 7; Phillips v. Green, 5 Mon., 345; Breckinridge v. Ormsby, 1 J. J. M., 236.) And he has an election, after his disability is ended, to affirm or avoid it. To confirm, it is not indispensable that he should re-acknowledge the first or execute a new deed, but he may do so after full age by an act in pais. But conveyances of an infant are not so easily ratified as his purchases, and something more than bare recognition or silent acquiescence is necessary to a binding confirmation, unless prolonged for the
Says Story: “Without undertaking to apply this doctrine to its fullest extent,” that is, that the act after full age should be of as great solemnity as the original instrument, “and admitting that acts in pais may amount to a confirmation of a deed, still we are of the opinion that these acts should be of such a solemn and unequivocal nature as to establish a clear intention to confirm the deed, after a full knowledge that it was voidable. A fortiori, mere acquiescence, uncoupled with any acts demonstrative of an attempt to confirm it, would be insufficient for the purpose.” (Tucker v. Moreland, 10 Peters, 75; Jackson v. Carpenter, 11 Johnson, 542.)
But though voidable such a deed passes the title, and some act on the part of the infant, after full age, is necessary to be done to avoid and divest the estate. (Philips v. Green, 5 Mon., 345.)
The evidence in this case “shows no more than a mere acquiescence on the part of the appellee. The consideration of one hundred dollars, being one-third of the purchase price, was received by him when the deed was executed, but his retention of it was not such an act as amounted to a confirmation of the deed. The first act which can be regarded as an election by him was the institution of this action, which was more than fifteen years after he arrived to full age. But as the life-tenant did not die until 1877, when his right
Within what tixne such an action must be commenced, and whether there is in fact any express statutory limitation on the sxxbject, are questions not hitherto passed on by this court.
The authorities generally agree that the election to avoid such deed must be mMe by the infant within a reasonable time after he arrives at full age. But what is a reasonable time can not be determined by' any certain or fixed.test, and. must, therefore, be left for the discretionary determination of the court, which is not in accordance with the modern and wiser policy of our statutes, fixing in every case a definite limit to litigation, and a period at which owners of property may repose in security.
In Meriweather v. Herran, 8 B. Mon., 162, is this language: “The right of avoidance is still the same, founded in the infancy of the party, taking date froxxx the moment of executing the contract, or, at any rate, from his arrival at full age, and subject to be defeated or lost by any act of confirmation or waiver, or by such continued acquiescence as may afford an implication of either, or by the failure to assert the right for such a length of time as in. analogy to the statute of lim
It seems to ns the necessity of resorting to analogy, and much less of depending upon the discretion of the court, as to whether the election has been made within a reasonable time, does not now exist, but that section 9, article 3, chapter 71, General Statutes, was intended and should be applied to a case of this kind. It is as follows: “An action for relief not provided for in this or some other chapter can only be commenced within ten years next after the cause of action accrued.”
In our opinion, therefore, while a party may, before the expiration of that period, by act bind himself to a confirmation, he cannot, after ten years from his arrival at full age, maintain an action to avoid and set aside a deed made while an infant. And as this action was not commenced within that statutory limit, the court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff, and it is reversed, with directions to dismiss the petition.