This is an appeal from a judgment entered in a partition action. Brent Warren Rankin (“Rankin”) and his wife, Kimberly Webb (“Webb”), (collectively referred to as the “Rankins”)
1
contend that the trial
Factual and Procedural Background
The Hoits, husband and "wife, lived on a farm in McClouth, Kansas, for nearly forty years. 3 In the summer of 2007, the Hoits decided to move to Kearney, Missouri, to be closer to their two adult daughters. At the time, Rankin was living in Houston, Texas, with his wife, Webb. Rankin is Mrs. Hoit’s son and Mr. Hoit’s step-son. Webb is Rankin’s seventh wife and was not well known to the Hoits. Rankin simultaneously expressed an interest in moving to Kearney, Missouri, to be closer to his adult son and grandson.
The Rankins were pre-qualified for a loan and began looking for homes in Kear-ney. Although the Rankins were using a realtor to assist with their search, Rankin asked the Hoits to look at several of the homes that were of interest to them given the Hoits’ closer proximity to the area. The Hoits decided to look for a suitable home for themselves at the same time.
In late June, 2007, the Hoits viewed the House. The House was not on the list of homes that were of interest to the Ran-kins. The Hoits liked the House and told the Rankins. On July 2, 2007, Rankin traveled to Kearney to look at the House. Following this visit, the Hoits and the Rankins began discussing the possibility of living in the House together. 4 The Hoits made it clear they wanted the House either way but offered the Rankins the opportunity to live in the lower level of the House.
The Hoits and the Rankins decided that the Hoits would purchase the House and that the Rankins would live on the lower level of the House, with both families sharing the kitchen. Though “ownership” of the House at the time of purchase was never discussed, Mrs. Hoit did testify that she and Mr. Hoit intended that, upon their deaths, the House would pass to her son, Rankin, and that their money would go to the Hoits’ two daughters. Mrs. Hoit testified that she and Mr. Hoit hoped that Rankin would take care of them, should they require assistance, until they died, though no such assistance was required during the short time the Hoits and the Rankins lived together. The Hoits both testified that it was never their intention to give the Rankins the House at the time of purchase or at any time during their lifetimes.
Because the Rankins were already pre-qualified for a loan, the Rankins secured the mortgage for the House to facilitate a speedier closing, instead of waiting for the Hoits to sell their farm. The purchase
After the closing, the Rankins sold their Texas home. They moved into the House in September 2007. The Hoits sold their farm in November and moved into the House at that time. The Hoits used the proceeds from the sale of the farm to pay off the mortgage on the House. The Ran-kins do not dispute that, as a result, the entire purchase price for the House was paid by the Hoits.
When the Hoits moved into the House, they learned that the Rankins had taken over an upstairs room that Mrs. Hoit had expressly indicated would be used for her piano. The Rankins had also placed belongings all over the upstairs portion of the House, such that there was virtually no room for any of the Hoits’ furniture and personal belongings, necessitating their sale.
Over the next several months, the joint living arrangements between the parties deteriorated. In late July, 2008, Mrs. Hoit demanded that the Rankins move out of the House. The Rankins refused to do so. The Rankins claimed the House belonged to them. The situation became so unbearable that the Hoits purchased a second home in the Kearney, Missouri, area in September 2008 and moved out of the House.
On September 18, 2008, the Hoits filed a petition seeking partition of the House. The Rankins filed a counterclaim, which failed to specify a theory of recovery, but which sought damages for their detrimental reliance on the Hoits’ “promise” to gift them the House on their deaths.
On May 18, 2009, following a trial to the court, the trial court entered its judgment (“Judgment”). The trial court found in favor of the Hoits on the Rankins’ counterclaim. On the partition claim, the trial court found that the Hoits paid $192,-
The trial court awarded the House outright to the Hoits. The trial court granted the Rankins an owelty 8 judgment against the Hoits in the amount of $2,757.48 and imposed that judgment as a lien against the House. The Rankins appeal.
Standard of Review
A partition action is a court tried action and is thus reviewed pursuant to
Murphy v. Carron,
Analysis
The Rankins raise two points on appeal. In their first point, the Rankins claim the trial court should have found that the House was owned equally by the Rankins and the Hoits. In their second point, the Rankins claim that the trial court was strictly limited in its options in a partition action to either division of the House in kind or a forced sale of the House with a division of the proceeds and thus erred in awarding a judgment to reimburse the Rankins for taxes and insurance they paid. 9 We disagree.
Point I
In their first point on appeal, the Ran-kins contend that because the deed conveying title was silent as to the parties’ respective ownership interests, there was a presumption that the Rankins and the Hoits each held a 50% interest in the House. The Rankins claim this presumption could not be rebutted because of the family relationship between the parties and/or because the Hoits’ had a donative intent. In support of their position, the Rankins rely on
Montgomery v. Roberts,
In Montgomery, the court held that if a deed:
‘[d]oes not specify the shares of each co-tenant, it will be presumed that they take equal undivided interests, but this presumption may be rebutted by proof,e.g., that the co-tenants contributed unequal amounts toward the purchase of the property and there is neither family relationship among the co-tenants nor any evidence of donative intent on the part of those who contributed more than their pro rata amounts towards the purchase price.’ 10
Montgomery,
Prior to
Montgomery,
our Supreme Court stated in
Anderson v. Stacker,
‘[a] conveyance to grantees as husband and wife, although the parties were knowingly living in meretricious relations, will, nothing being shown to warrant a different conclusion, ordinarily be construed to create a tenancy in common, and the property so conveyed will be apportioned, in partition or similar proceedings, on that basis, the apportionment not always being in equal shares but according to the proportionate contribution of each of the grantees toward the acquisition of the property.’
(Emphasis added) (citation omitted). Following
Anderson,
in
Atkinson v. Dasher,
Neither
Anderson
nor
Atkinson
described or alluded to the presence of “conclusive limitations” on the rebuttable nature of the presumption of equal ownership.
Montgomery
was the first Missouri case to suggest that the presumption of unequal ownership among co-tenants can be rebutted but only if
neither
a family relationship
nor
donative intent are present.
Several cases have since favorably cited the language in
Montgomery
addressing the effect of evidence of a family relationship and donative intent on the ability to rebut the presumption of equal ownership. These cases, as our discussion will reveal, have interpreted the principle first cited in
Montgomery
as an irrebuttable presumption such that
any
evidence of a family relationship and/or donative intent will negate the trial court’s ability to weigh other relevant evidence on the subject of owner
Historical development of the principal announced in Montgomery
When the Eastern District held in
Montgomery
that the presumption of equal ownership “may be rebutted by proof, e.g., that the co-tenants contributed unequal amounts toward the purchase of the property
and there is neither family relationship among the co-tenants nor any evidence of donative intent on the part of those who contributed more than their pro rata amounts
towards the purchase price,”
In
Varel,
the Illinois Supreme Court held that “[w]here title to property is taken in the name of two persons as coten-ants, and their contributions to the purchase price of the property are unequal
and their relationship is not such that a gift from one to the other is presumed to be intended,
they will in equity be held to own the property in the proportions of their contributions to the purchase price.”
Id.
at 211 (emphasis added). On reading
Varel,
several things are evident. First, the word “family” does
not
modify Varel’s discussion of relationship, rendering suspect THE LAW OF PROPERTY’S (1984) unilateral insertion of the modifier. Second, and of even greater relevance to our discussion,
Varel
did not hold that a relationship among co-tenants where a dona-tive intent might be reasonably presumed prevents a court from assessing the proper weight to be afforded such evidence. In other words,
Varel
did not treat evidence of a relationship where donative intent might be presumed as conclusive. Indeed, the court held that “[t]he ownership of the property and the relationship of Mrs. Var-el
and her mother
is not such that a gift from one to the other may be presumed to have been intended
in this case.” Varel,
The application of the Montgomery principle in subsequent Missouri cases
In
Montgomery,
the Eastern District found that an unmarried couple named as tenants by the entirety on a deed were in fact tenants in common.
Two Western District cases have since cited
Montgomery.
In
Lemay v. Hardin,
The Eastern District and the Southern District have also favorably cited
Montgomery
but have read the “neither/nor” reference to family relationship and dona-tive intent to mean that “either” circumstance will render the presumption of equal ownership conclusive. In
Snyder v. Snyder (In re Estate of Snyder),
880
The full impact of the evolution from the “neither-nor” principle described in
Montgomery
to the “either-or” principle described in
Christen, Estate of Snyder,
and
Johannsen
was realized in
Nelson v. Killman (In re Killman),
Bankr.No. 08-61703, Adversary No. 09-6075,
The Rankins rely heavily on Christen, Estate of Snyder, Johannsen, and Kill-man. The Rankins maintain that “the original presumption of equal ownership cannot be rebutted by evidence of unequal contributions towards the purchase of the real estate, if there is [either] evidence of a family relationship or evidence of dona-tive intent.” (Appellants’ Br. 19) The Rankins thus argue that their family relationship with the Hoits rendered the presumption of equal ownership irrebuttable and that the trial court was powerless to consider the uncontested evidence that the Hoits contributed 100% of the purchase price for the House in determining the relative interests of the parties in the House. We do not agree.
First, we believe it obvious that Montgomery’s reference to “neither” a family relationship “nor” donative intent cannot be read to permit “either” a family relationship “or” donative intent to render the presumption of equal ownership irrebutta-ble. The ordinary and common definition of “neither” is:
[N]ot either of two .... not one of two or more: not either ... .not the one and not the other of two....
[U]sed as a function word before two or more coordinate words, phrases, or clauses now joined usu. by nor or sometimes by or or archaically by neither to indicate that what immediately follows is the first of two or more alternatives both or all of which are rejected.
MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY 1514 (3rd ed.1993). “Neither/nor,” therefore, means “both” and is the antithesis of “either/or.” Thus, when
Montgomery
stated that the presumption of equal ownership can be rebutted in the absence of
neither
a family relationship
nor
donative intent, it was necessarily stating that
both
conditions must be present, not merely one or the other. To the extent
Christen, Es
Second, and of even greater import, we do not believe that any rationale or reasoned basis exists to conclude that the rebuttable presumption of equal ownership becomes irrebuttable even if evidence of both a family relationship and donative intent are present. Instead, having explored the origin of the principle first cited in Montgomery, it is clear to this court that “family relationships” and “donative intent” amount to nothing more than evidence which may be considered and weighed by the court to possibly explain unequal contributions toward the acquisition of property. Unfortunately, the paraphrasing of Varel by THE LAW OF PROPERTY (1984), which was then repeated by Montgomery, has misdirected subsequent courts to the unwarranted conclusion that an inflexible litmus test exists such that either a family relationship or donative intent (in the Eastern and Southern Districts) or both a family relationship and donative intent (in the Western District) will completely negate a trial court’s ability to consider and weigh all relevant evidence to determine the interests of co-tenants in property. We have located no authority (other than that which has arisen out of the improvident paraphrasing of Varel in THE LAW OF PROPERTY (1984)) which supports such a proposition.
We conclude, therefore, that evidence of a relationship among cotenants suggestive of donative intent amounts to nothing more than relevant evidence which may be considered by a trial court as it determines whether the presumption of equal ownership has been rebutted. This view is in complete accord with other learned treatises on the subject. For example, 20 AM.JUR.2D Cotenancy and Joint Ownership, Section 117, at 247-48 (2005), states:
Where two or more persons take as tenants in common under an instrument silent as to their respective shares, thereis a presumption that their shares are equal. Ordinarily, this presumption is not conclusive but is subject to rebuttal, and has at times been rebutted by parole evidence. A party challenging the presumption that property held in joint tenancy is equally owned has the burden of proof.
The presumption is applicable only in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Where the cotenancy property is acquired by purchase and there is evidence as to the proportion of the total purchase price paid by each tenant in common, such evidence may be determinative of the proportion owned by each cotenant....
The fact that the tenants in common are husband and wife may lead to the conclusion that they own equal shares, regardless of any disparity in their respective contributions toward its acquisition, on the theory that the spouse furnishing the consideration, or most of the consideration, for the property intended a gift to the other. This conclusion may apply to other familial relationships, or to cotenants who are co-habitating and intend to confer equal shares by gift despite unequal contribution.
(Emphasis added.) Clearly, this treatise does not treat any relationship between co-tenants as dispositive on the issue of equal ownership. Instead, this treatise recognizes that the nature of the relationship between co-tenants may be relevant to assist the trial court in determining whether unequal contributions toward acquiring property can be explained as a gift.
Ironically, other passages drawn from THE LAW OF PROPERTY (1984) also support our conclusion. The discussion of partition within the treatise states:
When a concurrent estate is created by a deed or will that does not expressly provide to the contrary, it will be presumed that each concurrent owner obtains an equal undivided interest. If the deed or will creating the concurrent estate expressly provides for unequal interests, it will necessarily create a tenancy in common and the co-tenants will obtain the unequal interests specified in the instrument. But even where unequal interests are not expressly provided for in the creating instrument, the presumption of equality may be rebutted for purposes of determining the share of each co-tenant in a partition action, whether the concurrent estate is a joint tenancy or a tenancy in common.
THE LAW OF PROPERTY, Section 5.13 (1984) (emphasis added). In the footnote referenced as support for the highlighted principle cited above, the treatise provides:
The rule is * * * that the interests of joint tenants being equal during their lives, a presumption arises that upon dissolution of the joint tenancy during the lives of the cotenants, each is entitled to an equal share of the proceeds. This presumption is subject to rebuttal, however, and does not prevent proof from being introduced that the respective holdings and interests are unequal. This presumption may be rebutted by evidence showing the source of the actual cash outlay at the time of acquisition, the intent of the cotenant creating the joint tenancy to make a gift of the half-interest to the other cotenant, unequal contribution by way of money or services, unequal expenditures in improving the property or freeing it from encumbrances and clouds [on title], or other evidence raising inferences contrary to the idea of equal interest in the joint estate. [Citation omitted]
We conclude that the principle first cited in Montgomery relating to “neither family relationship nor donative intent” should no longer be cited verbatim 15 as the manner in which the principle was initially written improvidently suggests the existence of an irrebuttable presumption. Instead, we take advantage of this opportunity to clarify the principle cited in Montgomery. The presumption that co-tenants hold equal ownership shares in property in the face of a deed that is otherwise silent may be rebutted. Evidence relevant to rebut the presumption may include evidence that the co-tenants contributed unequally toward the purchase of the property. However, unequal contributions may be explained by evidence that the co-tenant contributing a greater amount toward purchase intended the disparity as an enforceable gift, a determination which may be influenced by evidence of the nature of the relationship among the co-tenants. 16
Application of modified principle to this case
As applied to this case, Rankin is the son of Mrs. Hoit and the step-son of Mr. Hoit. However, Webb was Rankin’s seventh wife and was barely known to the Hoits. The trial court heard uncontested evidence that the Hoits’ intended the Ran-kins to take ownership of the House, but only on the Hoits’ deaths. 17 The Hoits testified that they never intended to give the House to the Rankins at the time of purchase.
The Rankins argue that the use of a joint tenancy deed, instead of a beneficiary deed,
18
requires us to conclude that the Hoits knew what they were doing and intended a present gift of at least a 50% interest in the House to the Rankins. However, there was evidence which per
Moreover, the Hoits would certainly have been free to revoke or modify their future donative intent had it been reflected in a beneficiary deed
19
or in a will.
20
We see no logical basis for differentiating between these estate planning tools and a joint tenancy deed if the evidence supports a conclusion that a present gift of ownership was not intended.
See Stout v. Stout,
We find no error, therefore, in the trial court’s award of the House in its entirety to the Hoits. The presumption of equal ownership of the House afforded by the deed, which was otherwise silent on the subject of ownership shares, was rebutted by the uncontested evidence that the Hoits contributed 100% of the cost to acquire the House, 21 and by the absence of evidence that the Hoits’ unequal contribution toward purchase of the House could be explained by their intent to make a present and irrevocable gift to the Ran-kins. 22
Point One is denied.
For their second point on appeal, the Rankins complain that the trial court erred in awarding the House outright to the Hoits and in entering a judgment in the Rankins’ favor and against the Hoits, imposing same as a lien on the House. The Rankins claim the trial court’s only options in this partition action were to partition the House in kind or to order the House sold with the proceeds to be divided. We disagree.
Section 528.030 provides:
In all cases where lands ... are held in joint tenancy, tenancy in common, or coparcenary ... it shall be lawful for any one or more of the parties interested therein ... to file a petition in the circuit court of the proper county, asking for ... partition ... if the same can be done without great prejudice to the parties in interest; and if not, then for a sale of the premises, and a division of the proceeds thereof among all of the parties, according to their respective rights and interests.
In addition, as we noted in
Clark,
“[i]t is well settled that in a partition proceeding, the parties are entitled to reimbursement for expenditures with respect to the property for taxes, insurance and necessary repairs and improvements.”
Thus, in a partition action, a trial court must declare the interests of the purported co-tenants in the property and must then either divide the property in kind or sell the property with the proceeds divided accordingly. A trial court may also reimburse a co-tenant for contributions made to improve or repair the property, even though this “relief’ is not expressly described in section 528.030. If property is partitioned in kind, such reimbursements are made by placing an equitable lien on the property partitioned to the other party.
Clark,
Here, the "trial court partitioned the House in kind. It awarded the House 100% to the Hoits given their 100% contribution toward its acquisition. This represented the trial court’s proper exercise of one of the two options expressly envisioned by section 528.030. The trial court also awarded the Rankins a “judgment of $2,757.48, against both Plaintiffs [the Hoits], Said judgment is a lien against the property.” The trial court was authorized to enter this judgment to the extent the judgment did no more than impose a lien against the House.
Given the manner in which the judgment in favor of the Rankins was written, it is not entirely clear whether the trial court intended to impose both an in personam judgment against the Hoits and an equitable lien against the House, or whether the trial court intended to only impose a lien on the House. The trial court did make a separate finding, however, which sheds light on its intention. The trial court found that “the judgment for owelty should be the full amount of the moneys contributed by Defendants [the Rankins].” As previously noted, owelty is a lien imposed on property partitioned in kind. BLACKS LAW DICTIONARY 996 (5th ed.1979). The trial court’s finding that an owelty judgment should be imposed suggests that the trial court only intended to award the Rankins an in rem judgment imposing a lien on the House. 24
We thus conclude that the trial court did not err in reimbursing the Rankins by imposing an equitable lien on the House.
See Clark,
We do acknowledge that the Judgment could be misread to impose an in personam judgment on the Hoits. As we have concluded this was not the trial court’s intent, and as to avoid any confusion, we will exercise our authority pursuant to Rule 84.14 to “give such judgment as the [trial] court ought to give,” as the record here permits us to do so. The Judgment is modified to delete the judgment granted the Rankins in the amount of $2,757.48 and to substitute the following: “IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED by the Court that Defendants are granted an in rem judgment in the amount of $2,757.48, which judgment shall be imposed as an equitable lien against the House, legally described as Lot 163, Brooke Haven Fourth Plat, A Subdivision in Kearney, Clay County Missouri.” 25
The trial court’s judgment as herein modified is affirmed.
All concur.
Notes
. We will refer to Rankin and Webb collectively as the "Rankins” for simplicity, intending no disrespect to Ms. Webb.
. All statutory references are to RSMO 2000 as supplemented unless otherwise indicated.
. We view the evidence and all reasonable inferences from the evidence in the light most favorable to the judgment.
Alongi
v.
Alongi,
.The Hoits had originally planned to move in with their eldest daughter. However, they determined that renovations necessary to their daughter’s home were cost prohibitive. They thus decided to look for a home of their own.
. The Rankins acknowledged during oral argument that it is likely that the Rankins were named as co-owners on the deed as a requirement of the Rankins' mortgage lender, as the lender would have been unwilling, based on common practice, to extend a mortgage to the Rankins secured by real estate in which the Rankins did not hold title. Moreover, though the mortgage was secured based on the Ran-kins' preapproval, it appears from recitals in a deed of release recorded after the Hoits later paid off the mortgage, that the lender required the Hoits to sign the deed of trust, and perhaps even the promissory note. The lender would likely have been unwilling, based on common practice, to accept a deed of trust as collateral security that had not been executed by all title holders.
. It is highly unlikely that the Hoits signed the deed, as a deed is typically signed by only the grantor/seller. As observed in footnote 5, the Hoits may have been asked to sign the deed of trust and the promissory note.
. This sum includes the $188,500 purchase price for the House and all of the charges assessed to the buyers at closing.
. Owelty is "[a] sum of money paid by one of two ... co-tenants to the other, when a partition has been effected between them, but, the land not being susceptible of division into exactly equal shares, such payment is required to make the portions respectively assigned to them of equal value. The power to grant owelty has been exercised by the courts of equity from time immemorial." BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 996 (5th ed.1979).
.A casual reader will find it odd that the Rankins are contesting the trial court’s authority to award a judgment in their favor. We perceive the Rankins’ argument as presuming that we will find they were entitled to an award of an interest in the House, and thus as presuming we will require a division or forced sale of the House.
. This principle applies equally to property held in joint tenancy as well as in tenancy in common. ROGER A. CUNNINGHAM, ET AL., THE LAW OF PROPERTY, Section 5.13 (1984).
. There is no section 52 in the referenced treatise. The quoted passage is actually found in section 5.2.
. The current bound volume of the treatise cited in Atkinson which contains the referenced passage is 86 C.J.S. Tenancy in Common, Section 13, at 257 (2006).
. A similar principle is espoused in the two other cases cited in the footnote offered by the authors of THE LAW OF PROPERTY (1984) as the support for the statement addressing "neither family relationship nor donative intent.” See
Williams v. Monzingo,
. Notwithstanding our view that
Christen, Estate of Snyder,
and
Johannsen
should not be followed for the proposition that
“either”
a family relationship
“or"
donative intent will render the presumption of equal ownership irrebuttable, we note there is no need to overrule these decisions as they reached a result that is consistent with the law hereinafter described in this Opinion. In
Christen,
there was evidence of both a family relationship (the co-tenants were half-brothers) and dona-tive intent (one half-brother included the other half-brother's name on the deed out of gratitude for an agreement to challenge the probate of his mother’s estate from which the first half-brother was excluded). Though we hereinafter hold such evidence cannot be viewed as creating an irrebuttable presumption, the evidence in this case would nonetheless supported a finding that unequal contributions toward the purchase of property were otherwise explained.
Christen,
On the other hand,
Killman
reached a result which cannot be reconciled with our view of the law as hereinafter described in this Opinion.
Killman
never discussed donative intent once it found there was a family relationship between the co-tenants.
. This conclusion does not require us to overrule
Montgomery
or
Clark,
as the outcome of those cases is not altered by the clarification of the law described in this Opinion. In both cases, the courts found neither a family relationship nor any evidence of donative intent, and thus neither court applied the principle drawn from
Montgomery
as an irrebutta-ble presumption.
Montgomery,
. The presumption of equal ownership among co-tenants on an otherwise silent deed will be more easily rebutted in an action to determine ownership when all co-tenants are alive and available to testify about their intentions. Once a co-tenant passes, however, it may be more difficult to present credible or unbiased evidence that a deceased co-tenant did not intend an unequal contribution towards purchase of property as a gift. However, any difference in outcomes in cases involving living or deceased co-tenants will merely be the result of evidence being weighed based upon the unique facts and circumstances of the case.
. In fact, the Rankins' counterclaim asserts that their claim for damages arises out of their claimed reliance on the promise of a gift of the House after the deaths of the Hoits.
. A beneficiary deed is expressly permitted by section 461.025 and conveys property to a stated recipient on the death of the grantor, without restricting the grantor's ownership of the property during his or her lifetime.
. Section 461.025.
. Section 474.400;
Humphreys v. Welling,
. The trial court found that based on "contributions” to the House including purchase price, taxes, and insurance, the relative "interests” of the parties in the House were 98.61% and 1.39%. However, in a partition action, a trial court is to determine the respective interests of parties in property which has been acquired by purchase by looking only at contributions toward the purchase price.
See
section 528.030;
Clark,
.The Hoits bore the burden to overcome the presumption of equal ownership. 20 AM. JUR.2d,
Cotenancy and Joint Ownership,
Section 117, at 247 (2005). This burden undoubtedly included the obligation to offer evidence of the unequal contributions toward acquisition of the property, and the obligation to negate that the inequality in contributions was a result of a present donative intent. There is some authority for the proposition that satisfying this burden requires clear and convincing evidence.
See, e.g.,
86 C.l.S.
Tenancy in Common,
Section 13, at 257-58 (2006) ("Parties who own property jointly are presumed to be tenants in common, but the presumption is rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence.”). However, cases have relied on Missouri Supreme Court decisions which “set forth the general rule that when a presumption is operating against a party, that party need only introduce substantial controverting evidence to rebut that presumption.”
Johannsen,
. This line of cases lends further support to the proposition that the determination of the ownership interests held by co-tenants focuses on the contributions of the parties to the acquisition of the property. Other “contributions” which may have benefitted the property after it was purchased, but which were not incurred in the initial acquisition of the property, are not factored into the determination of relative ownership interests, though said contributions may be otherwise eligible for reimbursement. See footnote 21.
. Owelty is actually a means of equalizing the relative value of property that has been divided in kind among co-tenants and is not the label applied to an equitable lien imposed to "reimburse" for expenditures which improve a property. See footnote 8. However, the fact that the trial court used the wrong legal term to identify the lien it desired to impose on the House is immaterial.
. Judgments imposing liens against real property should provide the legal description of the property to permit proper recordation of the lien interest.
