198 Ky. 816 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Appellant Ida B. McCampbell is tbe second and last wife of tbe late Amos Gr. McCampbell, wbo died intestate in Mercer county in 1919, survived by tbe said appellant and six children by bis first wife, wbo are defendants and appellees. At tbe time of tbe death of Amos Gr. McCampbell be resided upon a tract of 198 acres of fine land, estimated to be of tbe value of about $50,000.00. This 198-
Sallie B. McCampbeil, first wife of Amos Gr., died in 1910. In 1912 Amos Gr. intermarried with appellee Ida B. McCampbell. The deed from which we have copied was executed, delivered and recorded more than twenty-five years before said marriage. Amos G-. McCampbell did not revoke the grant made by said deed, or appoint the property to other uses or to other persons, except that he executed, after marrying the second time, two mortgages ' on the land amounting in the aggregate to $10,-000.00. One of these mortgages was to the Continental Bank and was sued on in 1917. See 184 Ky. 658.
After the death of Amos Gr. McCampbell in 1919, the widow, now appellant, continued to live on the farm until the fall of 1922, when the children, now appellees, demanded possession, which she refused. This suit in eject
The widow, as appellant, insists: (1) that the writing made by Amos Gr. to Sallie B. McCampbell and others, if authorized, is revoked under the statutes of Elizabeth; (2) if the opinion in the Continental National Bank v. McCampbell is the law in that case, it has no application in the case at bar and decides nothing in this case; (3) an answer denying plaintiff’s ownership or right of possession presents a good defense; (4) where the owner knows his title and neglects to undeceive the occupant he will be deemed to have consented to the occupancy; (5) the court erred in dismissing the answer setting up claim for improvements; (6) wife joining with husband in mortgage is endowed in remainder of the proceeds of the sale of mortgaged premises; (7) the plaintiffs, now appellees, are estopped; (8) the doctrine of equitable estoppel is recognized in courts of common law; and (9) silence or acquiescence is sufficient.
As this is an action in ejectment the plaintiffs who are the children of Amos G-. McCampbell and named as remaindermen in the deed to which we have referred are entitled to recover only in case the said deed was not revoked by Amos Gr. under and pursuant to the powers reserved therein by him. 'Clearly if the deed was not revoked the appellees, children of Amos Gr. McCampbell, became the absolute owners of the property at the death of their mother subject of course to the power retained by Amos Gr. McCampbell to revoke the grant and to appoint the property to new and different uses and to other persons. As Amos Gr. McCampbell died without having-conveyed, encumbered or otherwise disposed of the property except, by the excution of the two mortgages aforesaid, the grant continued a valid one to the extent it was not revoked by the said mortgages. In considering and construing this deed in the case of the Continental National Bank v. McCampbell, supra, we said: “We are of the opinion that the mortgage made by McCampbell and wife to the trust company, if a revocation at all, was but a pro tanto revocation of the. deed and a pro tanto exercise of the power to appoint the property to a new use to the extent of the eight thousand ($8,000.00) dollar mortgage made to the trust company and no more, it appearing that the residue of the property, after the satisfac
It is insisted by appellant that the trial court was in error in sustaining the* general demurrer to the answer which contained a traverse. True, the answer in the first paragraph traversed in a way part of the affirmative allegations of the petition, but the answer as a whole admits the execution of the deed by Amos G. McCampbell to his wife, Sallie B., and children in 1886, and that he made no revocation of the said grant except such as may have resulted from the execution of the said two mortgages. In legal effect the answer admitted all of the material averments of the petition.
It is next insisted for appellant that while holding from and after the death of her husband Amos G. McCampbell, and while in good faith believing that her husband was the true and bona fide owner of the said lands, she placed lasting and valuable improvements on the premises for which she should be reimbursed. At the time she intermarried with Amos G. McCampbell the deed in question was on record in the proper office in Mercer county and gave constructive, if not actual, knowledge to appellant of all of its provisions. She was bound to take notice of the said deed. Moreover, this litigation was commenced several years before the death of her husband, and the appeal in the ease of the Continental National Bank v. McCampbell, supra, was decided on May 20, 1919, before the death of McCampbell.
Only a bona fide claimant in possession of real property may have a recovery for improvements placed thereon, in the absence of other equities. Appellant being charged with notice of the deed and of its terms could not be held to be a bona fide claimant, and is not therefore
As the answer presented no sufficient defense to the petition, the trial court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer thereto, and upon the failure of the defendants to further plead, enter a judgment in favor of plaintiffs, now appellees.
For the reason indicated the judgment is affirmed.