156 Ky. 267 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1913
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The parties to this action are husband and wife, and after having lived together for more than forty years, they separated in June, 1913, as a result of differences
. For answer to this suit the husband, after controverting the material averments of the petition, set up in substance that when they married, in 1869, neither of them had any property, but the father of his wife placed her in possession of about fifty acres of land in the State of Tennessee where they then lived, and in which State they continued to reside until 1911. He averred that as a result of his labor and skill the land increased in value to such an extent that it was sold in 1911 for $4,000, $1,000 of which was paid in cash and notes executed for the remainder. He averred that it was at all times verbally agreed and understood between them that they should share equally in the ownership of the land and in the proceeds of the sale if it was sold. He further averred that there was collected on a judgment rendered in their favor in the State of Tennessee, $4,262, to all of which he was entitled; that his wife had taken possession of and converted to her own use the proceeds of the sale of the land, to one-half of which he was entitled, and this being so he should be allowed to retain for the purpose of offsetting this $2,000 and other money that his wife had received in which he owned a half interest, the property sought to be subjected by her and described in the petition.
All the affirmative matter in this answer was controverted by a reply in which it was also averred that the notes for which the land in Tennessee was sold were
After this the husband filed an amended answer in which he set up certain provisions of the statute law of Tennessee showing that the husband is entitled to his wife’s ehoses in action and personal property by reducing them to possession. It was further averred in this ' amended answer that all of the personal property they had, amounting to $1,400 when they left Tennessee in 1911, was and had been in his possession, and that the money recovered on the Tennessee judgment was his property. He further set up in the reply that he paid a debt of $500 against the land in Tennessee that his wife received from her father, and put improvements on the land of the value of $2,000.
There is also filed with the record a deed made by Miller and his wife conveying to their two children fifty acres of land in the State of Tennessee subject to the life estate of the grantors.
Afterwards this amended answer was stricken from the files and thereupon the case was submitted upon the petition, answer, reply and the deed made by the parties hereto to their children, and it was adjudged by the court that the money received on the Tennessee judgment was the joint property of the husband and wife, and that the husband had no interest in the proceeds of the sale of the Tennessee land. The court further found that the wife was entitled to one-half of the Odd Fellows note, one-half of the insurance stock and one-half of the $583.14 withdrawn by the husband from the bank, making a total of $1,141.57. It was further adjudged that the real estate, which was indivisible, was bought with money owned jointly by the husband and wife, and it was ordered that the lots be sold and the proceeds divided equally between the parties and that the interest of the husband in the lots be charged with a lien to secure the payment of the $1,141.57 found to be due the wife. From this judgment the husband appeals.
Under these circumstances there is no escape from the conclusion that the wife was the owner of one-half of the money loaned to the Odd Fellows, one-half of the money invested in the purchase of insurance stock, one-half of the money used to purchase the lots, and one-half of the cash appropriated by the husband.
The judgment is affirmed.