Adkins v. Adkins

188 S.W. 843, 171 Ky. 762, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 425
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 27, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 843 (Adkins v. Adkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adkins v. Adkins, 188 S.W. 843, 171 Ky. 762, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 425 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hurt-;

Affirming.

Winright Adkins owned a tract of land consisting of of about one hundred and forty-four acres, on Greasy Creek, in Pike county, upon which he resided, in 1885. His wife, Nancy Adkins, and his sons, L. G. or Grant Adkins and William Adkins, resided with him. L. G. Adkins was' his youngest child, at that time, and was twenty or twenty-one years of age. Winright Adkins had been married, previous to his marriage with Nancy, and by his first marriage there were five children. Nancy Adkins was the mother of seven children by Win-right Adkins, and two by a former marriage, one of whom was the appellee, John Gillespie. On the 13th [763]*763day of October, 1885, Winright Adkins was somewhere from sixty-fonr to sixty-nine years of age, when he executed and delivered a deed to his son, L. G. Adkins, for the tract of land upon which he then lived. The portions of the deed which set up its terms and conditions and consideration were as follows:

“Witnesseth, that said party of the first part, for and in consideration of the sum of taking care of me and his mother as long as we both live, and to provide for said Winright Adkins and Nancy Adkins, his father and mother, with such things that is suitable, as long as they both live, and Winright Adkins is to have and keep possession of the land and full control of it until his death, do hereby sell and convey to the party of the second part, his heirs and assigns, the following described property, to-wit:.......which said Leonard G. Adkins is to have no possession of said land until the death of Win-right Adkins, his father, and if the said party of the second part fails to comply with the foregoing agreement, then on his failure the parties of the first part has the right to sell the land for their support.”

“To have and to hold the same together with all the appurtenances thereunto belonging unto the party of the second part, his heirs and assigns, forever.”

Then follows the clause by which the grantor covenanted to warrant the title to the party of the second part and his heirs and assigns forever, against the claims of all persons. Then follows this clause:

“A lien is retained upon the property hereby conveyed as security for the performance of the above contract. This deed is not to take effect until the death of Winright Adkins.”

Winright Adkins and his wife, Nancy, and L. G. Adkins continued to live as they were then living upon the farm and in the dwelling house upon it for three or four years thereafter, when Nancy Adkins died. A few months thereafter L. G. Adkins married and brought his wife to live with him and his father. Shortly thereafter, either in the year 1888 or 1889, the proof does not definitely show, Winright Adkins married a third time, and brought his wife, Elizabeth Harris, to live in the same house. Father and son and their wives resided in the same house for about one year, when L. G. Adkins, as he claims, by his own efforts, and as the widow of Winright Adkins claims, with the assistance of his father and [764]*764other members of the family, built upon the land a new log house.. The logs were procured upon the land. Win-right Adkins and his wife then removed to this new house, leaving L. GL Adkins and his wife in the old residence. The wife of Winright Adkins, at the time of their marriage, was the mother of four children, and was comparatively a young- woman. The youngest of these four children, who was about three or four years of age, at that time, she brought to reside with her, when she became the wife of Winright Adkins. After she married, she became the mother of five other children, the result of her marriage. Upon the removal of Winright Adkins and his wife to the new house, by some kind of arrangement, either express or by mere acquiescence, L. Gr. Adkins apparently took control and possession of about one-half of the land, which he used and cultivated thereafter. The father had the use and control of the other one-half of the land, which included a small corn mill upon the land, and he retained the control and possession of that part of the land until his death, in April, 1903.

In February, 1903, at the solicitation of Winright Adkins, he and L. Gr. Adkins, by a joint conveyance, sold and conveyed the minerals in the lands to the Northern Coal & Coke Co., for which the company paid to L. U. Adkins the sum of two hundred and one dollars and seventy-five cents. It was agreed between Winright and L. Gr. Adkins that the consideration received for the sale of the minerals should be equally divided between them.

After the death of Winright Adkins, L. Gr. Adkins either instituted or threatened the institution of proceedings to secure the possession of the portion of the land which his father had retained the possession of until his death, when, by arrangement with the widow of his father, he paid her twenty dollars to give up the possession and she removed from the land. The five children of Winright Adkins by his last marriage were then all infants and the younger ones of them were of very tender years.

The father and son each cultivated crops upon his respective half of the land, and each procured firewood from it, and the proof shows the son oftentimes assisted to a more or less extent in the cultivation of the crops planted by his father, and his father and wife and children frequently assisted the son in his work in his crops.

[765]*765It is claimed by tbe appellants that the appellee, L. Gr. Adkins, wholly failed to provide for his father, as was stipulated in the deed under which he held the land, and that during all the time, up to the death of his father, he failed to render him any assistance or to provide him with clothing or with money or with the necessities of life, except a barrel of flour and a small amount of bacon and coffee upon one occasion, and paid for his burial at his death. Upon the other hand it was claimed by the appellees, that from the time of the making of the deed to the death of Nancy Adkins, that the appellee, L. Gr. Adkins, entirely maintained his father and mother and after his father’s marriage the third time and until his death, that he contributed to the support of himself and family to the extent of his ability, and furnished to his father a sufficiency to have maintained him alone, but not a sufficiency to maintain him and his wife and children; that the aid and assistance and things furnished by him to his father were twice the value of the farm in controversy.

Both father and son cut and sold from the land timber trees without consulting the other, so far as the proof tends to show.

The proof showed upon the side of the appellants that Winright Adkins maintained himself and family and had as plenty of food and clothing as other people in their station of life in the community, up until about one and one-half years previous to his death, and that after that time he was unable to labor or to do anything for his support, and that he was oftentimes almost destitute of both food and clothing, while the evidence for appellees tended to prove that up until the time of his death he and his family had such food and clothing as people in their station of life in the community ordinarily had.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 843, 171 Ky. 762, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-adkins-kyctapp-1916.