Adkins v. Bently

197 S.W. 1086, 177 Ky. 616, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 638
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 8, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 1086 (Adkins v. Bently) 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. Bently, 197 S.W. 1086, 177 Ky. 616, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 638 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing.

Tke appellant and plaintiff below, Calestine Adkins (nee Moore), brought this suit against appellees, A. W. Childers and Thomas Bentiy (defendants below), to cancel two deeds to a one-sixth undivided interest in a [617]*617tract of land in Pike county, containing 391 acres, and to recover from them $125.00 rents and $250.00 for timber sold from the land since her deed was executed. One of the deeds was made by plaintiff to the defendant Bently on November 1, 1902, and the other was made by Bently and wife to the defendant Childers on the 17th day of February, 1905.

The grounds for the relief sought arc (1) that at the time plaintiff executed her deed of November 1, 1902, to the defendant Bently, she was an infant not quite 19 years of age; and (2) that she was induced to execute it through threats, intimidation and fraud on the part of Bently.

The defense jointly made is a denial of the allegations of the petition, and the plea that plaintiff is estopped to maintain the action because of alleged representations on her part that she was at the time 21 years of age, and, further, that in 1904 there was a judgment rendered in a suit then pending in the Pike circuit court brought for the purpose of dividing the land of Jackson Moore, who was the father of plaintiff, among his heirs, and that she was a party plaintiff in that suit and is bound by the judgment rendered therein. The further defense was made that the plaintiff was an illegitimate child and that she did not therefore inherit any of the land of which her father died seized.

The plaintiff by her reply denied,all the affirmative allegations of the answer, including the pendency of any division suit, or that she was a party thereto, or, if her name appeared as a party to any such suit in the capacity of plaintiff, that same was done without her knowledge or authority, and that she was not bound by any judgment which may have been rendered therein. Upon final submission the plaintiff’s petition was dismissed, and from that judgment she prosecutes this appeal.

But four questions are discussed by counsel for either side in presenting their contentions upon this appeal, and each of them may be classed as one of fact, only. They are, (1) as to the age of plaintiff at the time she executed the deed; (2) whether the facts and circumstances, including any representations which she may have then made estop her from maintaining this action; (3) whether she is barred from inheriting from her father because of illegitimacy; and (4) whether there had ever been a suit for the division of Jackson Moore’s land in which plaintiff was a party, and if so, is she bound [618]*618by that judgment if its terms are adverse to her present contention?

According to our view, obtained from the record as presented in this court, the principal question is the one concerning the age of plaintiff when she executed the deed to Bently. Before considering any of- the above questions it should be stated that Jackson Moore, the father of plaintiff, was adjudged a lunatic in 1892, and from that time until his death, on October 1, 1902, was an inmate of the Eastern Kentucky Insane Asylum at /Lexington, Kentucky. A short while after the father’s death plaintiff’s mother died, she having resided upon the tract of land in question from the time of her husband’s confinement in the asylum until her death.

The plaintiff, at the age of 17, having had a poor chance in life, married her present husband, Adkins, and moved from Pike county, Kentucky, over into Wise county, Virginia, a distance of about forty miles from the land, and the proof shows that she had made but one or perhaps two visits to Kentucky after her marriage. Her mother did not bear the best reputation, at the time she married plaintiff’s father. The plaintiff seems to have been afforded but small opportunity for obtaining an education. In the language of some of the witnesses, she and the other children of Jackson Moore, after the latter’s confinement in the asylum, “scattered about” amongst relatives in the neighborhood, or with any charitably disposed persons who would give them even a temporary home.

Turning now to the issues., the plaintiff testified that she was born, according to the information which she received from her parents, especially her mother, on December 24, 1883. Her half-brother, many years her senior, and who appears to be an intelligent witness, substantiates her testimony on this point. “Aunt” Sally Ann Vanover was a midwife in that vicinity, who attended, plaintiff’s mother at the time of her birth, and she is positive that plaintiff was born just before Christmas in 1883; that the birth occurred during the night, which she remembers distinctly (and from which she was not shaken on cross-examination),' even going to the extent of telling the name of the person who came after her. This old lady has a son much older than plaintiff, who substantiates the testimony of his mother and narrates a circumstance calculated to fix the date accurately in his mind. This is found in the witness’ answer to a question when he says;

[619]*619“She was born about the last of 1883 or the first of 1884; it was in cold weather. I was married the first time on the 12th day of July, 1883; that fall I got me out a set of house logs; in January, 1884,1 went there and invited Jack Moore to help me raise my house, and I saw Polly (plaintiff’s mother) there with the kid in her arms, and they told me it was just about two or three weeks old.”

Some four or five other witnesses give similar testimony more or less persuasive, and all of this testimony is supplemented by the school census reports made in 1895, 1896 .and 1897 by the defendant Childers, who was a trustee of the school district in which plaintiff’s mother resided. On these reports the age of plaintiff is given as being 12 years in 1895, 13 years in. 1896, and 14 years in l897. That such reports are competent evidence upon this character of issue was held by this court in the case of Asher v. Bennett, 143 Ky. 361.

The strongest opposing testimony which defendants introduce was that of a sister of plaintiff’s father, who testified to having carried plaintiff as a child on a certain trip across the mountains at a time when she must have been two or three years old in 1883; but the witness upon cross-examination shows that her recollection is exceedingly faulty, not even remembering the ages of her own children, and she furthermore appears to have entertained .animosity toward plaintiff’s father, perhaps growing out of the fact that he married plaintiff’s mother. Other witnesses, some four or five in number, testify to having lived in the neighborhood and saw plaintiff as a child and gave it as their opinion that she is older than she claims to be. Some of these witnesses say that they have children who are two or three years older than plaintiff claims to be and that the latter was as large, when a small girl, as the children of the witnesses. But, like the witness Kelly, some of them show some bitterness in their testimony as well as very faulty recollections. Even if their testimony was not impaired by any such circumstances, we are unable to conclude that it is sufficient to overcome the almost positively convincing testimony introduced on behalf of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 1086, 177 Ky. 616, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-bently-kyctapp-1917.