Adkins v. Whalin
This text of 7 S.W. 912 (Adkins v. Whalin) 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.
Opinion
delivered the opinion op the court.
The appellant, Y. A. Borah, as one of the children, •and as administrator of George M. Borah, deceased, filed his petition in the Bntler Circuit Court for the purpose of settling the estate of said deceased, and having his land sold to pay his indebtedness. One hundred and fifty acres of a tract of three hundred acres of land belonging to said deceased was sold for said purpose. The widow and children, except the appellant Borah, of the deceased, remained in the possession of the remaining portion of said tract. The appellant Borah, having wasted some of the assets of his decedent’s estate, he in 1856, and after the sale of said one hundred and fifty acres of land, moved to the State of Wisconsin, where he has remained ever since. In 1869 all of the children then living of George M. Borah, except the appellant, Y. A. Borah, conveyed, with the consent of their mother, by title bond, all their interest in the remaining one hundred and fifty acres of land to their brothers, C. C. and G. E. Borah. Afterwards, G. E. Borah sold his half of said land to C. C. Borah. Afterwards, to wit, on the fifteenth day of October, 1873, C. C. Borah, together with the other children of George M. Borah, [155]*155then living, except the appellant Borah, conveyed, by deed, seven-eighths of said land to Gr. H. Borah (not one of the heirs). .He, in 1873, conveyed by deed the whole of the one hundred and fifty acres of land to the appellee, J. H. Whalin. He immediately took the actual adverse possession of Uie whole tract of land, claiming it as his own. In 1874, while the appellee was in the actual possession of the tract of land, claiming the whole of it adversely- to all the world, the appellant Borah conveyed by deed one-eighth of it to the appellant Adkins.
In 1885, the appellants, Borah and Adkins, filed their joint petition in the Butler Circuit Court against the appellee, for the purpose of having the said tract of land divided in the proportion of one-seventh to the appellant Adkins, and six-sevenths to the appellee.
They alleged in their petition that the appellant Borah, in fact, sold to the appellant Adkins one-seventh of said land, but, by mistake, the deed called for one-eighth only. Among other defenses, the appellee relied on that of champerty. If this defense is available, it is unnecessary to notice the others.
The appellants' contend that, as the appellant Borah and his brothers and sisters -held the land in joint tenancy, the sale by the brothers and sisters of their interest to a stranger, and his sale of the whole tract to another stranger, could not invest the latter with such an adverse possession of Y. A. Borah’s interest in the land as to defeat his vendee’s right to maintain an action to have the land divided, and the interest of Y. A. Borah restored to his vendee.
This court, in the case of Russell, &c., v. Doyle, [156]*156&c., 84 Ky., 386, decided that a sale by one tenant in common to his co-tenant of his undivided interest in land, which was held adversely, was not champertous ; for the reason that each joint tenant or tenant in common owns an interest in the entire tract of land, and the-sale by the one of his interest to the other introduces no stranger to the title, but simply increases his interest in the whole. But the case at bar is not like that case. For the brothers and sisters of Y. A. Borah sold their interest in said land to a stranger to the title, and he sold the whole land, including Y. A. Borah’s interest, to another stranger to the title; and the latter, pursuant to said purchase, entered upon the land in his own right, and was holding the actual adverse possession of the whole tract at the time the appellant Y. A. Borah sold his interest to the appellant Adkins, who was also a stranger to the title.
The policy of the statute against champerty is to prevent litigation, by prohibiting the sale of land, adversely held, to. a stranger to the title. Tested by this rule, the appellant Adkins, having, as a stranger to the title, purchased Y. A. Borah’s interest in the land while the appellee was in the adverse possession of it, he having also purchased as a stranger to the title, the appellant’s purchase was clearly champertous, and therefore void.
But it is contended that, as Y. A. Borah’s deed conveyed to the appellant Adkins only one-eighth interest in said land, and as Y. A. Borah owned one-seventh interest therein, the difference should have been allotted to him. It is a sufficient answer to this proposition to say, that the appellants, Adkins and Borah, [157]*157allege in their petition that Borah, in fact, sold to Adkins one-seventh interest in said land, and that the recital in the deed should have been one-seventh instead of one-eighth interest, and they ask that one-seventh interest be allotted to Adkins. As the court, therefore, was called upon to correct the deed and to effectuate a champertous sale of Borah’s entire interest in the land, the dismissal of the appellant’s petition as to Borah’s entire interest was proper.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
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7 S.W. 912, 87 Ky. 153, 1888 Ky. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-whalin-kyctapp-1888.