Alexander v. de Kermel

81 Ky. 345, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 81 Ky. 345 (Alexander v. de Kermel) 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
Alexander v. de Kermel, 81 Ky. 345, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 72 (Ky. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE HARGIS

delivered the opinion oe the court.

This was an action by appellees for the construction of a deed of trust made by Thomas Bullitt Alexander in 1856, and of his will made in 1878, while in the Republic of France, at the appellees’ home, whither he had gone some time after the American civil war, and where he virtually enjoyed their hospitality and kindly offices for several years preceding his death.

By the deed of 1856 he conveyed a lot and warehouse thereon to Wilson in trust for his own use during life, and to his issue, if any, in fee; if none, then in equal parts to two half brothers, or the survivor, or to the issue of either, and “if both of them should die before the party of the first part without issue, said property shall go to the heirs of the said party of the first part.”

The half brothers died without issue before Thomas Bullitt Alexander, who, after their death, himself having no issue, devised by his will the house and lot-to the appellee, Mrs. de Kennel.

The petition of herself and husband was not paragraphed until after appellants made a motion to compel them to para[348]*348graph it, which they did without objection. Thereupon, the appellants, claiming the house and lot as heirs and devisees •of Col. T. L. Alexander, who was the father of Thomas Bullitt Alexander, and survived him, demurred to the first paragraph of the petition, which was sustained, but no judgment was rendered effectuating the demurrer, either by dismissing the first paragraph or otherwise. In this condition, the case was transferred to the vice chancellor’s .court, and there, upon the hearing on the merits, the appellees recovered judgment, declaring the title to be in Mrs. de Kermel, and removing the cloud therefrom. From that judgment this appeal was taken. The first question is, whether the order sustaining the demurrer was final and conclusive unless reversed, the appellees having failed to appeal from that •order.

As there was no judgment following it, the mere order sustaining the demurrer was not final and appealable. It is well settled that even a judgment o-n demurrer, unless the complaint is sufficient, is no bar to a future action. Section 267 of Freeman on Judgments has no application where the demurrer is not followed by a judgment, or an order equivalent to a judgment. Although a demurrer may be sustained, the case may be kept in court for the purpose of amendment or reconsideration before judgment of dismission, and the court may finally determine not to dismiss the pleading on either of those grounds. Hence, the order .sustaining the demurrer to the first paragraph of the petition is not final or preclusive, and the subsequent judgment •of the court must be treated also as an order correcting the error in sustaining the demurrer, which the court had the right to make, as no former judgment had been rendered on the demurrer. In the first paragraph of the petition the [349]*349appellees set forth the deed of 1856 and the will, and in the second they averred, substantially, that if they were mistaken as to the proper construction of those instruments, then they were entitled to the property because of an agreement and declaration of trust on the part of the father of Thomas Bullitt Alexander to hold it for his use.

The appellants answered, controverting the material allegations of the petition as to the construction of the deed and will, and, in avoidance, pleaded a conveyance of the house and lot in May, 1864, by Thomas Bullitt Alexander to his father in consideration of $9,000, all of which is stated to have been paid in different amounts from the year 1854 to the date of the deed, except $1,000 paid at the latter date. The appellees, in effect, replied, that this deed was never delivered to or accepted by his father, and if it had been, it was in trust for Thomas Bullitt Alexander’s use and benefit.

Thus, it will be seen, that the correctness of the judgment below depends upon the legal effect of the deed of 1856, and on the fact whether the deed of 1864 was delivered, and, if so, whether a maintainable resulting trust grew out of the circumstances of its execution.

We will first consider the deed of 1856. The real question under it is, whether the term "heirs,” embraced in the words "said property shall go to the heirs of the said party of the first part,” imports purchasers. It is undoubtedly the law that Thomas Bullitt Alexander had the right to designate his heirs as purchasers under the deed, but whether he intended to do so depends upon the terms which he employed. We must assume, in the absence of words in the deed expressing a contrary intention, that the language quoted from it was used in its legal sense, and subject to legal interpretation.

[350]*350According to the elementary books, the language under consideration made such a disposition of the reversion in the property, which was not absolutely conveyed by Thomas Bullitt Alexander, as the law would have made had not the reversion been provided for or nothing been said about it.

According to Coke, '' a reversion is where the residue of the estate always doth continue in him that made the particular estate, or where the particular estate is derived out of his estate;” and, in illustration of reversions, he says: ‘ ‘ If a man seized of lands in fee make a feoffment in fee (and depart with his whole estate), and limit the use to his daughter for life, and after her decease to the use of his son in tail, and after to the use of the right heirs of the feoffor ; in this case, albeit he departed with the whole fee-simple by the feoffment, and limited no use to himself, yet hath he a reversion.” And he says further, even "if the limitation had been to the use of himself for life, and after to the use of another in tail, and after to the use of his own right heirs, the reversion of the fee had been in him, because the use of the fee continued over in him.” And as a reversion is never created by deed or writing, arising only from construction of law, it would seem that the last quotation precisely' embraces such a case as this, and places the estate in the grantor as a reversion by the construction which the law gives to his deed.

On page 175, second book, Blackstone, in treating of reversions, uses these words: ‘ ‘ An estate in reversion is the residue of an estate left in the grantor, to commence in possession after the determination of some particular estate granted out by him;” and that "Sir Edward Coke describes a reversion to be the returning of land to the grantor or his heirs after the grant is over.”

[351]*351Blackstone attributes the doctrine of reversions to the feodal constitution; but Kent differs from him, and says that reversion, in the general sense, must be familiar to the laws of all nations who admitted of private property in lands. (4 Kent, 389.) Therefore, and from the nature and purpose of reversions, we think they are not as inimical to our allodial system of titles to lands as remainders, on which the doctrine of English entails were principally based.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Ky. 345, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-de-kermel-kyctapp-1883.