Clay v. Clay

250 S.W. 829, 199 Ky. 4, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 788
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 9, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 829 (Clay v. Clay) 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
Clay v. Clay, 250 S.W. 829, 199 Ky. 4, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 788 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

On April 20, 1888, Henry Clay, who resided in Bourbon county, executed his will. Within a short time thereafter he died the owner of a large body of land in that county and on July 7, 1890, his will was probated. In it he devised his land to his three children jointly, the appellant, Lettia Clay, George Clay and Joseph II. C'lay, and as to the shares of his two children, George and Letitia, he provided ££in the event of the death of either George or Letitia Clay without children each to inherit their lands of the other so far as received from me.” The land so devised consisted of about nine hundried acres and after the probate of the will a suit was brought-for its partition among the three devisees. The copimissioners allotted lot No. 1, containing 293 acres 3 roods [6]*6and 32 poles to appellant, Letitia Clay, and lot No. 2, containing 296 acres. 1 rood and 32 poles to George Clay, and lot No. 3, containing ¡360 acres to Joseph H. Clay. Appellant was dissatisfied with the lot apportioned to her and preferred the one given to her brother George Clay, and on October 30, 1891, they executed deeds to each other by which she conveyed absolutely and with covenant of warranty lot No. 1 to her brother, George Clay, and he on the same day and in the same manner conveyed to her lot No. 2.

On December 3,1912, the same two parties exchanged deeds from the one to the other in each of which the above quoted provision of the will of Henry Clay was recited and reference made to the deeds of October 30, 1891, and they further contained this recital: “Whereas, it is desired by each of the said parties, namely: George Clay and Letitia Clay, to own in fee simple and without restriction the lands devised to each by the will of their father, Henry Clay, Now, therefore,” etc. Those recitations and reference, were followed by a regular quitclaim deed of conveyance of all the interest which the one had or claimed to own in the devised land of the other with the expressed purpose of relieving each of their portions of the executory devise imposed by their father’s will in favor of the other, so that each might hold their respective portions by absolute and unfettered title.

On March 1, 1913, George Clay sold for a valuable consideration his tract to appellee and defendant below, Brooks Clay. At the latter’s request appellant and plaintiff below, Letitia Clay, joined in the deed of conveyance made by George Clay to his vendee, the defendant, Brooks Clay. The obligation of plaintiff in that deed is thus, recited therein: “The first party, Letitia Clay, has heretofore, by the deeds above referred to, conveyed to the first party, George Clay, all right or title to which she might have succeeded in said real estate under the will of her father, Henry Clay, but for greater certainty and definitenes. she is made a party hereto, and united herein, to sell, assign, transfer, quitclaim and convey to second party, his heirs and assigns, all right, title or interest owned by her, or to which she might ever succeed under the will of her said father, Henry Clay. And to this extent the said first party, Letitia Clay, warrants specially, and not generally, the title herein conveyed.”

In August, 1913, George Clay, upon inquisition, was adjudged a person of unsound mind and plaintiff was [7]*7appointed his committee, bnt she soon thereafter resigned and H. Clay Howard was appointed as her successor and he and plaintiff in this case filed an equity action in the Bourbon circuit court on October 13, 1914, seeking’ to set aside the deed of March 1,1913, to defendant, Brooks Clay, upon the ground (as to George Clay) that he at the time of executing it and long prior thereto .did not possess mental capacity to understand the nature and purpose of the deed and that he was mentally incapable of doing so, and that the consideration paid by defendant, Brooks Clay, was greatly inadequate. It was further alleged in that petition as a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff in this case that her brother, George Clay, had threatened her with personal violence, “and that she feared personal violence at his hands if she opposed him in any matter or refused to comply with any of his demands, . . . and that by reason of her fears of such violence at the hands of her said brother she was unable to refuse to unite with him in such conveyance (the one to Brooks) when he demanded that she should execute the same,” and for that reason, and the further one that to avoid exciting and irritating her brother, George, and to prevent an aggravation of his malady, she consented to and did join in the deed attacked in that suit.

Appropriate pleadings made the issues, and upon extensive preparation the court set aside the deed of March 1,1913, from which the defendant therein, Brooks Clay, who is also the 'present defendant, prosecuted an appeal to this court, and the judgment was reversed on February 26,1918, in the case of Clay v. Clay’s Committee, et al., reported in 179 Ky. 494, and the cause was “ remanded with directions to dismiss, the petition.” The mandate was filed and a judgment entered dismissing the petition against both plaintiffs as directed by this court in its opinion. At that time George Clay was alive and lived until September 28, 1919, when he died unmarried and without children.

On October 29, thereafter, plaintiff brought this equity action against the defendant, Brooks Clay, seeking to recover the same tract of land by virtue of her defeasible remainder interest created in it by the will of her father upon the death of her brother, George Clay, without children or other remote descendants, and. for cause she alleged that her brother, George Clay, by his threats, force and duress compelled her to execute the [8]*8deed to him on December 3, 1912. The same was alleged as to the deed of March 1,1913, and that both of them so far as she was concerned were without consideration. By an amendment she alleged that all of the deeds she executed to her brother, George, as well as the one in which she joined with him to defendant, Brooks Clay,were each void because at the time she executed them she possessed no conveyable interest and she further alleged that her brother was of unsound mind on October SO, 1891, although he was made executor of his father’s will and carried out its provisions.

The answer, as. amended, in addition to a traverse alleged affirmatively as defenses, (1) the execution by-plaintiff of the various deeds hereinbefore recited; (2)-pleaded the statute of limitation in bar of plaintiff’s right to contest either of them, and (3) pleaded the judgment and proceedings in the case of Clay v. 'Clay’s Committee, in bar of the action. The demurrer filed by plain-' tiff to the answer as amended was overruled and she declining to plead further, her petition was dismissed, from which judgment she prosecutes this appeal. The parties have assumed and proceeded on the theory that the quoted provision from the will of Henry Clay by which a defeasance was created in the respective shares of his two children, George and Letitia, upon their death-“without children,” related to their deaths at any time and not to their dying without children before the death of the testator, and for the purpose of this case we will adopt that construction as the true one, which brings ns to a consideration of the merits, of the three affirmative defenses relied on.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 829, 199 Ky. 4, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-clay-kyctapp-1923.