Combs v. Roberts

35 S.W.2d 293, 237 Ky. 299, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 583
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 6, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 293 (Combs v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Combs v. Roberts, 35 S.W.2d 293, 237 Ky. 299, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 583 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman-

Affirming'-

Cordelia Roberts, formerly Cordelia Combs, nee Cordelia Johnson, was married to Cooly Combs in the early part of this century. Cooly Combs died some time prior to 1915 leaving surviving him his widow, Cordelia, and his son, James Arlie Combs, the present appellant. At the time of his death, Cooly Combs was the owner of a tract of land in Knott county, which we shall hereafter *300 refer to as the Cooly Combs farm, and a lot in Jackson, Ky., upon which there was a hotel building known as the Combs Hotel. He left some personalty, including some money in bank. On his death, Mrs. Combs took up the management of the Combs Hotel. The record shows that she and her son, the appellant, disagreed very bitterly over the administration of the estate of Cooly Combs, and suits and counter suits were filed by each against the other about that estate. In the meantime, John Roberts, who was then married to the appellee, Lourania Roberts, and who had been a magistrate and later a United States deputy marshal, was in 1917 elected sheriff of Breathitt county. While Roberts was United States deputy marshal, and when in Jackson, he put up at the Combs Hotel, as his family lived out in the county. According to Mrs. Lourania Roberts, he and Cordelia Combs became very much infatuated with each other. According to the proof of Mrs. Lourania Roberts, the rumor of this infatuation soon spread abroad in the community. Meanwhile, Cordelia Combs and her son, Arlie Combs, entered into a compromise of their differences. By the terms of the compromise, Mrs. Combs was to deed to her son her dower interest in the Cooly Combs farm and pay him $1,000. Her son was to deed to her his interest in the Combs Hotel and release her from all other claims he then had against her. Deeds were prepared, signed, and acknowledged by both Mrs. Combs and her son carrying out this agreement, but at the request of Mrs. Combs, the deeds were placed in her trunk at the Combs Hotel and were not recorded. Arlie Combs then left Jackson, Ky. After he left, his mother got out the deed he had made her and recorded it, but did nothing with the deed she had made to him. Arlie Combs soon discovered what his mother had done, and at once launched into more litigation with his mother to compel her to carry out her side of the compromise agreement. In 1919 he secured a judgment against his mother requiring her to release to him her dower in the Cooly Combs farm and to pay him the sum of $1,000, for which he was given a lien on the hotel property.

Returning now to the matrimonial troubles of the Roberts, we find that, as time went on, Mrs. Lourania Roberts ihecame more and more aware of and dissatisfied with the infatuation that existed between her' husband and Cordelia Comb's. " In the summer of 1921' she determined to bring a suit for criminal conversation' against *301 Cordelia Combs, but her husband, John Roberts, then being critically ill in Lexington, she postponed the filing of the suit. Roberts recovering his health sometime in the latter part of the summer of 1921, Mrs. Lourania Roberts determined to go ahead with her suit against Cordelia Combs. She planned to obtain an attachment when this suit was filed, and her daughter, who was acting as deputy sheriff for her father, but whose sympathy was with her mother, endeavored to procure a bondsman on the attachment bond. Whether this bondsman told John Roberts about this or not, it clearly appears that Roberts learned of his daughter’s efforts before the suit was filed, because he then upbraided her and reproached her for her efforts in her mother’s behalf. Roberts was then living in the Combs Hotel, then being run by Cordelia Combs At.this time the appellant was living in Springfield, Ohio. Just before September 2, 1921, Cordelia Combs called her son up by long distance. Up to this time the appellant had never enforced the judgment he had secured against his mother, in 1919', although he says he was pressing her all the time for a settlement. Over the telephone, Mrs. Combs, in substance, told her son that she was going to settle her differences with him and for him to get Mr. O. H. Pollard as his lawyer and she would make him a deed of compromise. On September 2,1921, Mrs. Combs by deed conveyed the hotel property to her son and also by the same deed she conveyed a tract of land she owned in her own right in Knott county and which she had inherited from her people. Her son had no interest in this farm, which we shall call the Johnson farm. The purported consideration for this conveyance was the settlement of all claims Arlie Combs had against her, which, so far as this record shows, consisted only of the judgment for the $1,000 and interest above mentioned, secured.by a lien on the property conveyed him. In this conveyance, Mrs. Combs made this reservation, which the appellant calls a life estate.

‘ ‘ The party of the first part reserves the right to the use and control of all or any of said property or any part thereof as she may elect to do so long as she sees fit’to use, occupy or control said property for her own personal use and benefit and should said party of the first part elect not to use or control said property or fail to use or control said property for her personal use and benefit, then the party' of the second part, his heirs and *302 assigns shall have the right to immediate possession of all of said property or any part thereof not in nse, occupancy or control of the said party of the first part for her own personal use and benefit.”

The parties are at odds as to the value of the property conveyed by this deed to the appellant, but we are of opinion that a minimum value that could be put upon it at the time was $6,000. It is not fair to deduct from this $6,000 the value of a normal or usual life estate, because, although Mrs. Combs could remain on the property as long as she lived, if she so elected, yet at any time she could give up the use and occupancy of the property, and thereupon appellant would have the right, according to the deed, to its possession. At the best, he paid for this property by the surrender of his judgment less than $1,100. He was represented in the transaction by Mr. O. H. Pollard, and his mother by Mr. Patton. This deed was not put to record, although dated September 2d, until September 21st following. According to the county clerk of Breathitt county, Mrs. Combs gave him the deed of September 2d on the day of its execution or shortly thereafter, and told him not to record it until she gave him further notice. On September 19, 1921, the criminal conversation suit of Lourania Roberts against Cordelia Combs was filed. Immediately thereafter Mrs. Combs called the county clerk up and. told him to record the deed, and this he did. This criminal conversation suit took several years for its disposition. On the first trial there was a judgment in favor of Mrs. Roberts for $10,000, which the trial court set aside. Before the second trial came on, she and John Roberts were divorced and John Roberts and Cordelia Combs had intermarried. .On the second trial, the appellee, Lourania Roberts, again secured a judgment of $10,000' against Cordelia Roberts, which judgment was- affirmed by this court. Roberts v. Roberts, 230 Ky. 165, 18 S. W. (2d) 981. In the meantime Mrs. Cordelia Roberts had brought suit against her son to set aside the deed she had made to him on September 2,1921.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.2d 293, 237 Ky. 299, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combs-v-roberts-kyctapphigh-1931.