Cramer v. Eline

153 S.W. 18, 152 Ky. 106, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 596
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 7, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 S.W. 18 (Cramer v. Eline) 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
Cramer v. Eline, 153 S.W. 18, 152 Ky. 106, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 596 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Miller.

Affirming.

The appellants, fourteen in number, were plaintiffs in the -court below, and by their petition sought to dispossess the appellee of ten acres of land, on Beargrass Creek, in Jefferson County, which, prior to_ 1852, belonged to John Doup. John Doup married Matilda Noel, a wiffow, who had two 'children, Ann Noel and Rebecca Noel, by her first husband. On June 17, 1852, John Doup conveyed said ten acres to Ann Noel, the language of the deed, so far as it is material, reading as follows:

“In consideration of the esteem and affection and the [107]*107¡adoption of the aforesaid Ann, as one of my children (now my step-daughter), I hereby give, grant and convey to the said Ann the aforesaid ten acres of ground, to have and to hold same during her natural life, and if ishe should die without heirs, then and in that case the same shall revert to her mother, or her legal representatives, and in the event the said Ann should have married, the husband shall not have the power or right to sell or alienate the same.”

While the foregoing clause contains some loose expressions in the use of the terms ‘ ‘ revert, ” “ heirs, ’ ’ and “legal representatives,” we think it is apparent that it ’was the intention of the grantor, and the effect o£ thé deed was, to vest a life estate in Ann with remainder to her mother, or her heirs, in case Ann should die childless.

This case does not come within the rule announced in Alexander v. de Kermel, 81 Ky., 345, Coomes v. Frey, 141 Ky., 741, and similar cases holding that where there is a conveyance to one for life, and in case of the grantee’s death without heirs, the land shall revert to the grantor or Ms heirs, the grantor takes a fee upon the happening of the event, because the attempted reversion here is not to the grantor, or his heirs, but to a stranger to the deed.

Ann Noel married W. H. Robinson, who, in 1858, brought an action in the Louisville Chancery Court against Ann Robinson, his wife, and John Doup and Matilda Doup, for the purpose of selling said ten acres and reinvesting the proceeds in other real estate, to be held on the same terms and limitations as those prescribed in the Doup deed of June 17,1852. The property was sold under a judgment of the court on April 19,1858, to Floyd Parks, the predecessor in title of the appellee Eline, for $1,800.00, which sum, as shown by the report of the appraisers filed in said action, was the full value of the fee simple title. The sale was duly confirmed, but no deed was ever made to Parks. He executed his two promissory notes, however, for $1,000.00 and $800.00, respectively, which he paid. By an order of the court $1,000.00 of this sum was re-invested in a lot on the •southwest corner of Clay and Main Streets, in Louisville, bought from Robert J. Breekenridge, Jr., and the remaining $800.00 was used in improving said lot. These investments, and the deed to the Main .Street lot, were examined and formally approved by the chancellor. On [108]*108the same day of the sale — April 18, 1858 — John and Matilda Doup conveyed their interest in the ten acres to Floyd Parks. This fact may account for Parks’ failure to ask and get a deed, and bears out the contention hereinafter pointed out, that Parks acquired, or thought he acquired, a title to the fee of the ten acres by virtue of the sale and the deed from John Doup and wife.

Ann Robinson held the Clay Street property until July 21, 1898, when she sold her interest therein to Patrick O’Brien, .and from O’Brien it passed, by mesne conveyances, to the Metropolitan Realty Co., in April, 1909. On June 12, 1911, Ann Robinson died without issue, the appellants, who were plaintiffs below, being the descendants of her sister, Rebecca, who had married MeCaleb. After the death of Ann Robinson the appellants asserted claim to the Clay Street property, as heirs at law of Matilda Doup, under the deed of 1852; and, in order to acquire the interest oif appellants in said lot, the Metropolitan Realty Co. paid appellants $2,800.00, in cash, and took from them quit claim deeds bearing date August 8, 1911, and September 11, 1911.

On September 15, .1911, appellants instituted this action to recover the ten acres, claiming that the chancery; judgment of 1858, under which the ten acres had been sold to Floyd Parks, was void, and the sale passed no interest to the purchaser, or, at most, only the life estate of Ann Robinson, and that upon her death in 1911, without heirs, Matilda Noel having died in 1866, the fee of said ten acres vested in the children of Rebecca Noel McCaleb under the Doup deed of .1852.

The proceedings taken in the Robinson suit of 1858, were void for want of jurisdiction. The petition, however, sought to sell said ten acres upon the ground that it did not yield a reasonable return upon the investment, and to re-invest “the proceeds in other real estate to be held on the terms mentioned in said deed to Ann Noel.” Ann Noel Robinson and Matilda Doup answered, consenting to the sale of the ten acres, and the re-investment of the proceeds as prayed for, their consent having been taken and certified by the commissioner separately and apart from their respective husbands. In a separate answer John Doup consented to the sale, and asked that the proceeds be re-invested in real estate, or in Kentucky bank stocks. Proof having been taken, the chancellor, in a memorandum opinion, expressed his doubts as to .the [109]*109validity of the proceedings, under the Revised Statutes then in force, in so far as it undertook to sell anything more than the contingent interest of Matilda Doup. However, the chancellor seems to have changed his opinion, since he entered a judgment on March 29,1858, directing that the interest of said Ann Robinson in said land be sold. The sale was made to Parks for $1,800.00, which was the full value of the fee as appears1 from the report of the commissioners filed at the time, and the money was re-invested in the 'Clay Street property, as above indicated.

Upon the trial of this action the circuit judge held that the legal effect of the Doup deed of 1852, was to vest a life estate in Ann Noel, -with remainder in fee to such of her children as should survive her, but that she having died without issue, the remainder went to the appellants as the legal representatives or heirs of Matilda Doup. The circuit judge further held, however, that the effect of the chancery proceedings of 1858, and the sale thereunder, was to vest Parks with a fee simple title to the ten acres. He therefore dismissed the petition; and the plaintiffs appeal.

Whatever may have been the doubts of the chancellor who entered the judgment in the Robinson suit in 1858, it is true beyond question that all the parties to those proceedings thought that Parks had, by his purchase and the deed from John and Matilda Doup, obtained a fee simple title,to the ten acres; otherwise, there would have been no reason for investing the entire proceeds in the Clay Street property. If the chancery sale of 1858 had conveyed only the interest of Ann Noel Robinson in the ten acres, she was entitled to the purchase money absolutely, which of course would not have amounted to the full value of the land.

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145 S.W.2d 529 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W. 18, 152 Ky. 106, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-eline-kyctapp-1913.