Crowley v. Ballard

131 S.W.2d 463, 279 Ky. 484, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 309
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 23, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 463 (Crowley v. Ballard) 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
Crowley v. Ballard, 131 S.W.2d 463, 279 Ky. 484, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 309 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

Tbe appellees and plaintiffs below, M. F. Ballard and Ms surviving, children (Ms wife being deceased),, *485 filed this equity action in the Webster circuit court against appellant and one of the defendants below, A. C. Crowley, and two of M. F. Ballard’s grandchildren, one of whose parents was an heir of his deceased wife. The petition sought a sale for division of a tract of land in Webster county containing between 25 and 30 acres, in which plaintiffs claim to own a three-fourths undivided interest, and that the other one-fourth interest belonged to defendant and appellant A. C. Crowley. The latter answered the petition and denied that any of the plaintiffs, or either of his co-defendants, owned any interest in the tract of land sought to be sold; but that on the contrary he was the exclusive owner of it. He made his answer a cross petition against all other parties to the action and sought a judgment declaring him to be the sole owner of the involved land. Following pleadings made the issues and proof was taken by depositions by both sides when the cause was submitted, followed by a judgment sustaining the prayer of plaintiffs’ petition and dismissing A. C. Crowley’s cross petition. It ordered the land sold by the master commissioner and the net proceeds divided among the parties as set out in the petition — the defendant A. C. Crowley receiving one-fourth thereof — and from that judgment he and his wife prosecute this appeal.

The record discloses that sometime between the years 1870 and 1875 one Sebron Crowley died the owner of a tract of land in Webster county, which, as recited in his deed, contained only 80 acres, 'but which the proof in this case (without contradiction) shows contained between 90 and 95 acres. He died intestate leaving surviving him four infant children (one of whom was A. C. Crowley) and his widow. She and her children continued to occupy the land for some years when she married a man by the name of Keystone, and he and his wife and her children continued to occupy the entire tract without any assignment of the widow’s rights therein. In the meantime the plaintiff M. F. Ballard purchased the interest of two of the Crowley heirs after they became of age, which gave him a one-half undivided interest in the entire tract with his wife — who was a daughter of Sebron Crowley — owning a one-fourth undivided interest, and Keystone as vendee of A. C. Crowley owning the other one-fourth interest. In the year 1900 pursuant to a protracted agitation by M. F. Ballard for the purpose (as it appears from the record), by agree *486 ment between Keystone and wife and M. F. Ballard and wife, the entire tract was divided into three parcels— one of them supposed to contain 43 acres; another one between 25 and 30 acres, and the small one between 11 and 15 acres, the latter of which it was agreed should be held by Mrs. Keystone, either as her dower or a part of it, and the larger, or 43 acre tract, was conveyed by Keystone and wife to M. F. Ballard. But prior to that time (and in 1899) A. C. Crowley sold to his step-father, Keystone, his undivided one-fourth interest in the entire Sebron Crowley tract. The 25 acre tract was taken possession of by Keystone and wife and they occupied it as long as they lived, both of them having died before the commencement of this action. It will, therefore, be perceived that all persons having an interest in the land were parties to the allotment or division in 1900 — Keystone at that time being the owner of A. C. Crowley’s inherited interest. In Í910 he reconveyed that tract to defendant A. C. Crowley — from whom he had obtained' his undivided interest — and he (Crowley), according to the proof in this case, has claimed to own it from that time to the present.

For seven or eight years after he obtained deed to ' it from Keystone he and his family occupied and lived upon it, and after that period of occupancy he moved away and rented it to tenants. In the meantime he improved it by the erection of buildings, repairing others, and making other improvements, and according to his testimony and that of others he claimed to own it absolutely, listing it for taxation and paying taxes continuously thereafter, and which he was doing at the time of the filing of this action against him following the death of Mrs. Keystone, nee Crowley. There was no deed executed by Ballard and wife to Mr. Keystone at the time of the division or allotment made of the entire Crowley tract of land in 1900, conveying the land involved, for the reason, as stated by A. C. Crowley in his testimony, that M. F. Ballard at the time stated that there was no necessity for such a deed, since Keystone and his wife were then (and had been) in possession of that tract, and which reasons appear to have been acted on and accepted by them. At any rate, they, as we have seen, remained in possession of the tract — which is the only one involved here — and resided upon it, claiming to own it until its conveyance to A. C. Crowley in 1910, who has occupied it by himself or tenants continuously since then.

*487 At the time of the division in 1900 there was a surveyed line made separating the involved tract from the rest of the Crowley tract, and a fence was later erected along that line, and we think the proof largely preponderates — even to the extent of clearly showing — that the parcel of land then allotted to Mr. Keystone was intended by the parties to be the one-fourth interest inherited by A. C. Crowley from his father and conveyed by him in 1899 to Keystone. It would serve no useful purpose to take up the testimony of each witness and to portray each circumstance and all of the conduct of the parties pointing to that conclusion. Suffice it to say that many facts and circumstances corroborate that view, one of which is that Keystone, before he made the reconveyance back to A. C. Crowley, deeded to a church 1 acre of land in the corner of the involved tract, and plaintiffs in this ease do not seek to disturb that title. Another fact in the case is, that, unless the involved tract represents the one-fourth interest of A. C. Crowley, then that one-fourth interest in the entire Sebron Crowley tract has become lost in the shuffle, except the one-fourth aliquot part in the involved tract of 25 or 30 acres which plaintiffs admit is owned by A. C. Crowley; but his fourth of his inherited interest in the rest of his father’s farm has become evaporated or absorbed somehow by someone. It was never conveyed to anyone by Mr. Keystone after he acquired it from A. C. Crowley, and when it was re-conveyed to Crowley by him the entire involved_ tract — supposed to represent the one-fourth interest inherited by A. C. Crowley from his father — was conveyed. The only_ fact in this case furnishing a foundation for this litigation is the failure of M. F. Ballard and wife to execute a deed to Mr. Keystone at the time of the allotment or parceling of the Sebron Crowley tract in 1900, but which, as we have seen, was not done at the suggestion of M. F. Ballard. He, in a way, denies having suggested the non-necessity of such a deed, and contends that the deed which Mr. and Mrs. Keystone executed to him for the larger 43 acre tract was only for the purpose of extinguishing Mrs. Keystone’s interest therein as surviving widow of her husband. Therefore counsel for appellee emphasizes the fact that the deed so executed expressly conveys “all title and dower that we have to the following tract of land,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 463, 279 Ky. 484, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowley-v-ballard-kyctapphigh-1939.