Fergerson v. Rieke

3 S.W.2d 405, 223 Ky. 321, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 958
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 18, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 405 (Fergerson v. Rieke) 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
Fergerson v. Rieke, 3 S.W.2d 405, 223 Ky. 321, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 958 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court bt

Judge Dietzman

Reversing.

This is an action of ejectment brought by the appellant against the appellees. On the motion of the appellees for á judgment on the face of the pleadings, the court entered judgment for them, and the appellant brings this appeal.

The facts as disclosed by the pleadings are these: On November 27,1918, the appellees Frank H. Rieke, ¥m. H. Rieke, Lilly Rieke Clark, her husband, Edward Clark, Clara Rieke Burnett, and her husband, Emmett Burnett, hereinafter referred to as the Rieke heirs, by a deed with a covenant of general warranty conveyed to the appellant the property involved in this litigation. The consideration for this conveyance was the sum of $10,000, evienced by a note payable on the 30th of December, 1925, with interest from the date of the conveyance until paid; a lien being retained on the property to secure this note. The deed provided that the grantee should maintain insurance on the property in the sum of not less than $5,000 and cause the policy to be assigned to the grantors to secure them in the payment of the note mentioned. The deed provided that the title conveyed by it was not to vest in the grantee until the 29th day of December, 1925, which, as the deed recited, would be 15 years following the date of the death of ¥m. H. Rieke, from whom these grantors had inherited the property. Contemporaneously with the execution of this deed these Rieke heirs executed a lease to the property in question to the appellant. By this lease the appellant agreed to pay for the occupancy of the property until title should vest in him, as provided *323 by his deed, the sum of $600 per year, together with all the taxes, assessments, and insurance on the property. The lease further provided that the interest payments on the note mentioned in the deed of conveyance should be construed as a payment of the rent provided for by this lease. It seems that in the will of ¥m. H. Rieke under which the Rieke heirs hold this property it was provided that the property should not be alienated for 15 years. It is perfectly obvious, and indeed it is admitted in the pleadings, that the scheme of this deed and lease was gotten up to evade the restraint on alienation provided for in the Rieke will.

At the time the parties executed these documents, it was supposed that the grantors were the sole owners of the property. They had had a sister, Carrie L. Cooper, to whom, along with themselves, the property in question had been willed by their father, Wm. H. Rieke. This sister had died after the death of their father and before the execution of the deed and lease above mentioned. She left surviving her a husband, James E. Cooper, and in some litigation which had been had in the McCracken circuit court it had been adjudged that he took no interest as a tenant by curtesy in the property in dispute herein. However, after the deed and lease above mentioned had been executed, the judgment of the McCracken circuit court, on an appeal prosecuted to this court, was reversed, and James E. Cooper was held to have a curtesy interest in the property. Cooper’s Adm’r v. Clarke, 192 Ky. 404, 233 S. W. 881. While this appeal was pending in this court, the Rieke heirs were unable to put the appellant into possession of the property in question, and thereupon a supplemental agreement was drawn up, which was signed, however, only by F. H. Rieke. This supplemental agreement provided that as long as the appellant was out of the possession of the property the Rieke heirs were to collect the rents from such tenants as were in the property* apply the same to the payment of taxes, insurance, and assessments and the rental or interest on the $10,000 note, and that, when the appellant should be put in possession of the property, there should be an accounting, and, if the rentals the Rieke heirs had collected exceeded the amounts to which these rentals were to be applied, the Rieke heirs should pay the appellant any such excess, and, on the other hand, if there was°a deficiency, appellant would pay the heirs such deficiency. As this agreement, though in *324 definite in its terms as-to time, was one which might have been performed within a year from its daté,, it was one not required by section 470 of the Statutes to be in writing. East Tenn. Tel. Co. v. Paris Electric Co., 156 Ky. 763, 162 S. W. 530. Although this agreement was signed only by one of the Rieke heirs, they all did collect the rents from the tenants from November 16, 1919, to date. The appellant was never put in possession of the property.

On December 30, 1925, title then having vested in him under the deed above.mentioned, as appellant contends, he wrote to the appellees offering to pay his note and to adjust the matter of the rentals, taxes, insurance, and assessments. The Rieke heirs declining to accept payment of the note, which they have retained from the time it was delivered to them to date, and declining to yield up possession of the property to the appellant, he brought this action of ejectment against them, certain .alleged tenants in the building, and Wm. Burnett. He did not make James E. Cooper a party to the suit. The only one of the alleged tenants in the building who answered disclaimed any title to the property or right to hold it. Wm. Burnett by his answer claimed that he was in the custody and charge of the property as rental agent for the Rieke heirs and James E. Cooper. By their answer the Rieke heirs asserted that the conveyance and lease above mentioned were in fact and in truth only an option to purchase on the part of' the appellant, which option to purchase had long since been abandoned by all of the parties, and that through mistake and oversight the deed and lease did not express the true agreement of the parties. No request, however, was made to reform these instruments to express such alleged true agreement of the parties, nor was any motion made to transfer the case to equity for that purpose. By a reply the appellant traversed the claim of the appellees to the effect that this lease and deed constituted an option to purchase, which had been abandoned, and reiterated that the deed and lease were exactly what they purported to be on their faces. With the pleadings in this shape, the appellees made a motion for a judgment on the face of the pleadings, with the result above noted. We have not overlooked the fact that the appellant offered to file an amended petition, which the” court declined to allow him to do, but, in view of the disposition we think should *325 have been made of this case, we need not consider this alleged error on the part of the trial court.

We are informed, in brief of counsel for the appellees, that the trial court entered the judgment it did because one owner of an undivided interest cannot maintain ejectment against the owner of another undivided interest in the same property, and the case of Higgins v. Howard, 61 S. W. 1016, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1863, is cited to sustain that proposition. It is perfectly plain, though, that so far as the Rieke heirs are concerned this principle has no application. Conceding, without deciding, that their answer, alleging that the deed and lease were in fact only meant to be an option to purchase which had been abandoned, presented a valid defense, yet the burden of establishing this answer after it had been traversed by the appellant was upon them, for on their faces the deed and lease purported to be nothing but a conveyance and lease.

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20 S.W.2d 1013 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 405, 223 Ky. 321, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fergerson-v-rieke-kyctapphigh-1927.