Groves v. Bryant

216 S.W. 364, 186 Ky. 104, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 2, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 364 (Groves v. Bryant) 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
Groves v. Bryant, 216 S.W. 364, 186 Ky. 104, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 184 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle —

Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Simpson circuit court, rendered in an action quia timet, declaring the appellee, Sue Bryant, as sole devisee under the will of Eli Bryant, deceased, the owner of a house and lot in the city of Franklin and quieting her title to same as against the appellants, Billy Groves and others, who asserted claim to the property as heirs at law of Isaac Groves, deceased.

The single question presented for decision by the appeal will readily be understood from the following brief statement of the facts out of which the litigation arose. The action was originally instituted by Eli Bryant in whom the petition alleged title to and possession of the house and lot in question, acquired through its purchase by him in 1874 of, and conveyance by deed from, the trustee in bankruptcy of a partnership known as “Knapp, Smithson & Horn” and the several members thereof at a sale made by him of same and other property of the bankrupt firm and its members; that he paid the trustee in bankruptcy for the house and lot and upon receiving the deed from the latter caused it to be duly recorded in the office of the clerk of the Simpson county court,’ but [106]*106after' it was recorded neglected to obtain from the connty clerk’s office the original deed, which, together with the record made of it in the office of the connty clerk, all other records of that office and others in the court house of Simpson county, was consumed in a fire by which that building was burned and entirely destroyed in 1882. It was also alleged in the petition that by the deed mentioned he, Eli Bryant, was invested with the fee simple title to the house and lot in controversy, the possession of which he held at the time of the institution of this action and had continuously enjoyed without interruption, adversely to all others, for more than thirty years and, in fact, ever since its purchase by him in 1874; and that one Isaac Groves, the defendant originally named in the petition, had by wrongfully claiming to be the owner of the house and lot and threatening to sue for the possession of same, oast a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title to the property and interfered with his peaceable possession thereof. The prayer of the petition asked that the plaintiff be adjudged the owner of the house and lot and' that his title thereto be quieted.

The answer of Isaac Groves denied Bryant’s title to the house and lot, alleged that the property was purchased by Mary Bryant, his first wife, a daughter of Isaac Groves; that it was paid for by her with money furnished her by the father and the title conveyed her, instead of her husband, by the deed from the trustee in bankruptcy of Knapp, Smithson & Horn; and that by her death in 1895, intestate and childless, he as her father and only heir at law, under the statute of descent and distribution of this state, at once took the title to the property and also the right of the possession thereof. By the prayer of the answer the court was asked to quiet Isaac Groves’ title to the house and lot and compel the immediate delivery to him' of the possession thereof.

After giving their depositions, and following the taking of those of substantially all the other witnesses in the case, both Bryant and Groves died, the former testate and childless. By his will the appellee, 'Sue Bryant, his second and surviving wife, was made executrix thereof and the sole devisee of his estate. Isaac Groves died intestate, survived by the several children whose names appear as appellants in the record brought to this court on the present appeal. Pursuant to an agreement of the [107]*107parties and the éntering of the necessary orders, the action was duly revived in the court below by mating the appellee, Sue Bryant, as the executrix of and sole devisee under Eli Bryant’s will, a party plaintiff and the appellants, Billy Groves and others, as heirs at law, of Isaac Groves, parties defendant to the action.

We have rarely found evidence more conflicting than that contained in the record of this ease. That of appellants strongly conduces to sustain their contention that the deed conveying the lot in controversy was made to the first wife of Eli Bryant, while that of appellee is equally strong to the effect that it conveyed the lot to the latter. Isaac Groves, the father of the first wife of Bryant, testified that he let Bryant have the money to pay for the property with the understanding that it was purchased for and was to be conveyed his daughter, the wife of Bryant. The latter testified with equal positiveness that this was not true, but that the money paid for the property was furnished by him alone and the deed made to him.

There was also an abundance of evidence to the effect that Isaac Groves was insolvent at the time he claims to have furnished the money to buy the lot for his daughter and, by reason thereof, without ability or means to give or advance her the $1,800.00, required to pay for the lot. On the other hand it seems apparent from the evidence that Eli Bryant was then able to pay for it. Two or three witnesses claimed to have seen in the possession of the first Mrs. Bryant the original deed by which she was conveyed the lot, but it will be found, with perhaps one exception, that these witnesses were defendants to the action' or related to the defendants. On the other hand Eli Bryant and others testified that the deed was made to him and not to his wife, and that it was never in her possession, but was destroyed with the court house. It was also testified in substance by Isaac Groves and other members of the Groves family that Eli Bryant admitted to him or them that the title to the lot had been in his wife’s name and that at his death it would go to the Groves family; but this was all denied by Bryant and contradicted by other witnesses.

It is claimed for appellants that Geo. B. Knapp’s testimoney shows the first Mrs. Bryant to have been the purchaser of the lot and that the deed, was made to her. [108]*108We fail to find that Knapp’s testimony conclusively sustains this contention. On the contrary it shows that Eli Bryant was the bidder for the property, that it was knocked down to him and that the witness was unwilling to positively state that Mrs. Bryant was the purchaser. It is true he said he believed he wrote the deed and notes and that “to the best of his recollection” the deed was made to Mrs. Bryant, but he did not positively say that this was so and .his deposition, as a whole, leaves the impression that his mind was not entirely free of doubt as to the identity of the person named as grantee in the deed. It is not to the discredit of the witness that he would not be positive in his statements as to this matter, in view of his age and blindness and the long time intervening between the sale of the property and the taking of his deposition.

Without going into further details regarding the evidence contained in the numerous depositions found in the record, it is sufficient to say that it was as conflicting as the nearly equal number of opposing witnesses giving the depositions could make it; so conflicting, indeed, as to render it a difficult task for the chancellor to determine from the depositions alone how the issues of fact made by the pleadings should be decided. The record furnishes, however, in the way of circumstantial evidence certain acts, both of Eli Bryant and Isaac Groves, with respect to the property in question, that doubtless had weight with the chancellor in arriving at the conclusions expressed in the judgment appealed from.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Charles v. Charles
250 S.W. 855 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 364, 186 Ky. 104, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groves-v-bryant-kyctapp-1919.