Howard v. Mitchell

105 S.W.2d 128, 268 Ky. 429, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 775
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 27, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 105 S.W.2d 128 (Howard v. Mitchell) 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
Howard v. Mitchell, 105 S.W.2d 128, 268 Ky. 429, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 775 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Reversing.

The subject-matter of this controversy is six-sevenths of a tract of land in Ohio county, Ky. The plaintiffs on March 13, 1930, began this action by filing their petition in equity against Thomas R. Howard and his vendees, Roy Mitchell and T. F. Birkhead, in which petition the plaintiffs sought to have this tract sold for the purposes of partition and incidentally to quiet their title thereto. Thomas R. Howard was dismissed on demurrer, and on October 13, 1930, he died, and no one on behalf of him, his estate or his heirs, is a party to this appeal. The trial court decided in favor of Thomas R. Howard’s vendees, dismissed the petition, and the plaintiffs have appealed.

History of This Title.

It is claimed this land is a part of the Fielding Lewis 10,000-acre survey, 3,000 acres of which were involved in the case of Charles Groodwin and Nineteen Others v. Squire L. Taylor and Thirty-One Others, a partial transcript of which may be found in the record of Combs v. Ezell, vol. 9, p. 221 et seq., begun October 2, 1873, and terminating in a judgment for the defendants on June 11, 1881. At one time Lucius Howard was in possession of this land and claimed to own it. He died intestate in 1888, and the plaintiffs claim this land by inheritance from him.

The Claims Asserted.

The defendants claim that Mary E. Howard, the widow of Lucius Howard, occupied this property after *432 Lucius Howard’s death under 'a claim of ownership in herself, and so held it adversely to all the world until ■she sold it to Thomas R. Howard, and that he, after acquiring all'the title she had, himself held it adversely to all the world until he sold it to the present appellees, and this sale they assert vested them with perfect title, while the plaintiffs assert their mother remained in possession of this land as the widow of Lucius Howard until her death in 1921, and that Thomas R. Howard and the appellees have been in possession since then as the •eotenants of the plaintiffs.

Lucius Howard’s Descendants.

For the convenience of the reader, we have prepared a table of the descendants who survived Lucius Howard in which we have listed them in the order of their birth, and following’ the names of his children, wherever the record shows such, we have given in parentheses the age of such child at the time of the death of Lucius Howard and the figure written beneath any of the names of this family indicate such member is dead and the date of that death:

/Thomas R. Howard

Oct. 13, 1930

Frances J. Smith (23)

1 Philipp J. Howard /Verna Howard

.Lucius Howard Ellen Howard (16) Bertha Long

1888 Louise Cauley (14) Estil Howard

and Mary Howard f Appalona Boone (10) l Coleman Howard ' Charles Howard

1921 James Howard (5) 1928 | Rommie Howard I Virgie Howard

All these children of James 'Howard are in\fants.

With the exception of Thomas R. Howard, all of these together with the spouses of those that are married joined as plaintiffs, the infants suing by their mother, Agnes Howard (widow of James Howard), as their next friend.

Lucius Howard’s Title.

Lucius Howard had no title of record. There is *433 some showing that years ago Richard Howard owned this land by some sort of a title. He gave this land to his son, "Wash. Howard, and gave other land to his son, Lncins Howard. These two exchanged properties, and in that manner Lucius Howard came into possession of the land in question, but just when does not ■clearly appear.

There is some evidence Lucius Howard was in possession of it as early as 1864, while other evidence definitely places his first possesion at about the year 1880. When his possession first 'began we need not decide, for the result will not thereby be affected.

All admit he was in possession and was living there with his family and claiming it as his own when he died in 1888, and from this record we conclude his possession with claim ,of ownership and occupancy was then but 8 years old. We shall therefore consider this case upon the basis that his possession with claim of ownership began in 1880.

We will find it easier to straighten out this tangled skein by starting at the beginning and straightening it out as we come this way.

All we find to start on is that Lucius Howard was claiming it as his own and was in possession when he died, and had been so for 8 years.

That raises a rebuttable presumption of ownership, which, in the absence of evidence to the contrary,- the law will assume to be correct. See 22 C. J. p. 126, sec. 65, note 69; East Jellico Coal Co. v. Hays, 133 Ky. 4, 117 S. W. 307, 34 Am. St. Rep. 436; Moxey v. Day, 1 Ky. Op. 74. See, also, 10 R. C. L. p. 876, sec. 21.

Possession is prima facie evidence of title. Payne v. Edwards, 188 Ky. 302, 221 S. W. 1073; Ratcliff v. Iron Hill Furnace & Mining Co., 9 Ky. Op. 345.

Since Lucius Howard and Mary E. Howard were husband and wife, it might be suggested it would be as logical to assume this land belonged to her as that it belonged to him, but, where there is a joint possession in a husband and wife and there is either no evidence or the evidence favors one as much as the other, the courts uniformly hold that the ownership is in the husband. Curran v. McGrath, 67 Ill. App. 566; Hill v. *434 Chambers, 30 Mich. 422; McClain v. Abshire, 63 Mo. App. 333; and Karch’s Estate, 133 Pa. 84, 19 A. 311. However, the evidence here is not equiponderant, and such as there is all favors the ownership by Lucius Howard, and we shall therefore assume he died the owner of this property in fee simple, since, for all we know that old man, if he had, while living there, been disturbed in his possession, might have been able to show connected paper title from the commonwealth. There is no satisfactory evidence he did not have such.

The conduct of all the world since then has been entirely consistent with his absolute ownership, and the present doubt may all be due to his failure to have recorded the evidence of title that he then had. This is the same reasoning upon which the opinions of this court were rested in Morgan v. Moseley, 206 Ky. 72 266 S. W. 876, and Jarboe v. McAtee’s Heirs, 7 B. Mon (46 Ky.) 279.

From the assumptions made it follows that, when Lucius Howard died, his widow, Mary E. Howard, was entitled to dower in the property in controversy (see sections 2 and 4, art. 4, c. 52, General Statutes), and until dower was assigned to her she had quarantine therein (see section 8, art. 4, c. 52, Gen. Statutes), or she was entitled to a $1,000 homestead therein (see section 13, art. 13, c. 38, Gen. Stats.). Those statutes were then in force, and what Mary E. Howard then took must be determined by the statutes in effect when she took.

What the Widow Did.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 S.W.2d 128, 268 Ky. 429, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-mitchell-kyctapphigh-1936.