Ison v. Cornett

75 S.W. 204, 116 Ky. 92, 1903 Ky. LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 17, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 204 (Ison v. Cornett) 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
Ison v. Cornett, 75 S.W. 204, 116 Ky. 92, 1903 Ky. LEXIS 170 (Ky. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE HOBSON

Affirming.

John M. Creech died about twenty years ago, leaving a widow and two children, who were both then infants. He owned four tracts of land. Some time after his death the widow intermarried with William' Ison, and after this the daughter, Pasha, married George Ison.- In the year 1886, when she was seventeen years of age, she and her husband swapped her interest in the four tracts of land owned by her father to her stepfather, William Ison, for a tract of land in Letcher county owned by him, he paying her $50 in addition in the trade. This trade was proposed by her and her husband, and seems to have been much canvassed before it was made. The tract of land which William Ison swapped to her. was of the value of $500. So thait she got in the trade $550 for her patrimony. He knew that she was only seventeen years of age, and took from her an affidavit that she would make him a deed after she became of age. Before deeds were made under this trade, she and her husband swapped the William Ison tract to Elijah Ison for a tract owned by him, and by agreement William Ison made a deed to Elijah Ison for his tract. Elijah Ison [96]*96conveyed his tract to her, and she conveyed her interest in her father’s land to William Ison. She and her husband settled on the tract of land conveyed to her by Elijah Ison, and subsequently, while she was still an infant, conveyed one-half of it to Joseph Holcomb, and made a deed to him for it. After all this, on July 1, 1891, she became of age. The deed which she had made to William Ison for her land had not been recorded, and R. N. Cornett proposed to her husband to pay him $1,100 for it. William Ison heard of this, and on the day that sl}e was of age went to see her, asking her to make him a .deed the next day. The next morning he went to see Cornett, telling him of his purchase of the land and requesting him to drop the trade,, and offered him $100 to do this. Cornett said he did not want his money for nothing, and Ison told him if he bought the land he would buy a lawsuit. That day Cornett took to her house a deputy clerk, with a deed he had prepared for her to sign. Joseph Holcomb’s wife was there with his' deed for the purpose of getting that reacknowledged.. Thp proof is conflicting as to which deed was signed first,, but from all the evidence we conclude that it was in substance one transaction, and that both deeds should be treated as executed at the same time. Both were on the table together, and the proof leaves the mind in doubt as-to which was acknowledged and delivered first. Cornett got his deed and paid the money, and Holcomb’s wife got his. Both were properly acknowledged. William Ison was in possession of the land at the time. Cornett paid $1,100' for the land, $800 of it being paid in a stock of goods. Holcomb paid nothing for the acknowledgment of his deed. Pasha Ison and her husband were then living on the remainder of the tract conveyed to her by Elijah Ison, outside of the part conveyed by them to Holcomb, and con[97]*97tinued to reside there. Before she became of age, William Ison had cut off the land she conveyed to him timber of the value of something over $200 and received the money for it. What she had received for the land conveyed to Holcomb is not shown. Cornett then filed this suit against William Ison to quiet his title to the land. William Ison answered, making his answer a counterclaim, and praying that his title be quieted. The case was submitted to the chancellor, who entered judgment in favor of Cornett, and William Ison appeals.

The proof leaves no sort of doubt that Cornett bought with full knowledge of the previous sale to William Ison and of his claim to the land. It also leaves no sort of doubt that Cornett paid for the land $1,100 in money and property. Each of them earnestly maintains that the other has no equity in his case. The stepfather evidently knowingly made a hard trade with his stepdaughter when an infant, but the husband urged the trade, and there was no-fraud in it. Cornett bought with full notice of the prior claim of William Ison; also of the reacknowledgment of the deed to Holcomb, and that he was buying a lawsuit.

The deed of an infant conveying real estate, when any valuable consideration passes to him, is not void, but voidable only, and may be confirmed after his arrival at age by the reacknowledgment of the deed or conduct showing an election to stand by it. Hoffert v. Miller, 86 Ky., 572, 9 R., 732, 6 S. W., 117, and cases cited. After arriving at age he may disaffirm a contract made during infancy for the sale of real property, either executed or executory, by merely making another conveyance of the same property to a third ‘ person, and it is unnecessary for him to refund to the first person the consideration' received in order to render the [98]*98second conveyance valid. Vallindingham v. Johnson, 85 Ky., 289, 8 R., 940, 3 S. W., 173. The purchaser holding-under a deed made by an infant can not rely upon the champerty statute as against the second purchaser, as his holding is not adverse to the infant. Moore v. Baker, 92 Ky., 518, 13 R., 724, 18 S. W., 363. To same effect, see Freeman’s note to Craig v. Van Bebber, 18 Am. St. Rep., 657, 703; 16 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 288-293. . The fact that Cornett had notice of the claim of Ison did not render his purchase void, for, as has been well said, the privilege of an infant to disaffirm his contract might be of little value to him if he were permitted to dispose of the property previously conveyed, to such persons only as had no notice of the prior conveyance. Jackson v. Burchin, 14 Johns., 124; Glamorgan v. Lane, 9 Mo., 446. It has also been held that if an infant conveys his land, and on attaining his majority ratified his conveyance, and then conveys to another person for a valuable consideration, the first grantee not being in possession, the second grantee, having notice of the 'deed made in infancy, but no notice of the ratification, is entitled to hold the land. Black v. Hills, 36 Ill., 376, 87 Am. Dec., 224. The rule is thus well stated in 16 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 287: “The right of an infant to avoid his contract is one conferred by law for his protection against, his own improvidence and the designs of others; and, though its exercise is not infrequently the occasion of injury to those who have in good faith dealt with him, this is a consequence which they might have avoided by declining to enter into the contract. It is the policy of the law to discourage adults from contracting with infants, apd the former can not complain if, as a consequence of their violation of this rule of conduct, they are injured by the exercise of the right with which the [99]*99law has purposely invested the latter, nor charge, that the infant, in exercising the right, is guilty of fraud.”

Here Cornett had notice of all the facts, and bought with full knowledge of the situation; Ison, the prior purchaser, being in actual possession. But the infant had sold the land to Holcomb before her majority, and, as appears from the proof, had nothing at that time except the. little place on which she resided. She was under no obligation to disaffirm her deed made to Holcomb. That deed was not void. It was only voidable. If she did not disaffirm it, it stood good. Ison, when she disaffirmed the deed made to him, could not demand of her,' as a condition of that disaffirmance, that she should also disaffirm the deed made to Holcomb. Her acknowledgment, therefore, of the deed made to Holcomb after she became of age, deprived Ison ■of no legal right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 204, 116 Ky. 92, 1903 Ky. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ison-v-cornett-kyctapp-1903.