Kelly v. Kelly

168 S.W.2d 339, 293 Ky. 42, 148 A.L.R. 331, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 557
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 29, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 168 S.W.2d 339 (Kelly v. Kelly) 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
Kelly v. Kelly, 168 S.W.2d 339, 293 Ky. 42, 148 A.L.R. 331, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 557 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Perry, Commissioner

Affirming.

In May, 1941, the appellant, Nona Kelly, filed in the Harlan circuit court her petition in equity against theappellee, M. D. Kelly, to recover the sum of $1,600' alleged expended by her for improvements made on a residence property in Evarts, Harlan county, Ky., which at the time she and her husband occupied as their home-but record title to which was held by the appellee, M. D. Kelly.

The appellant alleged in her petition the following facts as setting out her cause of - action, entitling her to recover the stated expenditure made in permanently improving the property, which she alleged enhanced its vendible value by that amount:

In the year 1933 plaintiff married M. L. Kelly, a. brother of appellee, M. D. Kelly, and she alleges that at such time her husband represented to her, and which representation she in good faith believed, that he was the fee owner of this certain house and lot which they were-occupying and upon which she placed the improvements for which she here seeks recovery, stating that the title to the property was held by him under a commissioner’s deed, which was then duly of record in the office of the Harlan county court, clerk in deed book 72, page 60.

She further alleged that prior to the time of her marriage in 1933 to ’M. L. Kelly, he also represented to her that he was the owner in fee and in actual possession of and living in this residential property and that she had no notice nor could she by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence have found out that he did not own the said house and lot, but that at the time she advanced her money and made the various improvements thereon in the amount stated, which increased the vendible value of the property by the amount expended, she in good faith believed that her husband, M. L. Kelly, not she nor M. D. Kelly, was the owner of the property, but that, since making the improvements on it, it has turned out her husband was not at such timé its owner as he had previously divested himself of title to the property in 1933 before she made the claimed expenditures for improve *45 ments, by deeding the property to his brother, the defendant, M. D. Kelly, and that some eight years thereafter, on April 12, 1941, M. L. Kelly, her husband, died.

Further she pleaded that as she had expended $1,600 in making these permanent and valuable improvements on the property, it was in lien to her for said amount, basing her plea on the ground that the defendant, M. D. Kelly, when having record title to the property and knowing he was the real owner of it under the conveyance of it to him as stated, had stood quietly by and suffered her to make said expenditures without advising her that the property had been transferred to him by her husband, M. L. Kelly, without any consideration paid by the defendant to her husband therefor. For such reason she alleged that the conveyance to the defendant was fraudulent and void in equity and that the defendant is now estopped, by reason of his having knowingly and silently stood by and permitted her to expend her money in improving the property which she believed was her husband’s, from setting up his claim to the property against her.

The defendant having filed a general demurrer to plaintiff’s petition and the cause having been submitted thereon, the same was sustained, with leave given plaintiff to plead further. Plaintiff excepted to such ruling and thereafter filed her amended petition, wherein she first stated that the allegation made in her original petition, to the effect that her husband had divested himself of title to the property in 1933, before she made the expenditures for improvements upon it and for which she was seeking recovery, was erroneous and untrue, for the reason that she had lately been informed that at the time of making the improvements on this property, the title thereto was still vested in and held by her husband, M. L. Kelly, and that if her husband thereafter transferred title thereto to 'M. D. Kelly, it was a fraudulent transfer made to cheat and delay his creditors, to-wit, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of Cleveland, who held certain notes against him aggregating $14,000 and that, to defeat the collection of their debt, he fraudulently transferred the property to his brother, M. D. Kelly, within a day or two after receiving their demand for payment on these notes.

Further she pleaded that the defendant, M. D. Kelly, *46 left “in the full actual possession of said property” her husband, M. L. Kelly, and that, with full knowledge the said improvements were being made by her, he stood quietly by and without objection or advising her of his ownership of it permitted her to make said improvements and expend therefor the amount of $2,200, when knowing that she in good faith believed when so doing what M. L. Kelly had told her, that he, her husband, was the owner and in the actual possession of said property. Further she pleads that by reason of such wrongful and misleading conduct on the part of defendant, he is now estopped from denying payment to her of $2,200 she expended improving said property, which enhanced its vendible value in such amount, and that he should not be permitted to set up his title to the property to the exclusion of her right to recover the amount expended by her for improvements.

Upon defendant’s demurrer to the original petition being extended to her amended petition and the case being submitted thereon, the same was sustained.

Plaintiff thereupon declining to plead further, her petition as amended was, on motion of the defendant, ordered dismissed, to which ruling plaintiff excepted and prayed an appeal from the judgment, which was granted and is now before us.

This appeal presents but the one question of law, as to whether or not the factual allegations made in the original and the amended petition were sufficient to state a cause of action.

In our consideration and disposition of this question, it is appropriate that we state the general rule as to what are the essentials of the right of one to recover compensation for improvements made by him on another’s land.

As said in 31 C. J. 319, Sec. 27:

“As a general rule in order that one may recover compensation for improvements made on another’s land, even in a court of equity, it is necessary that he shall have made such improvements in good faith while in bona fide adverse possession of the land under color of title. There must be three concurrent essentials: (1) The occupant must have made the improvements in good faith; (2) he must *47 have been in possession adversely to the title of the true owner; and (3) his possession must have been, held under color or claim of title. ’ ’

To this effect see, also, Farley v. Stacey, 177 Ky.. 109, 197 S. W. 636, 1 A. L. R. 1181, and Barlow v. Bell, 8 Ky. 246, 1 A. K. Marsh. 246, 10 Am. Dec. 731.

Further, in regard to the first of these essentials, that occupant must have made the improvements in good faith, it is generally held that the occupant is entitled to compensation for his improvements when and only when he has been a bona fide possessor and has made the improvements in good faith, believing his title to be a legal one. Loeb v. Conley, 160 Ky. 91, 169 S. W. 575, Ann. Cas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 S.W.2d 339, 293 Ky. 42, 148 A.L.R. 331, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-kelly-kyctapphigh-1943.