Kentucky Real Estate Board v. Smith

114 S.W.2d 107, 272 Ky. 313, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 25, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 107 (Kentucky Real Estate Board v. Smith) 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
Kentucky Real Estate Board v. Smith, 114 S.W.2d 107, 272 Ky. 313, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 117 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The primary and all-sufficient decisive question Mr our determination, as submitted by this appeal, is, Whether or not a deed in the chain of title of appellee and plaintiff below, Milton W. Smith, to a tract of land in Oldham county, Ky., containing 70 acres, conveyed to the joint vendees therein a fee-simple title, or a lesser estate? A secondary question'of adverse possession is also raised, but which becomes relevant only if the deed referred to conveyed a less estate than the absolute fee-simple title, and, since we interpret it as conveying the absolute fee-simple title with no reserved interest in the grantors (which was the judgment of the trial court) the question of adverse possession becomes irrelevant.

The facts are: The appellant and one of the defendants below, Kentucky Real Estate Board, as the constituted governmental agency of the commonwealth to acquire title to real estate, obtained an option from the plaintiff, Milton W. Smith, to purchase his tract of land containing 70 acres and located in Oldham county, Ky., at an agreed price, provided he could convey a perfect title. Before the expiration of the option the board notified him that it would be accepted. The purchase was a part of a much larger tract needed by the commonwealth for the purpose of erecting buildings for a reformatory for convicted criminals, and the aequistion of sufficient surrounding grounds to furnish employment for the prisoners. In due time plaintiff furnished, as agreed, an abstract of title, and tendered to the board a warranty deed conveying the absolute title to the premises. It declined to accept the tendered deed upon the ground that plaintiff owned, as it contended, only a one-half undivided interest in the tract of land, and that the other half thereof was owned by the heirs or devisees of A. Wellman, deceased. That contention was based on defendant’s interpretation of a deed executed by Wellman and wife to J. W. Lee and wife on January 6, 1910. The land was later conveyed by Lee and wife *315 to a man by the name of Allen, who in turn conveyed it to plaintiff. Both deeds — from the Lees to Allen, and from Allen and wife to plaintiff — admittedly conveyed the absolute title to the involved land.

The controverted language in the Wellman deed is contained in this excerpt therefrom: “That for and in consideration of the sum of $1.00 cash and other valuable consideration, receipt of which, by first party, A. Wellman, is hereby acknowledged, the parties of the first part have sold and do hereby grant, sell and convey unto said parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns, that is unto said second parties jointly, in interest of one-half each, during the life of the said Sue F. Lee, and at her death her interest to go to J. W. Lee and his heirs, ’ ’ etc. Lee and wife are dead, and the same is true as to Wellman; but the latter left surviving him two adult children residing in Knoxville, Tenn., and two infant grandchildren, the issue of a deceased child — all of whom were made parties defandants with the infants represented by guardians ad litem, and the nonresidents by a warning-order attorney — both of whom filed reports as required by law.

The action was brought by plaintiff against defendant, Real Estate Board, and other state functionaries possessing connected duties, and also against the Well-man heirs, under our declaratory judgment statute to obtain an interpretation of the inserted language from the Wellman deed; but though so designated the action in reality is one for specific performance — -all parties to the option contract apparently being disposed -to carry out that agreement if plaintiff’s tendered warranty deed conveys to the grantee therein the absolute title. The court held that it did do so, and from that judgment defendants prosecute this appeal.

It is the contention of defendants’ learned counsel briefing the case for this court that, the above inserted granting clause from the Wellman deed only conveyed a present joint life interest in the land to the vendees therein, Lee and wife, during the latter’s life and to the husband in remainder, after the death of his wife, Sue F. Lee, the fee to the one-half life interest that was conveyed to her, and that no conveyance whatever was made of the remainder in the half joint interest that was conveyed to the husband, J. W. Lee, for his wife’s *316 life. Therefore, as counsel contends, the unconveyed remainder interest of J. W. Lee’s half joint life interest per auter vie — never having been conveyed, according to his interpretation — was left vested in the grantor in the Wellman deed, and that, since both Sue F. Lee and Wellman have died, the latter’s heirs are the present owners of a joint half undivided interest in the land.

On the other hand, counsel for plaintiff contends that Wellman in his deed to the Lees intended to and did convey to them — in the awkward manner therein expressed — the entire fee-simple title of Wellman, but to be held by the Lees jointly throughout the life of Mrs. Lee, and after her death then her husband to become the sole owner, and that with the title so held they conveyed an unfettered fee-simple estate to Allen, and he in turn conveyed the same absolute title to plaintiff. In the argument advanced by both sides much earnestness as well as research is exhibited, and our attention is thereby called to a number of sections of our statute bearing upon the effect given specified phrased conveyances, as well as to a number of domestic cases discussing the relative effect to be given granting and habendum clauses in deeds — involving preferences to be given the one over the other, etc. But those statutes become relevant only when the phraseology to be interpreted is unambiguous and in conformity with the legislatively enacted rules contained in them; whilst the class of cited opinions referred to become relevant only when all other rules for the interpretation of such instruments prove abortive in revealing the intention of the parties. Such rule (preference of granting clause over the habendum clause) is the last one to be invoked in the interpretation of deeds, and if other rules therefor to which courts give precedence are themselves sufficient to solve the problem, the rule growing out of the difference between the granting and habendum clauses will be ignored. One of the primary as well as prevailing rules for the interpretation of the character of writing here involved (and also others) is to ascertain from the entire language of the instrument the intention and purpose of the parties in executing it, and if that intention is not in plain conflict with unambiguous inhibiting language found therein, then it should prevail. That rule is so fundamental as not to require the citation even of a single authority in its support, but one com *317 paratively recent case from this court in which it was approved and applied is Baker v. Baker, 191 Ky. 325, 230 S. W. 293, 294.

Our approval in that opinion of the rule as so stated is thus expressed: “It is an elementary, as well as fundamental, rule in the construction of deeds, wills, and other writings that the intention of the parties in executing them shall be given effect by the courts, provided that intention does not contravene any positive rule of law or of public policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 107, 272 Ky. 313, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-real-estate-board-v-smith-kyctapphigh-1938.