Kirk v. Kirk's

179 S.W. 1065, 167 Ky. 69, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 796
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 24, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 1065 (Kirk v. Kirk's) 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
Kirk v. Kirk's, 179 S.W. 1065, 167 Ky. 69, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 796 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle.

Affirming.

By this action, instituted in the court below, the appellant, Elizabeth M. Kirk, sought to recover of the appellee, Morris C, Kirk, as executor of the will of Morris C. Kirk, deceased, and devisee under the latter’s will,. 206 acres of land lying in Mason County, Kentucky,! and the rental value thereof for the seven years next preceding the bringing of the action, aggregating in! amount $21,000.00. Appellee filed a general demurrer’ to the petition, as amended, which the circuit court sustained, and appellant refusing to plead further, judgment was entered dismissing her petition. This appeal is prosecuted from that judgment.

The land in question was devised appellant’s husband, Erasmus G. Kirk, deceased, by the will of his father, Bichard Kirk. Erasmus G. Kirk died in 1906, testate, and appellant claims’title, to the land mentioned under his will, of which she is the sole devisee. The same land is in possession of and claimed by the appellee, Morris C. Kirk, under the will of his uncle, Morris C. Kirk, deceased, who died in 1914, and whose will, after bequeathing certain specific legacies to other relatives, devised the residue of his estate, including this land, to his nephew, the appellee, Morris C. Kirk.

[70]*70It was alleged in. the petition, as amended, that the 206-acre tract of land, together with a smaller tract of twenty-five acres, which her husband, Erasmus Gr. Kirk, acquired by purchase and conveyance several years prior to his death, and also devised her by his will, was conveyed by appellant to Morris C. Kirk, deceased, by deed of date June 8, 1906, whereby she intended to convey to him the twenty-five-acre tract of land at the agreed price of $2,000.00, which sum was then paid her in cash by Morris C. Kirk, but that by mistake of the draughtsman of the deed, or the fraud of the decedent, Morris C. Kirk, one of which facts, it was alleged, was true, though she did not know which was true, the instrument was made to falsely recite that it conveyed all the real estate owned by Erasmus Gr. Kirk at his death, whereas, she had, in fact, sold only the twenty-five-acre tract of land to him. It was further alleged in the petition that appellant did not learn of the mistake or fraud mentioned until within the ninety days next before the institution of the action. In the prayer of the petition it was asked that the contract of sale be rescinded and the deed cancelled insofar as it purported to convey the 206 acres of land, and that the instrument be so reformed as to make it convey simply the twenty-five acres of land sold the grantee and attempted to be conveyed him thereby.

Appellee’s demurrer to the petition, as amended, is based on the grounds: (1) that the action is barred by the statute of limitations; (2) that the facts alleged in the petition and amendment, and furnished by the exhibits filed therewith, fail to state or manifest a cause of action. With respect to the first ground of demurrer it should be observed that the appellant’s action was instituted eight years after the execution and delivery of the deed attacked by the petition, and it is insisted for appellee that while the statute allows the bringing of such an action within ten years next succeeding the commission of the alleged fraud or mistake sought to be corrected, it requires that, it be done within five years next after its discovery; and further, that the averment of the petition that appellant did not discover the fraud or mistake until within ninety days of the filing of the petition is insufficient to meet the requirement of the statute, unless coupled with or followed by the additional averment that reasonable diligence on appellant’s [71]*71part would not have enabled her to discover it sooner, which averment was not made.

This contention cannot be sustained. In Swineboard v. Wood, 123 Ky., 664, it was held that in ah action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake, the plaintiff need not anticipate a plea of the five or ten-year statute, and that if the defendant would rely upon limitation, it must be pleaded instead of being raised by demurrer. This decision was followed in Yager’s Admr., etc. v. President, etc., of Bank of Kentucky, 125 Ky., 177, and has been approved in one or more later’cases.

The second ground of demurrer is, however, fatal to the recovery sought by appellant. The facts alleged in the petition as amended, and exhibits filed therewith, show that appellant is not entitled to the relief prayed, as they manifest her want of title to the two hundred and six- acres of land, or any part thereon, sued for, or to the rents alleged to have accrued therefrom. , This .is so because the, land in question was received by her husband, Erasmus G. Kirk, under the will of his father, Bichard Kirk, which devised him only a life estate therein, and as the interest the husband took in the land under the will ceased or ended with his death, he was without power to pass, the title thereto to appellant by his will, as attempted by the devise therein made of it to her.

It is admitted in the petition' that the two hundred and six acres of land was devised appellant’s husband by the will of his father, Bichard Kirk. The will of Bichard Kirk appears to have been executed January 28, 1881, at which time the testator had three sons: Erasmus G., Morris C. and Bluford B. Kirk, all of whom were then unmarried. After providing in the first and second clauses of the will for the payment of his debts, and that his real and personal property be kept intact until that end was accomplished, the testator therein disposed of his real estate as follows: .

“Third. — After my debts are paid, I will and bequeath to my wife, Angeline Kirk, during her natural life, my home farm containing about 229 acres and known as the Nathaniel Kirk and Garrett Applegate land, less about 80 acres of it — the part willed to me by mv father, Bichard Kirk, Senior, on my paying for 'it, which is hereinafter willed to my son, Bluford B. Kirk.
[72]*72“Fourth. — After my debts are paid as aforesaid, I will and bequeath to my sons, Erasmus Gr. and Morris C. Kirk, subject to the condition hereinafter specified, the two tracts of land known as the ‘dowry tract,’ in which they already own an interest, and the tract of land deeded to me by Robert Downing, containing in both tracts about 268 acres, more or less.
“Fifth. — After my debts are paid as aforesaid, I will and bequeath to my son, Bluford B. Kirk, the 80 acres, more or less, excepted from the home farm of 229 acres, more or less; and, also, the remainder of the 229 acres called the home farm, after my wife’s life estate ceases by her death.
“Sixth. — The estate taken by my sons in the fourth and fifth clauses of this my will shall‘only be life estates; and in case they or either of them die, without heirs of their bodies, immediately at their death, the land hereby willed them for life shall go to my other living children and at the time should any of my other children be dead leaving heirs of their body, such heirs shall take the land, or an interest therein, the same as their father would have done if living.”

March 14, 1883, Richard Kirk made the following codicil to his will:

‘ ‘ Codicil. — My son, Bluford B.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 1065, 167 Ky. 69, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirk-v-kirks-kyctapp-1915.