Lake v. Ford

52 S.W.2d 724, 244 Ky. 803, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 24, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 52 S.W.2d 724 (Lake v. Ford) 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
Lake v. Ford, 52 S.W.2d 724, 244 Ky. 803, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 515 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clay

Reversing.

William Lake, Lucinda Taylor, Mary Lois Greer, C. F. Lake, Estker Whitaker, Ada Greer, Jno. W. Lake, and Arminta Roberts, eight of the children of Jno. B. Lake, deceased, brought this suit against Bertie Ford, who had acquired title from Olden Lake, the other child of Jno. B. Lake, to recover an eight-ninths undivided in-, terest in and to a 50-acre tract of land located in Ohio county on the waters of South Panther creek. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendants. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The facts are these: For some time prior to his death, John B. Lake and his wife, Mary Lake, together with their children, had lived on the land in controversy. John B. Lake died intestate on August 27,1887, survived by his wife, Mary, and the nine children named above. After his death the widow and children lived together on the land until the children married and reached their 'majority and moved away. Thereafter some of the children would come and live with her, but only for a short time. About the year 1910 she persuaded her youngest son, Olden Lake, to move on the farm for the purpose of *806 taking care of her in her old age. In the month of March, 1911, she conveyed the farm to Olden in consideration of his keeping and supporting her until her death, and died about six weeksi later. Olden took possession under his deed, but the deed was not recorded until October, 1919. In the month of August, 1921, Olden conveyed the land to Jeff Hodges, who thereafter sold it to appellee Bertie Ford.

1. Appellants, who claimed title through their father, first insist that the evidence which they introduced showed that he had acquired title by adverse possession before his death. Several witnesses of advanced age testified on the question of adverse possession. One of them deposed that he was present about the year 1870 when John B. Lake purchased the land from Edgar Miles, and he and other witnesses testified that John B. Lake took possession of the land more than 15 years before his death and continued to occupy and cultivate it until his death. However, when the witnesses were crosis-examined as to the time when John B. Lake took possession of the farm, which they had testified in chief occurred about 58 years before they took the witness stand, they exhibited some confusion as to the date, as well as to the dates of other occurrences called to their attention for the purpose of testing their memories, and the most that can be said is that their evidence was sufficient to make the question of adverse possession one for the jury, and not such as to authorize a peremptory instruction or render the verdict flagrantly against the evidence.

2. Instruction 2 given by'the court is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s father, John B. Lake, had the actual adverse possession of the tract of land sued for continuously and uninterruptedly to a well marked and defined boundary for 15 years or more before August 27, 1887, claiming the same openly and notoriously as his own adversely to all others, then and in that event the jury should find for the plaintiff the lot or tract of land sued for. And the court instructs the jury that if they should believe from the evidence that the plaintiffs or their father, John B. Lake, had said lot under enclosure and claiming said land as his. own then he *807 was in actual adverse possession of said lot in the meaning of the instruction.”

The instruction is attacked on the ground that it required an adverse holding both to “a well marked and defined boundary”, and also by inclosure for a period of 15 years, whereas either method was sufficient under the law. It was not shown that John B. Lake took possession under a deed or other instrument describing the land, or that there was a marked boundary around the land. In the circumstances the only way of showing that he claimed to a well-marked and defined boundary was to show that the land was inclosed, and all the evidence was directed to that point. That being true, it is clear that the trial court added the concluding paragraph of the instruction for the purpose of letting the jury know that if John Lake had the lot under inclosure, and claimed it as his own, it was equivalent to a holding “to a well marked and defined boundary”, and therefore sufficient. Hobson, Blaine and Caldwell on Instructions, sec. 57; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Rayl, 107 S. W. 298, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 870. There is, however, a mistake in the concluding sentence of the instruction, in that it uses the words “the plaintiffs or their father, John B. Lake”, instead of the words “plaintiff’s father, John B. Lake”; it not being shown or contended that plaintiffs had adverse possession of the land prior to the death of their father. We may also add that instruction (b), which is the converse of instruction (a), also contains the same mistake.

3. Instruction (c) submitted the question of adverse possession by Mary Lake for a period of 15 years or more before April 28,1911, the date of her death. By this instruction the jury were authorized to base a verdict for appellee on Mary Lake’s adverse possession, even though the jury believed from the evidence that her husband, John B. Lake, had acquired title by adverse possession prior to his death. As neither dower nor homestead was assigned, the widow’s subsequent occupancy of the land, which was worth less than $1,000, will be treated as an election by her to hold the land as a homestead. Smith v. Richey, 185 Ky. 516, 215 S. W. 429. In the circumstances her relation was that of a life tenant, and no rule is better settled than that the possession of the life tenant .cannot become adverse to the remaindermen unless he brings home to the remaindermen *808 by clear and convincing evidence notice of Ms intention to set np title in Mmself as against tbe remaindermen. Russell v. Tipton, 193 Ky. 305, 235 S. W. 763. All that the evidence in this case shows is that Mary Lake claimed the land and sold certain timber therefrom, and that during the greater portion of this time she and some of the children were living on the land. Clearly this was not sufficient to show that her occupance, wMoh was amicable to her husband’s children, had become adverse. Smith v. Richey, supra. On the other hand, if John B. Lake had not acquired title, the subsequent occupancy of the land by the widow together with her children was not adverse to them during that period, or even thereafter when she occupied the land alone, unless she brought home to them notice of her adverse holding which the evidence fails to show that she did. We therefore conclude that no instruction on adverse possession by the widow should have been given.

4. But appellants insist that the court should have given an instruction that would have permitted them to tack their possession to that of their father. Doubtless they would have been entitled to such an instruction if the contest were between appellants and some third party not claiming through the widow, but the question presented is whether they could tack their possession to that of the father as against the widow, who also claimed the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 S.W.2d 724, 244 Ky. 803, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-v-ford-kyctapphigh-1932.