McCreary v. Sizemore

247 S.W.2d 223, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 682
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 14, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 247 S.W.2d 223 (McCreary v. Sizemore) 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
McCreary v. Sizemore, 247 S.W.2d 223, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 682 (Ky. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice.

B. P. McCreary died intestate in Clay County, survived by a widow, Sabie Mc-Creary, and four children, all of legal age, whose names are: George McCreary, Loyd McCreary, Brack McCreary and Bessie McCreary Golden. The record shows that B. P. McCreary inherited as an heir-at-law a one-fourth interest in a. tract of land, known as the “William Mc-Creary home place”, hereinafter called the “home place”. The remaining three-[224]*224fourths interest in this tract was acquired by purchase under two conveyances on November 17, 1907, and in both deeds Sabie McCreary and her husband, B. P. Mc-Creary, are designated as grantees in the caption. The two instruments will be examined later on in detail, as there is a contention that Sabie McCreary did not become a joint and equal owner of the property conveyed to her and her husband. Three additional tracts of land were subsequently acquired by B. P. McCreary and Sabie McCreary. In two of the deeds the land was conveyed to them jointly and equally and in the other the ground was deeded to B. P. McCreary individually. All five deeds had been on record many years before this litigation arose. In none of the conveyances above mentioned is the description of any tract set forth by metes and bounds, and no acreage is given in any deed. The five tracts form one contiguous boundary of from 500 to 750 acres of mountain land, from which the merchantable timber has been removed. Only a small acreage of the farm which is bottom land may be cultivated.

On the 18th day of August, 1941, the children mutually agreed upon a division of the land of Sabie McCreary and her deceased husband, and all of them, together with their spouses, joined in deeds back and forth to each other. The widow did not then convey, and has not since conveyed, any of her interest in any of the above tracts to any person. Nor has dower or homestead been allotted to her out of the real estate of her deceased'husband. We have nothing in this suit by way of conveyances, surveys, maps or evidence that reveals in any respect what sort of division the children made among themselves. It is appellee’s contention, and there is vague proof to indicate it, that Sabie McCreary was left in possession of one-third of the land, but there is not even a hint as to where it is located with reference to the boundary as a whole. According to her testimony, she did not interfere with the division of the farm among the heirs-at-law because, as she stated, the children agreed that it would be left to “me to do as I pleased with,the land as long as I live and it was not to be sold as long as I lived.”

On April 3, 1943, George McCreary and his wife sold and conveyed to appellees, Jack Sizemore and Gertrude' Sizemore, his wife, the part deeded to him by his two brothers and sister in the division of the land. On April 15, 1950, Brack McCreary, together with,his wife, sold and conveyed to the same grantees the part of the land conveyed to him. Appellees paid the two sons of appellant $2300 and they still owe Brack McCreary $500 for the purchase price of his ground. They have also spent $1000 in making improvements on the two tracts, which improvements, according to Jack Sizemore, were wholly made on the tract bought from George McCreary. The testimony as a whole seems to develop the fact that the property bought by the Sizemores lies within the confines of the home place.

This suit was instituted by Sabie Mc-Creary on May 20, 1950, to have declared null and void the alleged division by her children of the property owned by her and her deceased husband, claiming such was done without her will or consent; to have Jack Sizemore and Gertrude Sizemore adjudged to be trespassers; and to enjoin them from claiming, in the words of the prayer of the petition, “other than a remainder interest of the heirs of George and Brack McCreary in the land.” Finally, the petition prayed that all the land be sold for a division of the proceeds among the persons entitled thereto according to their interests.

The heirs-at-law of B. P. McCreary, although made parties defendant to the suit, interposed no defense thereto. Jack Size-more and Gertrude Sizemore by separate answer admitted the conveyance to them of the property by George and Brack Mc-Creary and by counterclaim asked that the whole tract be partitioned among the joint owners thereof in accordance with their respective interests therein, but that the land be laid off so as to allot to them the property on which they have placed improvements. They averred that Sabie Mc-Creary had never acquired more than a [225]*225dowable interest in the tract known as the home place. The answer further alleged facts that amount to a plea of estop-pel.

The Chancellor entered a judgment dismissing the petition. The conveyances from Brack and George McCreary and their wives to the Sizemores were decreed valid for the reason, in brief, that Sabie McCreary had consented to and acquiesced in the division of the lands by her children and that, subsequently, she had stood by and permitted the Sizemores to purchase and pay $2300 on the property deeded to them and that thereafter she had remained silent while they made permanent and lasting improvements on the land of the value of $1000, with the result that she thereby became estopped from claiming any title or other interest in and to the land conveyed to the Sizemores. Aside from this adjudication by the Chancellor, the arrangement that had been worked out by the children was left in statu quo.

Sabie McCreary has appealed, contending that the Chancellor erred in adjudging: (a) that she had obtained no more than a marital interest in the home place by virtue of the conveyance of the two tracts to her and her deceased husband on November 17, 1907; and (b) that she was estopped to claim any interest whatsoever in the two tracts conveyed to Jack Sizemore and his wife, Gertrude Sizemore, by her two sons and their wives. We shall discuss these two complaints in the order named.

As we have said, a three-fourths interest in the home place was acquired from John McCreary and George McCreary, brothers of B. P. McCreary. In both deeds Sabie McCreary and B. P, McCreary are named as grantees in the caption. In the deed from John McCreary and his wife, Mandy McCreary, the granting clause reads that “party of the first part * * * do hereby sell and convey to party of the second part their heirs and assigns * Then, before the description, we have this sentence: “I do sell and convey to Bevley McCreary (the same person as B. P. Mc-Creary) my entire interest in my fathers farm * * The habendum clause is as follows: “To have and to hold the same * * * unto party of the second part, their heirs and assigns * * * and the said party of the first part hereby covenants with said party of the second part that they will warrant the title * * * hereby conveyed unto said party of the second part * * In the conveyance from George McCreary and his wife, Susan McCreary, the language of the granting clause is identical with that in 'the John McCreary deed. These words, however, are inserted after the description: “I, George McCreary I do sell and convey to Bev. McCreary my entire interest * The habendum clause in this deed is simply : “To have and to hold the same * * to the second party, heirs and assigns * * * >>

We believe the grantors expressly intended Sabie McCreary to be a joint and equal owner in each conveyance. The fact that her name appears in the caption of both instruments rebuts any presumption to the contrary.

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Williams v. Williams
259 S.W.2d 53 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W.2d 223, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccreary-v-sizemore-kyctapp-1952.