McGinnis v. Hood

159 S.W.2d 1018, 289 Ky. 669, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 619
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 27, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 S.W.2d 1018 (McGinnis v. Hood) 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
McGinnis v. Hood, 159 S.W.2d 1018, 289 Ky. 669, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 619 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

The one question involved in controversy upon this appeal is the one raised as to what is the proper construction of that part of the deed whereby the grantors, *670 P. W. Bottom, and wife, conveyed the ninety-five and a fraction acre tract of land here involved to Dr. John Patterson and “Cora White and her bodily heirs.” Only that part or one-half portion of this tract of land which was by the Bottoms conveyed by the expression or phrase “to Cora White and her bodily heirs” is here involved.

A controversy having arisen between the appellants and appellees as to what is the proper construction of this phrase employed by P. W. Bottom and wife in conveying the ninety-five acre tract here involved to Dr. John Patterson and “Cora White and her bodily heirs” (the appellees contending that an absolute title in fee simple was conveyed to appellee, Cora White, whereas the appellants insist that she took under such grant only a life estate, with remainder in fee-simple title to her bodily heirs), to determine such question this proceeding was brought in equity in the Mercer circuit court by Onis J. Hood and wife, Osie Lee Hood, on a contract made by and between them and the defendants, Guy Mc-Ginnis and wife, Mary Evelyn McGinnis, by the terms of which plaintiffs agreed to sell and convey to McGinnis and wife and they to buy said real estate, including that part thereof conveyed by P. W. Bottom and wife to “Cora White and her bodily heirs,” for an agreed consideration, payable by defendants to plaintiffs in cash upon their tendering to the defendants a good and sufficient deed with covenant of general warranty, conveying them a good and perfect title in fee simple thereto.

Plaintiffs alleged that on December 15, 1941, they executed, acknowledged and tendered to defendants a general warranty deed, conveying, for the stated consideration, the aforesaid real estate to them, which was effective to vest the appellants with an absolute fee-simple title to said land, but that appellants refused to accept said deed or to carry out said contract, or to pay for the land as agreed, upon the ground assigned, that the tendered deed was insufficient to vest them with an absolute fee-simple title to that part of the tract of land which was by the deed of P. W. Bottom and wife conveyed to “Cora White and her bodily heirs.”

Plaintiffs further alleged in their petition that the said real estate here involved and which they have contracted to sell to appellants was conveyed plaintiffs, here appellees, by deed of Dr. John Patterson, Cora *671 White and W. R. White (her husband) which vested in them absolute title thereto with covenant of general warranty, said deed being of record in Deed Book 90, page 148, in the Mercer county court clerk’s office; that their grantors, Dr. John Patterson and Cora White, acquired title to said land through a deed executed them by P. W. Bottom and wife, dated January 26, 1909, and recorded in Deed Book 79, page 296, in the Mercer county court clerk’s office; and, further, that although the grantor in said deed names “Cora White and her bodily heirs” and Dr. John Patterson as grantees and does further recite that the said grantor, P. W. Bottom, reserves “a life time interest in this conveyance during their (Cora White and her bodily heirs) natural life,” with the privilege reserved of “selling said land at his option and reinvesting the proceeds in other land for the said Cora White and her bodily heirs but not for the said Dr. John Patterson,” the proper construction and legal effect of said deed (regardless of such reservation) is that it effectively conveyed both Dr. John Patterson and Cora “White, in fee simple, an undivided one-half interest in the land and that plaintiffs, their grantees, by this aforesaid general warranty deed, were vested with an absolute fee-simple title to the land, P. W. Bottom and wife being then dead and their right reserved, to sell and reinvest, terminated.

Further the petition alleged that one of plaintiffs’ grantors, Cora White, still lives, is a married woman, the wife of W. R. White, who joined in the deed, and who still lives; that Cora White is sixty-one years of age; and that they have two children, a daughter, Eula White, about thirty-eight years of age, and a son, P. J. White, about thirty-seven years of age, neither of whom is married.

They also alleged in their petition that there exists between the plaintiffs and defendants a controversy, in good faith, in that the plaintiffs contend and insist that they have a perfect fee-simple title to the land under said chain of title and that their tendered deed conveys such title to the defendants. On the other hand, defendants contend that plaintiffs do not have a good fee-simple title to that half of said land conveyed them by Cora White, solely because of the terms of the deed referred to by which P. W. Bottom and wife conveyed it jointly to Dr. John Patterson and “Cora White and her bodily heirs.”

*672 The petition concludes with the prayer that the court determine and declare the rights, powers and duties of the plaintiffs and defendants and adjudge that plaintiffs have a perfect fee-simple title to said real estate through the deeds referred to and have the power to vest a fee-simple title in the defendants; and that the latter be adjudged to accept the title tendered by their deed to said property and perform the contract.

Defendants filed a general demurrer to the petition and, without waiving same, filed answer and counterclaim, to which plaintiffs also filed demurrer.

Defendants by their answer and counterclaim admit that they purchased from plaintiffs the land described in the petition and that plaintiffs tendered them a deed purporting to convey them the land in fee-simple title. They further assert that they desire to purchase said land but that they refused to accept the deed and the title tendered thereby because it does not convey them a perfect and fee-simple title to said real estate; further, that by the deed of P. W. Bottom and wife, referred to and filed with the petition, one-half interest in said land was conveyed to Cora White, a granddaughter of the grantors, and her children, so that the title vested in Cora White was only a life estate with remainder to any child or children now born to her or that may yet be born to her; that because of such provisions of the deed, plaintiffs can not and by the deed tendered them did not convey to them a fee-simple title in the land. Wherefore, they joined in the prayer of the petition for a binding-declaration of the rights and duties of the parties, including a construction of the deed, and that the court hold tha tsaid deed does not vest them with a fee-simple title to the land and that the contract between them be cancelled and that they be adjudged not required to comply with same..

The cause being submitted to the court for judgment upon the pleadings and exhibits, the court overruled the demurrer of defendants to the petition and sustained the demurrer of the plaintiffs to the answer and counterclaim. Further it adjudged that the deed, dated January 26, 1909, from P. W. Bottom and Catherine Bottom, his wife, to Dr. John Patterson and “Cora White and her bodily heirs ’ ’ conveyed and passed the fee-simple title to-the tract of land described in the petition to Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 S.W.2d 1018, 289 Ky. 669, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcginnis-v-hood-kyctapphigh-1942.