Moore v. Gaines

213 S.W.2d 990, 308 Ky. 223, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 878
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 15, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 990 (Moore v. Gaines) 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
Moore v. Gaines, 213 S.W.2d 990, 308 Ky. 223, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 878 (Ky. 1948).

Opinion

*225 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Knight

Reversing.

The sole question involved in this case is the title to a one-third interest in a city lot 50 feet by 103 feet on Leonard Court in Danville, Ky., fully described in the petition. Appellant is claiming title to this one third interest as a granddaughter and heir at law of E. F. Gaines who owned and held the record title to said lot upon his death in October 1924. Appellee claimed title to the property on several grounds, including adverse possession. From the judgment of the chancellor adjudging title to the property in appellee by reason of adverse possession, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The Facts in the Case

E. F. Gaines, called and generally known as “Bob Gaines,” acquired title to the property herein involved, at that time a vacant lot, by deed dated July 14, 1922, for the recited consideration of $850 cash. At that time Mr. Gaines was 92 years of age and died two years later .at 94 leaving surviving him three children, a son, Fisher D. Gaines, who was the only child by his second wife, Sarah Gaines, who had died in 1906, and two daughters, Sallie Moss and Ella Bruce, by his first wife who had died previous to his marriage to Sarah Gaines. During her lifetime Sarah Gaines acquired title to a tract of .about 100 feet by 400 feet at the corner of Main and Alta in Danville and upon her death this property, not involved in this case, descended to her son, Fisher D. •Gaines, subject to the curtesy interest of her husband, E. F. Gaines. By various deeds all the Main Street property was sold, the last one being sold by deed dated February 23, 1920, all these deeds being executed by E. F. Gaines, widower, and Fisher D. Gaines and his wife, Mamie C. Gaines, appellee herein. In the last deed a lien was retained for two deferred payment notes for $1875, each payable to Fisher D. Gaines, and on the margin of the .deed is shown a release of this lien signed by both E. F. Gaines and F. D. Gaines and dated July 5, 1922. Just nine days after this release and on July 14, 1922, the ■deed to the then vacant lot involved in this case was taken in the name of E. F. Gaines. Shortly thereafter :a house was erected on this vacant lot and on April 10, 1923, for the purpose of partly financing the construe *226 tion of this house a mortgage on the property involved was executed to the Central Kentucky Building and Loan Association. This mortgage was for $1500 and was executed by E. P. Gaines. Fisher D. Gaines, but not his wife, signed and acknowledged this mortgage, it being stated in the mortgage that he joined in for thé purpose of assuming the payment of this debt and to secure the payment thereof and to pledge and to assign to the mortgagee all shares in the Association owned or thereafter owned by him until the debt was paid. After the house was completed it was occupied by Fisher D. Gaines- and his wife and son and E. F. Gaines who had lived with them just one year from October 1923 until he-died in October 1921. It is also shown by the record that previous to moving to the new house Fisher D. Gaines- and family and E. F. Gaines had lived together in the home place at Main and Alta, the last part of which was sold in 1920.

Fisher D. Gaines was killed by a train on October-11, 1927, and, having died intestate, all his interest in the property involved passed to his son, Robert C-Gaines, and his wife, Mamie C. Gaines. Upon the death of Robert C. Gaines, intestate and unmarried, in 1931,. his mother, appellee herein, acquired all the title which. Fisher D. Gaines had to the property. Appellee continued in possession of the property renting it out and. treating it as her own until recently when she entered into a contract for a sale of the property for $7500 when the examination of the title disclosed that she had legal title to only a one third interest in the property. A quit, claim deed was obtained from the heirs of Sallie Moss-who had record title to one third of said property as a daughter of E. F. Gaines. Sarah Fisher Moore, who-had record title to the other one third as the heir at law of Ella Bruce, daughter of E. F. Gaines, refused to sign a quit claim deed for her interest. By agreement of all parties $2500, or one third of the purchase price, is being-held pending the final decision of this case as to whether-the disputed one third interest belongs to appellant or appellee.

Appellee filed this suit against appellant seeking to have her title quieted and asking that it be- adjudged, that appellant had no interest therein. In her petition-, she alleged that the consideration for the lot involved: *227 was paid by Fisher D. Gaines and that by inadvertence his father, E. F. Gaines, was named as the grantee in said deed; that Fisher D. Gaines bnilt the house on said lot and paid for all the improvements erected thereon; that she and her deceased husband had occupied, controlled and rented this property since 1922. Appellant’s demurrer to the petition was sustained.

Appellee by amended petition then alleged that by mutual mistake of grantor and grantee the deed was drawn to vest record title in E. F. Gaines instead of Fisher D. Gaines and further pleaded adverse possession for more than fifteen years against appellant. Appellant ’s demurrer to the amended petition was sustained.

Appellee then filed a second amended petition in which it was alleged that appellant had failed to lay any claim to the property, since the death of her grandfather in 1924, and again pleaded adverse possession against her. Demurrer was filed to the second amended petition but apparently not passed on. Then a third amended petition was filed in which it was alleged that since the consideration was paid by Fisher D. Gaines and title-taken in E. F. Gaines, a resulting or constructive trust was created in favor of Fisher D. Gaines and his heirs-at law. It further pleaded that appellant was guilty of laches and by a fourth amended, petition appelleeagain pleaded laches in a fuller, more complete form.. The court sustained a demurrer to the third and fourth amended petitions except as to the paragraph which pleaded laches, which was overruled. The defendant, without waiving demurrers to the various pleadings,, finally filed a lengthy answer denying the allegations, contained in the petition and various amended petitions..

The Question to be Decided

From the confused state of the pleadings, the motions to strike, the demurrers and the rulings thereon, it is a little difficult to determine just what is left in the-pleadings as the basis of appellant’s suit. But it appears'that all that is left is the plea of laches1 and adverse-possession. Although demurrer had been sustained to-the plea of a resulting trust, the chancellor further eliminated this ground when he said in his memorandum opinion:

*228 “The testimony on behalf of plaintiff does not support the claim of a resulting trust. There is no competent testimony that Fisher Gaines furnished the consideration for the purchase of the lot. And even if he did, there is no evidence the title was taken in the name of his father without his consent. (KRS sec. 381.170; Wright v. Yates, 140 Ky. 283, 130 S. W. 1111; McFarland v. McFarland, 263 Ky. 434, 92 S. W. 2d 785.)”

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 990, 308 Ky. 223, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-gaines-kyctapphigh-1948.