Morrison v. Fletcher

84 S.W. 548, 119 Ky. 488, 1905 Ky. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 18, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 84 S.W. 548 (Morrison v. Fletcher) 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
Morrison v. Fletcher, 84 S.W. 548, 119 Ky. 488, 1905 Ky. LEXIS 24 (Ky. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE SETTLE

Reversing.

The record in this case presents a controversy between •the appellants O. A. Morrison and Lucy A. Morrison (formerly Lucy A. Richardson) and the appellee, W. D. Fletcher, over the title to a house and lot situated in the city of Elizabethtown, Ky.; the former claiming it as devisees in remainder under the will of Mary M". Morrison, the latter as sole devisee under the will of his wife, Georgia A. Fletcher, nee Georgia A. Morrison. It appears that the real estate. in question was formerly owned by Mary M. Morrison, a widow, and resident of De Witt, Ark., and that she, while on a visit to Kentucky, by deed of date October 22, 1879, conveyed it to her daughter, Georgia A. Morrison, therein reserving to herself a life estate in the property. After acknowledging the deed before a deputy of the clerk of the Hardin county court, Mrs. Morrison returned to [492]*492her home in Arkansas, leaving the deed with J. W. Fletcher, an uncle of appellee, to be, as he testified, put to record, and it was lodged by him for record in the office of the clerk of the Hardin county court January 17, 1880, and soon thereafter duly recorded. Some time in the year 1882, Mary M. Morrison died at her home in De Witt, Ark., testate, and in September of that year her will was duly admitted to probate in the probate court of Arkansas county, in the State of Arkansas. By the provisions of her will, the testatrix devised to her daughter, Georgia A. Morrison, all the property, real and personal, of which she died possessed. The real ^estate, however, was only devised the daughter for life, with remainder, in the event of her death without issue, to Robert Scanland, a brother of testatrix, and at his death to appellants G. A. Morrison and Lucy A. Morrison, nee Richardson, nephew and niece of her deceased husband. The real estate thus devised consisted of a house and three parcels of land in De Witt, Ark., and the' house and lot in Elizabethtown, Ky., in controversy. The testatrix and her daughter, Georgia A. Morrison, were living with Robert Scanland in De Witt, Ark., at the- time of the death of the former, and after her death the daughter continued to live with him several years, and until his death. On the 10th of March, 1899, she intermarried with the appellee, W. D. Fletcher, with whom she lived until her death, which occurred February 10, 1901. No children were born to Georgia A. Fletcher, but she left a will, whereby she undertook to devise her husband all of her property, real and personal. The will was duly admitted to probate by the county court of Meade county, Ky., in which county she and her husband were domiciled at the time of her death. As before stated, the house and lot in controversy is claimed by appellee under the will of his wife, [493]*493and this action was brought to quiet his title to same, as well as to recover of appellants damages for certain alleged acts of trespass committed by them upon the property and by interfering with his tenants, it being averred in the petition that while he was in the peaceable possession of the house and lot, the appellants C. A. Morrison and Lucy A. Morrison, together with Frank Morrison, her husband, and James Montgomery, appellants’ attorney, set up claim to same as the property of appellants C. A. and Lucy Morrison, and were attempting to deprive him of the possession thereof, and had in fact collected of his tenants certain rents by making them believe that appellants were entitled to the same. The petition, as amended, contains the furtheraverment that appellee’s wife, Georgia A. Fletcher, obtained a fee-simple title to the house and lot in controversy by vii> tue of the deed from her mother, and that upon the death of the mother, she took possession of the property under the title conveyed her by the deed, and remained in the possesion thereof under the deed until her death.

The answer of appellants denies appellee’s title, or that his wife ever accepted the deed from her mother, and avers that her interest in and title to the house and lot was only a life estate under the will of her mother, Mary M. Morrison; and, further, that, as she died childless, and the first or intermediate remainderman, Robert Scanland, is also dead, appellants G. A. and Lucy A. Morrison, under the provisions of Mary M. Morrison’s will, became invested with an absolute title to the property as surviving remaindermen. The chancellor, however, adopted the contrary view, and by the decree rendered adjudged that Georgia A. Fletcher acquired title under the deed from her mother, and hot by the will, and therefore that the will of Georgia A. Fletcher invested appellee with -the title thus acquired [494]*494by her. Consequently he was granted all the relief asked in the prayer of the petition.

A careful reading of the record inclines us to the opinion that the deed from Mary M. Morrison to Georgia A. Fletcher, nee Morrison, was never manually delivered to the latter. It is not shown by the evidence that the daughter was with the mother, or in this State, when the deed was executed. Upon the contrary, the circumstances attending the making of the deed create the inference that she was then at her home in Arkansas, for, if with her mother, some one of the several witnesses who testified to the fact of seeing the mother during her visit to Kentucky would have told ■of seeing the daughter. Indeed, we might go further, and :say tlié record furnisher no evidence that tends to prove that the daughter was ever in Kentucky after the year 1S7S until she came into the State as the wife of the appellee. According to the testimony of J. W. Fletcher, the deed from Mrs. Morrison to her daughter was left with him to be recorded-. In Bunnell, etc. v. Bunnell, etc., 64 S. W., 424, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 805, it is said: “.Delivery [of the deed] is the act finally that divests the grantor of title, and acceptance the concurring act that invests the grantee. One may be established by entirely different proof, and, indeed, to have occurred on a different occasion from1 the other. Upon reconsideration of these cases, we are inclined to adhere to the doctrine that when the grantor has executed a deed by signing it, completely acknowledging it, and causing it to be lodged for record and recorded in the proper office for registry, under the authority of Ford v. Gregory’s Heirs (10 B. Mon., 175) and McConnell v. Brown (Litt. Sel. Cas., 459), supra, a prima facie case is made, or presumption is raised, that he - has delivered the instrument on the day of its date; this presumption, of course, sub[495]*495ject to be rebutted by competent proof of either a nondelivery in fact, or of a delivery at another time than the date of the instrument. Such facts, however, raise no presumption of an acceptance by the grantee (Owings v. Tucker, 90 Ky., 297, 12 R., 222, 13 S. W., 1078), save where a clearly beneficial interest is conferred.” Applying the above rule to the facts of the case at bar, we are inclined, in view of the relationship of the grantor and grantee, and the apparent beneficial character-of the conveyance, to hold that the due execution and recording of the deed in question authorizes the presumption that there was both a delivery and acceptance thereof. Although a prima facie acceptance of the deed by Georgia A. Fletcher is shown by the facts and circumstances referred to, her right to the possession of the house and lot thereby conveyed did not accrue until the death of her mother in 1882, which terminated the life estate in the property reserved to the mother by the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W. 548, 119 Ky. 488, 1905 Ky. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-fletcher-kyctapp-1905.