Muncy v. Smith

133 S.W. 1152, 142 Ky. 201, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 10, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 1152 (Muncy v. Smith) 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
Muncy v. Smith, 133 S.W. 1152, 142 Ky. 201, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 145 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

In this action appellee asserted title to fifty acres of land in Harlan county, described in the petition, subject to a dower interest therein alleged to have been formerly owned by the widow of Elisha Helton, deceased, but now owned, as further alleged, by appellant. The prayer of the petition asked that such dower be assigned appellant and that commissioners be appointed to allot it.

The answer denied appellee’s title to the land, or any part thereof, alleged title to the whole in appellant, and pleaded the statutes of limitation and champerty.

The record shows that the land in question was patented to Barbary Helton in 1816; that in 1852 she, by deed, conveyed it to her son, Elisha Helton, who remained on the land with' his family until the latter part of the year 1856, and then left it and removed to Leslie county; that he later returned to Harlan county, but did not again go upon this land. In 1861 he enlisted as a soldier in the United States Army from the State of Indiana, and in 1863 died in the service. He was survived by a widow and three children, who were living in Indiana at the time of his death, but soon thereafter returned to K.en-> [202]*202tueky and established their residence in a different neighborhood from that in which this land is situated.

The controversy between appellant and appellee over the title to the fifty acre tract of land arises in this manner. It is claimed by the former that Elisha Helton when he left the land in 1856 and removed to Leslie county sold it to his brother, James Helton, but without executing to him a deed therefor, and that James Helton remained in the actual possession of the land from that time until his death, which occurred in-1902; that in 1869’ or 1870, Hetty Helton, widow of Elisha Helton, deceased, sold and by deed, duly acknowledged and recorded, conveyed to James Helton her dower in the land; that shortly before his death, James Helton by deed, also duly acknowledged and recorded, conveyed the fifty acre tract of land, with other tracts adjacent, to his daughter, Matilda Howard, who had actual possession thereof from the death of her father’until February 8th, 1907, when she, together with her husband, made a sale and conveyance of the land, by proper deed, to the appellant, who has since owned and been in the actual possession thereof.

It is contended by appellee that Elisha Helton was the owner of the land at the time of his death, upon the happening of which event, the title thereto descended to his three children, Carter Helton, Elijah Helton and Mahala Taylor, subject to the dower of his widow, which she thereafter sold and conveyed to James Helton by whom it was conveyed to Matilda Howard who, in turn, conveyed it to appellant, but that the title remained in the children of Elisha Helton, subject to the dower, until they, December 31, 1906, sold and conveyed it to appellee.

We find the evidence quite voluminous and in some .respects conflicting, but in our opinion the great weight of it satisfactorily establishes the facts: 1st, That Elisha Helton in 1856, made a parol sale of the land in question to his brother, James Helton, who then lived on an adjoining tract which Barbary Helton had conveyed him; that Elisha Helton then put James in possession of the land and removed with his family to Leslie county, where he remained several years and until shortly before the beginning of the Civil War, when he returned to Harlan county, but to a neighborhood several miles distant from that in which he had formerly resided, and from the latter neighborhood removed to Indiana where he joined the army and later died while still a soldier; that Elisha Heltou, after selling and delivering possession of the fifty-[203]*203acre tract of land to James Helton, was never heard to assort claim to it, or deny James Helton’s right thereto. 2nd, That James Helton had and held the actual possession of the land uninterruptedly, continuously and adversely to all others, claiming it according to the boundary lines of the Barbary Helton patent, from the time Elisha left it in his possession in 1856, until his (James) death in 1902, and that in 1869 or 1870, immediately following the sale and conveyance to him by Elisha Helton’s widow of her dower in the land, he moved with his family into the dwelling house situated thereon and continued to occupy it as a place of residence until his death. 3rd, That after the return of Elisha Helton’s wife and three children from Indiana to Kentucky, following the enlistment of Elisha as a soldier, they resided on rented land and in a neighborhood of Harlan county other than that in which the land in controversy was situated, and shortly after Elisha’s death, were moved by James Helton to and upon the land he got of Elisha, in order, as he then stated, that he might assist the widow in raising her children; she being the sister of his wife, as well as his sister-in-law, and at that time the owner of a dower interest in the land; that the widow and her children remained on the land and were assisted by James Helton until 1869 or 1870, when she formed a discreditable liaison with Milton Simpson, on account of which James Helton made her leave the land, and when she left it with Simpson she carried her daughter, Mahala, with her, the two sons remaining with their uncle James. But, upon leaving the land, the widow, for a sufficient consideration, then paid her by James Helton, sold and by deed conveyed him her dower interest therein. 4th, That at no time after Elisha Helton left the land, did his widow or children set up claim to it, nor did the widow, after leaving the land, ever. assert claim to dower therein, although her right thereto was recognized and purchased by James Helton, as previously stated. 5th, That Matilda Howard, upon the death of her father, James Helton, in 1902, by virtue of the deed from him, topic possession of the land and had actual possession thereof down to the time she sold and conveyed it to appellant, who thereupon moved upon it and has ever since been in the actual possession thereof. 6th, That appellee during Matilda Howard’s actual, adverse possession of the land, purchased the alleged interest of the children of Elisha Helton therein and received from [204]*204them a deed purporting to convey it to him, subject to their mother’s dower.

The foregoing facts were testified to by Matilda How-: ard, appellant’s grantor, by the widow and children of, Elisha Helton, and quite a number of apparently intelligent and credible persons living in or near the neighbor-, hood of the land in controversy, and having an acquaintance of many years’ standing with the land and Helton* family; and this testimony, together with the circumstances attending the removal of Elisha Helton from the land, his failing to thereafter return to it or claim it, James Helton’s long and uninterrupted actual possession of the land, adversely to all others from 1856 to 1902, and the similar possession of his daughter, Matilda Howard, from his death down to the time of her sale and conveyance of it to appellant, clearly establish the latter’s claim and possessory right to the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 1152, 142 Ky. 201, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muncy-v-smith-kyctapp-1911.