Nelson's Heirs v. Clay's Heirs

30 Ky. 138, 7 J.J. Marsh. 138, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 5, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Ky. 138 (Nelson's Heirs v. Clay's Heirs) 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
Nelson's Heirs v. Clay's Heirs, 30 Ky. 138, 7 J.J. Marsh. 138, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 14 (Ky. Ct. App. 1832).

Opinion

Judge Underwood,

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Judge Nicholas did not sit.

We approve of the principles upon which the lands incontest have been equally divided between the parties litigant. The controversy lias assumed no now aspect, since it was decided hv this Court, which can authorize the assignment of more than h ill the lands to the anpellants. But on thispoint, we regard the opi-dou of this court, heretofoie delivered, as concluding the rights of the parties; and that in remanding the cause it was intended that nothing more should be done than carry into effect. [139]*139¿he principles settled as aplicable to their rights. See the case in 5 Lnt. 250, wnore tile points are Sufficiently stated.

Upon the return of the rase the appellants, by a second amendment of tne original hill, offered io bring into partition the settlement of 40*'acres and to submit to a division according to the deci-ion of this court. This fas t constitutes a suffic ient reason for disregarding tiio e assign me .ts of error which impeach (lie decree, because 600 acres of hind were not allotted to the appellants.

Tite circuit court, by gin interlocutory decree, directed an account to be taken of rents and profits and improvements. From the report of the commissioners it appears that the total value of the improvements m ule by the appellants, and those holding under them upon (lie hauls allotted to the defendants, now appellees, which was regarded as safe, not being covered by any interfering adverse claim, amounted to $1,540; and that the rents, for the use of the improvements so made, amounted to $2,450 69 in value: thus shewing an excess of rents of $910 69. 'I he circuit court reduced this balance to $838 67, upon the ground that the commissioners liad allowed rent upon a part of the lands improper^, by computing the rent on some of the improvements, for time running before the appellants had notice of the claim of tne ancestor of the appellees. The circuit court decreed that the appellants should pay the appellees the aforesaid sum of $838 67 on or before a given day in the ensuing term, and upon the payment being made that theappellees should convey the lands allotted to the appellants.

The appellants did not pay the moneyas required by the decree of the court. Thereupon the court dissolved the injunction and gave the heirs of Clay the benefit of the judgment in ejectment obtained against the appellants, and dismissed their bill without prejudice, decreeing costs against them. To reverse this decree the appellants prosecute an appeal.

We think that the chancellor should have regard 'eel the appellants and appellees as tenants in common [140]*140It is true that the appellants had not the legal title, jJ(1j t(.ien their right to it was established; and equiLy upon the establishment of a right, will regard tiie consequences resulting from it, and dispose of incide,Ual ^natters, in the same maimer as though the right to it was purely legal from the beginning. According to the doctrines of the common law, one tenant in common was not liable to his companion *°r waste or Cie profits of the estate; although he may have embezzled the profits or appropiiated to himself the whole. The injustice of this docfUne was obviated in England by the statutes of Westminster, 2, 6, 22, and IV. Ann. c. 16; the first giving an action for waste, and the second an account for the profits. II. Com. 194. Baneon’s Abr. title joint tenants and tenants in common letter, L. The provisions of the statutes of Ana were in substance adopted by an act of the colonial legislature of 1748. bee note 19, Tucker’s Blackstone 194. 1 his court, in the case of Coleman vs. Hutchinson, III. Bibb, 211, refer to an act of our parent state, passed in 1784, which authorizes “actions of account in favor of one joint tenant, or tenant in common against another, as his bailiff, for receiving, more than his just share.” It may, therefore, be safely laid down as the law, that a joint tenant or tenant in common, who commits waste, or who receives more of the rents and profits than comes to his share, (to be apportioned according to Ins interest in the estate,) is liable to his co-tenant for the waste or for the excess of rents and profits above his share, under thestatutary provisions aforesaid,

te jmt" o6"" a^t'^c 'in-mo'i. is respon-ibletn his waste Vi^for^ reonivin? more than his the' rmit» a °d profits of the «state so hold, ff one tenant or joint tenant enter up-•^no^rent''" ami improve the same, by hi» money or tenantes-00" pending neithermmey he^s e'-titied to the exclusiyo benefit of tho ri-nts or profits thus produced.

[140]*140But w|ieil the estate, at the commencement of the joint tenancy or tenancy m common, yields no rent or profit, and one of the tenants enters, and by imProvlng the estate renders it productive, can the co-tenant, who expends neither money nor labour, come in and claim a share of the profits? This Seems to be the question in the present case. The record does not shew that tiie appellees, or their ancestor, made any improvements upon the laud: on the contrary, all the improvements appear to have been made by the appellants and those holding under them, or by persons who were not tenants, and vyho paid no rents to the appellants. Under these [141]*141circumstances, we do not perceive the principle upon which the appellees, or their ancestor, as a co-tenant in coiniuou, can ciaba rents. It is clear .that it could not be done at common law: nor. is their any' thing- in the statute of IV. Ann.sc. 16, or the arts of Virginia, which can sanction the' clairti to rems by the appellees or their ancestor.

The sta'utes cl Ann and of Virginia give •n remedy for the recovery nf profits grown gout of an estate from its condition when acqu'red, or produced by the joint labor or expenditure of ’ho co-tenants. In partition between joint tenants, or tenants m having entered upon the Ian(l an;l im~ hc°will be protected' by the c. urt, ^Veme'nts assigned to him if pmcíowariceín"" division for the enhanced }^¡° of tl>0

These statutes were not designed to create a right in favour of a co-tenant who expended nothing, to share the promts resulting from the money or labour expended by his companion; hut they were intended to a¡ve a remedy, by which the profits of the estate, g-owing out of its condition when acquired, or v Inch the estate yielded, or would yield, independent of any extraordinary expenditure by the party receiving the profits, might bo apportioned accordin'' to the interests of the co-tenants, and the receiver compelled to account to his co-tenant for his share. rims the statutes enforced no more than was required by the principles of morality.

If A. and B are tenants in common of an proved large tract of land, A has an unquestionable right to enter upon and improve it, by making a farm thereon. If he leaves a full portion of its val-tie, m its unimproved state, to satisfy the interest oi B. on partition, it would be unjust to permit B. to claim the part improved by A. or to insist that the enhanced value of the land, owing to the improve-meats made by A. should he taken into consideration in making the partition.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ky. 138, 7 J.J. Marsh. 138, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelsons-heirs-v-clays-heirs-kyctapp-1832.