Parnell v. Loving

295 S.W. 462, 220 Ky. 471, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 10, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 462 (Parnell v. Loving) 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
Parnell v. Loving, 295 S.W. 462, 220 Ky. 471, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 562 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

• The appellant and plaintiff below, Eva Parnell (nee Sparkman), brought this action on October 8,1919, in the Montgomery circuit court, to recover from appellee and defendant below, James Loving, a tract of land in Montgomery county, containing 70 acres, which she averred that she owned and was entitled to its possession, and that it was being wrongfully withheld from her by de *472 fendant. She also prayed for judgment for reasonable ■rental for the '5 years preceding the filing of the action.

Defendant answered, denying plaintiff’s title, and averred that he owned 50 acres of the 70-acre tract, and that plaintiff’s claim was a cloud upon his title, and he sought to remove it by making his answer a cross-action against her. Later appellee Rufus Shepherd filed his intervening petition, in which he claimed to.own the other 20 acres of the 70-acre tract, and he sought the same relief against plaintiff by a similar cross-action against her. Appropriate pleadings made the issues, •and upon final submission, after proof taken, the court ‘adjudged that defendants owned the tract in the proportions described in their respective pleadings, and quieted 'their titles thereto, and dismissed plaintiff’s petition, to reverse which she prosecutes this appeal.

It is conceded by all parties that the land involved •was at one time owned by James Sparkman, the grandfather of plaintiff, who averred in her petition, and we think established by her proof, that he conveyed the land by duly executed deed and for a valuable consideration 'to his son, Hiram Sparkman, plaintiff’s father, and the latter immediately moved to and resided upon it until his death, which occurred about the year 1893; that the vendee in that deed (plaintiff’s father, Hiram Sparkman) did not file it' for record with the county clerk of the .county during his lifetime, but that his widow, plaintiff’s mother, did so file it, and it was so indorsed a short while after the death of Hiram Sparkman, but that in some -manner it was lost or removed from the clerk’s office without ever being recorded; that plaintiff was the only heir of her father, and inherited from him the tract of land, subject to the rights of her mother as surviving widow; that within a year or so after the death of plaintiff’s father she married Ambrose Shepherd, and that plaintiff’s mother and her second husband, on July 15, „ 1896, attempted to sell the land under an executory contract in the nature of a bond for title to Silas Amburgy, in consideration of $150 then paid by the latter. That bond was transferred by assignments written thereon to a number of successive and mesne vendees, until it was transferred to' defendant Loving in 1908, from which time he has possessed all his portion of the tract, and • in the meantime defendant Shepherd became possessed -of his portion of the tract through‘similar assignments. *473 One of the successive vendees of the executory title attempted to he conveyed by the bond was Isaac Jobe, and he transferred it to defendants in 1908 in the proportions of their respective claims.

Defendants contended that they and their, predecessors in title under the executory contract from Mr®. Ambrose Shepherd (nee Sparkman) and her husband have been in continuous, actual, notorious, open, exclusive, hostile, and adverse possession of the land, claiming it as their own against plaintiff and all the world, since July 12,1896, a period of more than 15 years, and more than 3 years after plaintiff arrived at the age of 21 years, which, according to the proof, was in 1914, and that by reason thereof they not only acquired title to the land by adverse possession but that-plaintiff’s -cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations, which, as stated, they also pleaded and relied on, and which plaintiff appropriately controverted.

Defendants contend, and we think correctly so, that under the principles announced in the cases of Campbell v. Whisman, 183 Ky. 256, 209 S. W. 27, Anderson v. Sanders, 193 Ky. 364, 236 S. W. 561, and others referred to in those -opinions, plaintiff’s mother will be conclusively -presumed to have elected after her husband’s death to take her homestead right in the tract of land instead of -dower, sin-ee the latter was never assigned her and the land at that time was worth considerably less than $1,000.

That being true, counsel further contend, in reliance upon the same cases, that the attempt by plaintiff’s mother to convey her right in the land as widow of her deceased husband, Hiram Sparkman, was an abandonment of her homestead right, and that plaintiff’s cause of action, as the owner of the land inherited by her from her deceased father, subject to her mother’s rights therein, then and there accrued, and that the -continuous occupancy thereafter in the manner and with the required intention to constitute adverse holding, and which it is claimed continued for a period of more than 23 years (the last 5 years of which was after plaintiff became 21 years of age), barred plaintiff’s right and ripened the title in defendants. The conclusions of counsel are no doubt sound and -correct? if based upon sound premises, as is fully -sustained by the cases supra. The unsoundness of the conclusion, however, according to our *474 interpretation of the testimony in the cause, lies in the fact that the character of possession by the original and successive vendees under the bond was not adverse and was not such as to ripen title by prescription, nor to operate as a bar to plaintiff’s right under the statute of limitations.

Isaac Jobe, who was one of the intermediate vendees under the bond, and the immediate assignor of it to both defendants, testified in the cause. At the time he .gave his deposition he was a merchant in the city of Mt. Sterling, and there is nothing in the record remotely or otherwise impeaching his credibility. He stated in his •evidence that he understood, when he purchased the land from his father-in-law, Bill Shepherd (who in turn purchased it from D. E. May, he having purchased it from Silas Amburgy), that the latter owned and transferred to him only an estate for the life of the plaintiff’s mother, upon the theory that her title bond conveyed only a life •estate which it was thought she owned in the land at that time. He stated that he never asserted any other title, .and that May had told him on a prior occasion that he (May) likewise claimed only an estate in the land for and during the life of plaintiff’s mother.

One of the essential elements to an adverse holding, ,so as to eventually ripen into title, is that the possessor must claim the title which he afterwards asserts under Lis adverse holding, upon the theory that the possession was accompanied with a claim of title “against the world,” and such a holding under such absolute claim must continue uninterrupted for the statutory period, since title by adverse possession is not so acquired without such continuous uninterrupted claim and possession, and limitations do not run unless there was a cause of action in favor of the one disputing such title every day during "the statutory period. Meek v. Davis, 189 Ky. 64, 224 S. W. 659. Our cases are unanimous as well as numerous, in support of the character of holding just described, and we deem it unnecessary to incumber the opinion with a lengthy citation of them. One is Combs v.

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Related

Eddington's Adm'x v. Eddington
295 Ky. 548 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1943)
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175 S.W.2d 12 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 462, 220 Ky. 471, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parnell-v-loving-kyctapphigh-1927.