Phillips v. Phillips

171 S.W.2d 458, 294 Ky. 323, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 440
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 11, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 458 (Phillips v. Phillips) 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
Phillips v. Phillips, 171 S.W.2d 458, 294 Ky. 323, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 440 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Ratliff

Reversing.

John Phillips and his wife M. A. Phillips, the appellee, and their son L. R. Phillips, the appellant, came to Pulaski county, Kentucky, from Johnson county, Tennessee, in the year 1919 for the purpose of buying a farm in Pulaski county. They contacted Gr. M. Yanhook of Pulaski county who owned a' farm which he desired to sell and after some negotiations the parties reached an .agreement to purchase the farm for the price of $9,000, and made an initial payment of $1,500 on the purchase price and executed five purchase lien notes in the sum of $1,100 each, the first one maturing August 25, 1920, and ■one on the 25th day of August in each suceeding year including 1924, and also assumed payment of a $2,000 indebtedness secured by a mortgage on the land which Yanhook owed the New York Life Insurance Company. Yanhook and his wife executed a deed to the land to John Phillips and appellee conveying to them the land in fee simple title. Just previous to the purchase of the Yanhook farm John Phillips and appellee, had bought another farm in Pulaski county, referred to as the “Science Hill” farm, and they and their son, the appellant, moved to it and appellant lived there with his parents (John and M. A. Phillips, appellee) for about two years and then moved to the Yanhook farm and resided there and used it, apparently as his own, without question or interruption by appellee or anyone until in the early part of the year 1940 when this controversy arose. In the meantime, however, in the year 1920, John Phillips conveyed his interest in the farm to appellee and she thereby became invested with title to the whole farm. Later appellee sold a portion of the farm, receiving $4,100 therefor, and appropriated all the money to her own use but left appellant in possession of the remaining portion of the farm. In the early part of the year 1940 appellee instituted a forcible detainer action seeking to dispossess *325 appellant of the farm but that action never came to trial-Immediately thereafter appellant filed his petition in equity in the Pulaski circuit court alleging that he was the owner of and in possession of the farm and that appellee was claiming title thereto and casting a cloud upon his title and asked that he be quieted in his title. But being confronted with the fact that his name did not appear in the deed of the farm executed by Yanhook to John Phillips and appellee, and not having any other written contract or agreement for the purchase of the land as between-himself and John Phillips and appellee, he then filed his amended petition and counterclaim by which he alleged, in substance, that when he and his father and appellee made the contract for the purchase of the Yanhook farm it was understood and agreed between him and his father and appellee that they would purchase the farm in partnership and he would pay $4,500 of the purchase price and appellee would pay the other $4,500. He stated further that appellee had sold a. portion of her one-half interest in the farm for the sum of $4,100, leaving him the holder and owner of his one-half undivided interest in the original farm, and appellee the owner of $400 interest therein.

Appellant further stated that at the time of the purchase of the Yanhook farm he paid the initial payment of $1,500 on the purchase price and a short time thereafter he assumed the payment of the mortgage debt in favor of the New York Life Insurance Company which Yanliook had therefore executed on the farm; that in compliance with his agreement to pay one-half of the purchase price of the farm he paid to Yanhook and the New York Life Insurance Company a total sum of $4,500, and that by a further oral agreement and understanding which he then entered into with appellee she was to execute to him a deed to his one-half undivided interest in the farm, but appellee had put him off from time to time and failed to comply with her promise to-make the deed but had instituted a forcible detainer proceeding against him for the purpose of putting him out of possession of the farm and depriving him of his interest therein. He further stated that a short time after the purchase of the farm from Yanhook in the year 1919, he took possession of it and has continuously occupied it and held possession thereof under the oral agreement of purchase from that time until the present and has occupied and used the farm as his own, since' said time, *326 claiming the same and paying the taxes thereon, expecting appellee to make him a deed to his interest therein in conformity with her repeated promises to do so.

Appellant further stated that appellee at one time .assured him that she was ready to make the said deed to him but that instead of executing to him a deed she executed a mortgage to him on the farm and delivered the same to him but that before he had time to take the mortgage to the county seat and have it recorded appellee visited his home and when she left she took the mortgage with her saying that she would have the same recorded but that she failed to have it recorded and had •destroyed or concealed the same and still refused to make him a deed in accordance with their agreement. Pie further alleged that by reason of the oral agreement with appellee for the purchase of the farm pursuant to which agreement he paid the sum of $4,500 on the purchase price, and having taken possession of the farm under the oral agreement of purchase, although he is not now in a position to enforce specific performance of the contract (under the provisions of the statute of frauds) and compel appellee to execute to him a deed for the farm, that he is entitled to recover of appellee the sum of $4,500 with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the-day of-, 1919, until paid and that he is entitled to a lien on the farm to secure him in the payment of the said $4,500 with interest and cost of the action. He further stated that since the making of the said oral agreement for the purchase of the farm as above' set out, and since taking possession of it, he had in good faith erected valuable and lasting improvements thereon, consisting of the repairing of buildings, fencing .and improving it generally in the amount of $2,000, and that he should recover of appellee the additional sum of $2,000 and is entitled to a lien against the farm to secure him in the payment of that sum. He further stated that after appellee sold her one-half interest in the farm he thereupon took open, notorious, and adverse possession of the balance of the farm and has since claimed the same as his own and has cultivated it, cut and removed timber therefrom and claimed.it adversely for more than fifteen years prior to the institution of the action and that he has title thereto by adverse possession. He prayed that he be adjudged the owner of the farm and his title thereto be quieted; or, if the chancellor be of the opinion that he is not entitled to that relief, then he *327 should have judgment against appellee for the sum of $4,500 which he paid on the purchase price of the farm and the further sum of $2,000 for the improvements made by him thereon and that he be adjudged a lien on the farm for the payment of said sums with interest, cost, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 458, 294 Ky. 323, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-phillips-kyctapphigh-1943.