Phillips v. Pope's Heirs

49 Ky. 163, 10 B. Mon. 163, 1849 Ky. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 Ky. 163 (Phillips v. Pope'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
Phillips v. Pope's Heirs, 49 Ky. 163, 10 B. Mon. 163, 1849 Ky. LEXIS 50 (Ky. Ct. App. 1849).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action of ejectment was brought, on the demise of the heirs of Mrs. Prances Pope, to recover land era- *• braced in a deed made in 1823, which purports to convey to E. B. Gaither all the land devised to said Frances by the will of her first husband, M. Walton, of [164]*164which the land in contest is a part, and under which deed, as passing the title of Mrs. Pope, the defendants claim.

The pro-visions of lhe act of 1840 bearing on this case,

It appears that Mrs. Pope died in 1843, having had no children by the marriage; that her husband, John Pope, died in 1845, and that this action was commenced in 1848, within three years after the death of the husband, but not until about five years after the death of the wife. Upon an agreed case, stating these and other facts involved in the action, a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. And, in this Court, two principal questions are presented, the decision of either of which in favor of the defendant, will not only reverse the judgment, but will, in its consequences, as admitted on both sides, defeat the action. These questions are, 1st, whether the deed to Gaither is sufficiently authenticated to pass the title of Mrs. Pope, and 2d, whether if it be not the act of 1840, “to amend the law limiting actions for the recovery of land by females and their heirs,” (3 Stat. Law, 413,) applies as a bar to this case. We shall consider this second question first.

The title of the act has been already stated. It proceeds to enact:

“Sec. 1. That all suits and actions hereafter instituted for the recovery of land, or the possession thereof, by any female, or her heirs — when such feme has or shall hereafter, jointly with her husband, execute a deed for the conveyance of her right of inheritance to the same — on the ground that the officer before whom such deed has been or shall be acknowledged, has only certified that the feme has relinquished her right of dower; or on account of such deed’s not having been lodged for record, in the proper office, in due time; or on account of a defect in the authentication of such deed, when the same has been or may hereafter be executed, in or out of the State of Kentucky; or for the want of a dedimus potestatum, or commission to take the acknowledgement of the same; or on account of the want of a proper authentication, or record of a power of attorney under the authority of which the deed has been [165]*165or may be executed, shall be commenced within three years next after such feme has or shall become discovert, or next after the death of the husband, in case he survives her: Provided, that when such feme shall die before she becomes discovert or before the time has run out after she becomes discovert for her to sue, and leaves heirs laboring under the disability of coverture, lunacy or infancy, they shall be allowed the same time to commence their suits, or actions, after the disability shall be removed, now allowed by law in other cases.

Statutes of limitation being intended to give repose to those having right, or apparent right, should be liberally construed with the view to é attain the object intended. The act of 1840 limiting the time-for bringing suits-by widows and' their heirs for lands, which it has been attempted to convey by husband and wife, confined to the cases enumerated in the statute. In all other cases, the widow, or her heirs, ¿as twenty years from the heath of the husdand.

“Sec. -. That this act shall not take effect, as respects deeds heretofore made, until the first day of January, 1843.”

From the title of the act, as well as from the operative words by which it prescribes a rule of action, it is evident that it is strictly an act of limitation, and that it was not intended and should not operate to give a right except so far as by limiting the time of asserting title, it creates or confirms a right in the party who is in possession. If it were not of this character simply, it would be something more than an act of limitation. But being, as it clearly is, an act of limitation only, it resembles other acts of that name and character in its object and effect of giving repose and quiet to parties in possession under an apparent right. And such acts, especially, when relating to land, are entitled to, and have generally received from this Court, a favorable regal’d and a liberal construction, with a view to the attainment of their objects.

The act then was intended to amend the law limiting actions by females and their heirs, which carries us back to the previous law limiting such actions. But in looking into the body of the act, we see that it does not apply to all actions by females and their heirs, but only to cases in which there has been or shall be an attempt by husband and wife to convey the title of the wife-; and when, by reason of one or other of the enumerated defects, the deed has failed, or is supposed to have failed to pass the title of the wife, and on the ground of this defect she or her heirs assert title and- sue for [166]*166the land. In all of these cases, by the previous and present law, if the deed be actually inoperative as to the wife, she or her heirs have a right of entry and of action as soon as the title or power of the husband to control her land ceases. And by the previous law, limiting their actions in such cases, she and her heirs had twenty years, within which to commence their suits, from the time when this right of entry or cause of action accrued. It was obviously the purpose and only purpose of the statute to reduce the period of limitation, in all the enumerated cases, from twenty to three years, after the 1st day of January, 1843. And while it thus left an opportunity to the females or their heirs, certainly sufficient for the assertion of their right, whenever the/me had not, in fact, freely and willingly executed the deed, its object and intent was to hasten the period when the bona fide purchaser might be absolutely protected by lapse of time, against the assertion of a claim, founded solely upon technical defects, for the most part, committed by the officers of the law, but which invalidated the evidences of his purchase, and in point of law, left the title in the wife, subject only to the effect of the deed, as the sole act of the husband. And as this purpose, in its nature, applies alike to all claims and actions founded upon the enumerated defects, so we cannot doubt that the legislature intended to subserve this purpose, in the act before us, by prescribing a new and reduced limitation to all actions founded upon any of them, without discrimination as to persons or circumstances, except as it has expressly made it in favor of persons under certain disabilities defined in the proviso.

Indeed, so manifest is the purpose and intent of the act, that it would not be perceived on a cursory reading, that the effect of one its clauses, if taken literally, is to exclude from the new limitation a case, the circumstances of which constitute no possible ground for the discrimination, and the exclusion of which, as it would in that case prolong the period for litigation, and postpone the period of repose, would so far defeat the intern[167]*167tion of the law-makers. We refer to.the language used, to describe the period, or event, from which the three years are to be counted, within which suits or actions, in the cases referred to, must be commenced by the feme or her heirs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Neumeyer v. Krakel
62 S.W. 518 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1901)
Whereatt v. Worth
84 N.W. 441 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Ky. 163, 10 B. Mon. 163, 1849 Ky. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-popes-heirs-kyctapp-1849.