Reed v. Reed

117 S.W.2d 211, 273 Ky. 502, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 677
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 13, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 S.W.2d 211 (Reed v. Reed) 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
Reed v. Reed, 117 S.W.2d 211, 273 Ky. 502, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 677 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the 'Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Reversing.

Parties appellant are John Reed, Squire Reed, and H. W. Haclcer, who were plaintiffs below. Appellees are Pleas Reed, and Lillie, his wife, and the children of Pleas Reed by a former marriage, and who were defendants below.

It is alleged in the petition that Mary Bell Reed, former wife of Pleas, died in 1928 leaving as her survivors twelve children, four of whom were under twenty-one years of age; that at the time of the death of Mary Bell she was the owner of a one-half interest in a tract of land, and Pleas Reed, her then husband, the owner of the other one-half undivided interest, and that upon the death of Mary Bell, Pleas Reed took curtesy.

Prior to December 18, 1930, Pleas had married appellee Lillie Reed. They had become indebted to a bank in the sum of $500, and the bank was pressing for payment; in order to save him the embarrassment of selling some live stock to meet payment of the note, the three appellants signed as sureties for him and Lillie on a renewal of the $500 obligation. This note was renewed several times until January 7, 1934, at which time appellants paid the note. When the note was first renewed with appellants as sureties, Pleas and Lillie Reed, in order to indemnify appellants, executed a mortgage on a described tract of land, being the same which it was alleged was owned jointly by Pleas and the former wife. The appellants asked for judgment against the maker of the note and for a sale of Pleas Reed’s interest, the proceeds to be applied to their debt. That interest was said to be the “undivided one-half in and to the described boundary of land, and the right of curtesy of Pleas Reed in the other undivided one-half interest owned by Mary B. H. Reed at the time of her death.” They asked that Lillie Reed’s inchoate *504 right be also subjected, since she had joined in the mortgage.

Upon the filing of the petition an attorney was appointed to represent the infant children, and he filed a report and answer in their behalf. It does not appear that any of the adult children answered. In the answer filed it seems that the execution of the note, with appellants as sureties thereon, and the contemporaneous execution of the mortgage by Pleas and Lillie Reed were admitted. The only issue raised was as to the ownership of any greater interest by Pleas Reed than his curtesy right, hence it is denied that the mortgage conveyed any other or greater interest. In an affirmative plea it is alleged that the boundary of land described in the deed was the inheritance of Mary B. H. Reed, coming to her out of real estate owned by her father at his death. It was then alleged that the name of Pleas Reed was placed in the granting clause of said deed by mistake of the draftsman, because of the fact that he was at the time the husband of Mary Bell Hacker Reed; that the said Pleas Reed paid no part of the consideration for said conveyance, and in fact there was no consideration other than the relationship of the said Mary Bell Hacker Reed, who was a child and heir at law of Martha Hacker Eversole, and the said boundary of land was conveyed to her as her distributable share in the landed estate. It is charged that H. M. Hacker, plaintiff, was one of the grantors in said deed, and was also a grantee in an interpartes deed, when there was conveyed to him another portion of the landed estate of said Martha Hacker Eversole, as his distributable share.

It was further alleged that “by reason of all these facts, whatever title Pleas Reed took under said deed he took in trust for these answering defendants, heirs at law of Mary H. Reed, all of which facts were well-known to plaintiffs at the time they took the mortgage on the boundary of land. ” It is then alleged that since Pleas Reed is holding out that he was or is the owner of an undivided half interest, a cloud is cast upon their title, and by way of counterclaim it was asked that their title and the title of the other heirs at law of Mary B. H. Reed be quieted. "While the answer does not set out the deed referred to therein, it was referred to in the petition, setting out the immediate source of alleged title in Pleas Reed.

*505 In reply, after denying material allegations of the answer, appellants asserted by affirmative pleading that the deed to the boundary of land set ont in the petition conveyed to Pleas Reed and Mary B. EL Reed a joint interest therein; was conveyed to them on June 14, 1904, and duly recorded November 2, 1907; that Mary B. H. Reed died July 24, 1928, and had lived in the neighborhood of the boundary of land from the date of the deed to the time of her death, more than twenty-four years after the execution, and more than twenty-one years after the recordation of the deed, without raising any question as to the interest of either herself or her husband therein, or seeking reformation thereof. It was also alleged that the deed was taken, conveying joint interests with full knowledge on the part of Mary B. H. Reed.

With the issues thus formed, some proof was taken, and, after completion thereof, the cause was submitted upon proof, pleadings, and exhibits, the court adjudging that the deed from Martha Eversole and.others to Pleas and Mary B. H. Reed, of date June 14, 1904, conveyed no interest to Pleas Reed, except in trust for the use and benefit of the heirs at law.of Mary B. H. Reed, and that such was the only interest held in said boundary at the time of the execution of the mortgage sought to be enforced. It was further held that whatever interest Pleas Reed held by curtesy had been forfeited by his attempted conveyance to plaintiffs by way of the mortgage, h.ence plaintiffs were not entitled to recover on the same as against the defendants, and, in so far as the petition related to them, it was dismissed, with objection and exception, and granting of appeal. The only question discussed in briefs is the one in respect to Pleas Reed’s title under the deed of June, 1904.

A recitation of the facts developed in regard to the deed is necessary to a proper conclusion of the controversy. It may be mentioned at the outset that the boundary of land under discussion was not of the landed estate of Martha Hacker Eversole. It came out of lands owned by her husband, Luther Hacker, who, as is shown died more than forty years prior to the time of taking the depositions. At the time of his death, the survivors were his widow, Martha, two sons, J. B. and H. M., and the daughter, Mary Bell. Later Martha Hacker married one Shackleford, and a daughter, Cora, was born of this marriage. Still later Martha mar *506 ried Eversole. There were no children of this marriage. After Lnther Hacker’s death, his three children, all of whom were then under age, agreed among themselves, and with Martha Hacker, to divide the land into four parts, the fourth part to go either to Cora Shackleford, the half-sister, or to her and her mother. This was done and parties took possession of their respective boundaries. Later, and after all the Hacker children became of age, it was agreed among themselves that inter-partes deeds should be made, and this was done on June 15, 1904. While the deed is not exhibited, the record shows that one-fourth of the original boundary was deeded to Martha Eversole and the half-sister, or to the latter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W.2d 211, 273 Ky. 502, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-reed-kyctapphigh-1938.