Robinson v. Miller

41 Ky. 284, 2 B. Mon. 284, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 25, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 Ky. 284 (Robinson v. Miller) 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
Robinson v. Miller, 41 Ky. 284, 2 B. Mon. 284, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 22 (Ky. Ct. App. 1842).

Opinion

Judge Makshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This ejectment of Robinson vs Miller, was formerly before the Court, and the opinion then rendered, reversing the judgment which the plaintiff had obtained, 1 B. Monroe, 88, is referred to as containing a general statement of the case as it then appeared on the record. Upon the return of the cause to the Circuit Court, the declaration was amended by striking out the demises from Whitlow and wife and James Maxwell, leaving only the demise from Robinson, to whom James Maxwell had, in 1832, conveyed his interest in the 200 acres which had descended to him from his father, Basil Maxwell; but James Maxwell having, by deed made in [285]*2851820, conveyed to T. C. Page, under whom the defendant claims, his interest in so much of the 200 acres as lay outside of the dower tract allotted to his mother, the deed to Robinson passed only his interest of one third in the dower tract of 584 acres; and it was for the recovery of this interest alone that the action was prosecuted after the amendment of the declaration. 'Upon the last trial as on the first, the principal question on which the plaintiff’s right of recovery depended, was whether the dower right of B. Maxwell’s widow, acquiesced in and recognized as it had been, presented a valid obstacle to the right of entry of the heirs of her husband or their alienee. It was decided in the former opinion that although Basil Maxwell, who died in possession of the land, may not have had the legal title but only a perfect equity to the land, still by our laws his widow was entitled to her dower therein, and was moreover, as against the heirs, entitled to remain in the mansion house and retain possession of the home farm until dower should be assigned to her, and that this right was not affected by the conveyance of the legal title to the heirs, in consideration solely of the equity which had descended to them from their father, and that they did not acquire the right of entry against the widow by reason of such conveyance even if there had been no allotment of her dower. It was also decided, that although if Bazil Maxwell had only an equitable title, the assignment of dower to his widow, under the authority of the County Court of Madison county, had in itself no validity because the Court had no power to make the assignment in such case, still the subsequent acquiesence of all parties in the assignment actually made, and the recognition of it by the dowress in her deed conveying it to Page, and by the heirs in their deeds (of 1820, 1822, and 1826,) conveying their respective portions of the 200 acres outside of the tract so assigned for dower, made it their act, and as such, valid and binding upon their alienees. To these opinions we still adhere, and they must certainly be re-regarded as governing this case at least, so far as they are applicable to the facts now appearing.

Principles of the former opinion cited and approved. The facts appearing in this case on the last trial. Instructions of the Court to the jury in the last trial. The devise in the ■will of Thomas Maxwell to J3. Maxwell.

All the evidence introduced on the first trial was also brought forward on the last, but it was made more clearly to appear, and may now be assumed, that neither Thomas nor Bazil Maxwell had acquired the legal title, but that the land was held by equitable title only until the conveyance was made to the heirs of Basil Maxwell in .1816. It was further proved on the last trial that Thomas Maxwell, who died about the close of the year 1795, left a widow who remained in the mansion house of her husband upon this 200 acres, living with her son Bazil Maxwell, to whom her husband had devised the 200 acres in fee until his death, about the year 1810, and afterwards with his widow until her own death ; that in January, 1812, one third of the 200 acres, including the mansion house and the whole of the 584 acres, which were afterwards allotted as the dower of B. Maxwell’s widow, was assigned her for her dower by Commissioners appointed by the County Court of Madison county, and that she died before the assignment of dower to the widow of Basil Maxwell which was in November, 1813. Upon these new facts it is contended that Basil Maxwell’s widow had no right to be endowed of any' part of the land which had been assigned to the widow of Thomas Maxwell for her dower, but had only a right of dower in the remaining two thirds, and that the assignment of said land to the widow of B. Maxwell having been made during the infancy of his heirs, and by their guardian, who was interested in the dower, their acquiescence and recognition of it, if made in ignorance of her having no right to be endowed of that land, was not binding upon them and was no bar to this suit, unless such acquiescence and recognition had continued more than twenty years, and instructions to this effect, moved for by the plaintiff having been refused by the Circuit Court, the propriety of this refusal presents the chief question for our consideration.

In coming to the decision of this question it is necessary to determine, first, the extent of the interest- which B. Maxwell took under his father’s will, in one clause of which the testator says: ‘ ‘1 leave to my loved wife her “thirds of this place I now live on her lifetime, likewise [287]*287“the household, furniture and all my personal estate, &e. ‘ ‘to dispose of it to the children as they grow up to the “age the law requires, as she may think proper, with the “advice of the executors,” &c. &c.; and in the next clause he says, “I give to my oldest son, Bazil Maxwell, “two hundred acres.of land that I now live on,” &c. &c.; “my son Bazil is hereby required and obligated to take ‘ ‘the care and oversight of the family, and in particular “for the support of his mother, and in conjunction with “her, to see how the children are disposed of.” In all the devises to his other children, he usesdhe words “I give,” &c.

The construction of the devise - Bazil Maxw?’-. Land of which the testator was in possession, he devised to his wife her thirds and to his son the whole tract, both residing on the land in the same family, the son is possessed of the whole tract, subject to the dower interest.when asserted. .

[287]*287The devise to the son, B. Maxwell, clearly imports that he was to have the immediate fee in the whole tract. Shall it be restricted by the preceding clause? This should not be done if any reasonable operation can • be given to the first clause, consistently with its language, and not violating any obvious intention.of the testator. May not the first clause then be properly understood, not as giving to the wife any interest or right in the land which she would not otherwise have had, but as merely referring to and recognizing the right of dower, which the law would give her, and leaving her to claim her thirds? If the first clause had been, ‘ T leave to my wife her dower' or her right of dower in the land I live on,” and the next clause, “I give to my son, B. M., two hundred acres of land'that I now live on,” there could scarcely have been a doubt that it was intended to give the immediate fee in the whole land to his son, subject to the claim of dower, just as it would have been if it had descended instead of being devised to the son; and such, we are strongly inclined to think, is the true constructive effect of the will as actually written.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Ky. 284, 2 B. Mon. 284, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-miller-kyctapp-1842.