Rush v. Eidson

286 S.W. 780, 215 Ky. 526, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 761
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 780 (Rush v. Eidson) 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
Rush v. Eidson, 286 S.W. 780, 215 Ky. 526, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 761 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Reversing.

Appeliants, Mrs. Rush and husband, commenced this .action in the Logan circuit court to recover of appellee, *527 Barney Eidson, on two purchase money land notes, total-ling $1,250.00, subject to a credit of $400.00, and to enforce a lien against the lands for which the notes were given. A copy of the deed from Mrs. Bush and husband to Eidson was filed with the petition and shows that the full consideration for the land was $3,500.00, of which sum $1,000.00 was paid cash in hand, tire balance being evidenced by four separate notes of $625.00 each, due and payable on April 1,1922, April 1,1923, April 1,1924, and the last one on or before April 1,1925, respectively.

Appellee, Eidson, answered in three paragraphs, the first of which was a traverse of certain averments of the petition concerning the acreage and the right of appellants to recover. The second paragraph pleaded false and fraudulent representations on the part of appellants^ as to the state of the title in appellants, and averred, that appellants did not have a good and perfect title to 12 6/10 acres of the tract of'36 acres conveyed; that the notes and the $1,000.00 cash paid were obtained by false and fraudulent representations of appellants, on account of which appellee was entitled to recover, as he averred, the $1,000.00 paid and have a Cancellation of the four notes and a rescission of the contract.

The third paragraph averred that the land was purchased by appellee on April 16, 1920, at the price of $95.63 per acre, for thirty-six and six-tenths acres; that the purchase was by the acre, and appellants undertook to convey to him thirty-six and six-tenths acres when they were the owners of only 24 acres, and the balance, 12 6/10' acres belonged to other persons, and not to appellants. Appellee prayed to recover $1,104.93 for a deficiency ini acreage if he could not have rescission of the contract.

By reply the fraud and misrepresentations averred in the answer were traversed, and the averments of the answer to the effect that appellants did not own all of the thirty-six and six-tenths acres conveyed was controverted; denied the right of recovery for deficiency of acreage by appellee. It was further averred in the reply that Mary Beatty became the owner of certain lots or parcels of the old Elish Bedfern land of which the thirty-six and six-tenths acres was a part and that she conveyed the same to predecessors in title of appellants in 1884, or thereabouts, and that during all of the time since the thirty-six and six-tenths acres were enclosed by fence and' held and claimed by Mrs. Beatty and all persons holding *528 under her since 1884 as a single tract, and that the boundary so purchased by appellants' was by them conveyed to-appellee, Eidson; that they and their predecessors, in title and Eidson had been in the actual, open, notorious, continuous adverse possession of the lands in the boundary conveyed for more than fifteen years next before the institution of the action and for more than thirty years before the institution of the action, and they pleaded and relied upon the statutes of limitation in such cases made and provided. Rejoinder by appellee, Eidson, made up the issues upon that branch of the case. About that time Leslie Beatty and William Henry Beatty and their wives filed intervening petition asking to be made party defendants and that their petition be taken as answer to plaintiff’s petition, and averred in sub stance, that they were the owners by inheritance of all of the 12 6/10 acres of land in controversy. -With respect to their heirship it is averred that Leslie and William Henry Beatty “are the sons of Mary Beatty and that Mary Beatty is the daughter of Reese Redfern, and that their mother was the granddaughter of Redfern, and' that in the distribution of Elish Redfern’s estate lot No. 2 was -assigned to Jeremiah Redfern.” Further pleading it is averred “plaintiffs allege and say that lot No. 2 was allotted to .Jeremiah Redfern and that now Leslie Beatty and William Henry Beatty are the only living heirs of Jeremiah Redfern and that they are entitled to inherit lot No. 2, consisting of 12 6/10 acres, and that they are now owners thereof by virtue of inheritance; that they have not known the whereabouts of Jeremiah Redfern for many years, for more than seven years, and the presumption is that he is dead; that by virtue of their kinship they are entitled to inherit said 12 6/10 acres, but they say they never have parted with the title thereto, and they now claim the same 'by right of inheritance. ’ ’

Further on in the same pleading the Beattys averred “that in so far as they know 'they are the only living direct descendants of Jeremiah Redfern; as heretofore stated they have not heard from Jeremiah Redfern for more than seven years, and the legal presumption is that he is now dead, and that said title of lot No. 2 has always been claimed by him, and the records in the clerk’s office show the same to be vested, in him, .and no record ever disclosed where he ever conveyed it awáy, and for these reasons aforesaid the plaintiffs are entitled to the same *529 by the law of inheritance made and provided in this state, and they claim title to said lot by said law of inheritance.”

Appellants filed reply to the answer and cross-petition of Leslie Beatty, et al., and put in issue all of the material averments thereof, denying the ownership of the twelve and six-tenths acres by the Beattys, and denying that they were the heirs of Jeremiah Eedfern or entitled to inherit from him.

Further pleading appellants averred that they were the owners of the whole of the thirty-six and six-tenths acres described in their deed to appellee and had been in the actual, open, continuous, adverse and uninterrupted possession of the whole thereof for more than fifteen years next before the institution of the action. And further pleaded that appellee, Leslie Beatty, conveyed all of his rights in the land to appellants and that William Henry Beatty had, prior to the date of the deed, conveyed all of his interest therein to Leslie Beatty and that appellants thereby acquired all of the interest of the Beattys in and to the lands. These averments of the reply of appellants to the cross-petition of the Beattys were not traversed or put in issue.

Many questions are presented by brief of counsel, but we think it will be necessary to consider only a part of them in order to dispose of this case.

It is a well established rule that persons claiming the right to take an estate as heirs or distributees, through others as such, have the burden of pleading and proving a particular degree of relationship to the alleged intestate and that there are no others entitled to take before them. Combs, et al. v. Cardwell, 164 Ky. 542; Craig v. Welch Hackley Coal & Oil Co., 73 S. W. 1035; Dailey v. O’Brien, 96 S. W. 521; 27 R. 812; Fite v. Orr, 1 S. W. 582; 8 R. 349. There is no evidence of consequence or probative value showing the Beattys, appellees herein, were entitled to inherit from Jeremiah Eedfern, even if there were no other heirs. It is neither alleged nor proved that Jeremiah Eedfern did not leave children or descendants of children.

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

Related

Gibson's Administrator v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. Hamilton
78 S.W.2d 336 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1935)
Riley v. Taylor's Guardian
37 S.W.2d 59 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1931)
War Fork Land Company v. Carr
33 S.W.2d 308 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 780, 215 Ky. 526, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rush-v-eidson-kyctapphigh-1926.