Salyer's Guardian v. Keeton

283 S.W. 1015, 214 Ky. 643, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 397
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 21, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 1015 (Salyer's Guardian v. Keeton) 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
Salyer's Guardian v. Keeton, 283 S.W. 1015, 214 Ky. 643, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 397 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appellee, whom we will call the plaintiff, began this action against the appellants, whom we will refer to as defendants, to enjoin the commission of waste on a certain tract of land in which plaintiff claims to own a remainder interest. She was awarded the relief sought, and the defendants have appealed. Practically the only question involved upon this appeal is whether limitation will begin to run against a remainderman prior to the death of the life tenant, who is also a cotenant with the remainderman.'This litigation grew out of these facts: On March 26, 1884, Dennis Patrick and his wife, Mary, acquired by deed, 194% acres of land. In 1886 Mary Patrick died intestate and left surviving her two children, Claude Patrick and Elizabeth Patrick, now Elizabeth Keeton, and to these two children, Claude and Elizabeth, the interest of Mary Patrick in this land passed under the statutes of descent and distribution, subject, however, to the curtesy of her husband, Dennis Patrick. *645 Believing himself to own the whole of this land, on September 28, 1887, Dennis Patrick undertook by deed of general warranty to convey the whole of this 194% acres to Solena Canoy, from whom through many mesne conveyances, a portion of this property has passed to defendants. In 1903, Claude Patrick became 21 years of age, and in 1909, he died intestate and without issue. His father became his heir, and the one-half remainder interest of Claude in his mother’s half of this property would have passed to Dennis Patrick, but he, having previously undertaken by general warranty deed to convey this to Solena Canoy, did not take this land, but on the contrary it passed immediately to the parties who had succeeded to the title of Solena Canoy. In the case of Perkins v. Coleman, 90 Ky. 611, 14 S. W. 640, 12 R, 501, we said:

“Where it clearly appears from the writing that the vendor has conveyed, or agrees to convey, a good and sufficient title, and not merely his present interest in the land, the agreement runs with the land, and repeats itself every day; and if the vendor, at the time of the conveyance, has not title to the land but subsequently acquires the title, it ‘ eo instante/ inures to the benefit of the vendee and his privies.”

In 1905, Elizabeth Patrick became 21 years of age. In 1907 she married L. B. Keeton, and in this suit, which was begun by her on October 6,1923, she alleges that she is the owner of one-fourth of this 194% acres of land, subject to the curtesy of her father, Dennis Patrick, who is still alive. She alleges that the defendants are committing and threatening to commit waste thereon by boring wells and taking from it the oil and gas thereunder. She seeks to have the court enjoin the commission of this waste, and to recover of the defendants treble the value of the oil and gas removed by them. The court in its judgment found that the defendants had obtained $1,000.00 in cash as a bonus for this lease, and that under this lease, they had obtained $3,188.41 as royalty for oil that had been pumped therefrom. The court gave to the plaintiff a judgment against defendants for one-fourth of this bonus, or $250.00, and for one-fourth of these royalties, or $797.10, thus giving to her the value of the waste committed by defendants, and not treble its value, as prayed for by plaintiff; but as no cross-appeal has *646 been prosecuted, plaintiff’s right to recover treble the value of the waste committed is not before us.

Defendants in the court below contended and are here contending that the plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by section 2515 of our statutes (the five-year statute); by section 2522 (the ten-year statute); by section 2505 (the fifteen-year statute), and by section 2508 (the thirty-year statute); but the defendants seem to have overlooked a part of each of these statutes, for an examination will disclose that in each of these statutes there is either this or a similar clause: “After the cause of action accrued,” and because such a clause is in each of these statutes, the defense of limitation was not available to the defendants, for the plaintiff’s cause of action did not accrue until this waste was either committed or its commission was so threatened as to give the plaintiff reasonable grounds to believe it would presently be committed.

We have seen above that the defendants have acquired by deed from Dennis Patrick his half of this land and his curtesy in the one-half formerly belonging to his wife, and have acquired by operation of law the remainder interest of Claude Patrick in this land; thus the defendants own one-half of this land absolutely, the life estate of Dennis Patrick in the other half and the remainder interest of Claude Patrick in one-fourth of it, and their argument is that they are cotenants of the plaintiff, and that limitation will run in favor of one cotenant against another cotenant, and they insist that they and those under whom they claim have been holding this land adversely to the plaintiff since 1887, a period of more than 35 years, and that she has been a matured woman since 1905, a period of more than 18 years, and that their adverse possession has ripened into title. This question was thoroughly considered and decided in the ease of May v. C. & O. R. Co., 184 Ky. 493, 212 S. W. 131, where we cited a vast number of authorities, discussed the question thoroughly and, among other things, said:

“Even where the life tenant attempts to convey the fee, and described the entire boundary, and this deed is placed of record, limitation does not begin to run against the remainderman until the death of the life tenant. ’ ’

In this case, the defendants own the life estate of Dennis Patrick in this land, and their holding can not become *647 adverse to the plaintiff until that life estate is terminated, for until then plaintiff has no right to sue, hence the defendant’s claim to title by adverse possession must fail for the same reason that their plea of limitations to the plaintiff’s cause of action failed. That is, it fails because the life estate has not terminated, and plaintiff’s right to sue for possession of. her one-fourth, of this land has never accrued to her.

This case is distinguished from the case of May v. C. & O. R. Co., supra, by the fact that the life estate in the May case terminated in 1897, and no suit was brought until 1913, a period of sixteen years, while here, the life estate has not terminated.

This case is also distinguished from the case of Webb v. Webb, 200 Ky. 488, 255 S. W. 137. There were two main branches and two questions in that case. Only the first one concerns us in this one. The Webb case was a controversy between two sets of children. The plaintiffs in that case aUegod that they owned a tract of land which they had inheriied from their mother, which had been occupied by their father as tenant by curtesy, and which tract of land they alleged their father had, in August, 1904, attempted to convey to his second wife, Jemimah Webb, for life, with the remainder to their two daughters, and that they were claiming same adversely to the plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 1015, 214 Ky. 643, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salyers-guardian-v-keeton-kyctapphigh-1926.