Shelby v. Shelby

279 S.W. 942, 212 Ky. 552, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 22, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 942 (Shelby v. Shelby) 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
Shelby v. Shelby, 279 S.W. 942, 212 Ky. 552, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 191 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

The appellant and plaintiff below, Mary P. -Shelby, and the appellee and intervening defendant below, Florence Shelby, were joint occupants of the old Shelby homestead known as Arcadia, and which is located in Lincoln county, Kentucky, and contains about 690 acre's. *553 Their interests and rights as such occupants were created by a family settlement deed executed by the' Shelby' heirs in 1898, and the substance of it is stated in the opin- - ion in the case of Shelby v. Shelby, 192 Ky. 304, reference-to which is made for its terms. Another sister, Miss B. Tevis Shelby, was a joint occupant under the same settlement deed to the time of her death in 1917, leaving appellant and her sister, Miss Florence Shelby, the only' ones entitled to the occupancy created by that deed. During the year 1918 there grew up an irreconcilable breach between the two, the causes of which and the blame therefor need not be stated herein, but it culminated in plaintiff’s filing the case referred to for a division of the premises, including the jointly occupied mansion house,, and that relief was granted by the opinion in that case and the division was made in the latter part of 1921 or the beginning of 1922 after the filing of the mandate in the trial court that issued from this one in that case. Before the breach and before the death of Miss Tevis ■Shelby she seemed to be the business manager for the sisters, and after that Miss Florence Shelby appears to have taken a more active part in such management of the jointly occupied property than did her sister, the plaintiff and appellant, though the latter participated to some extent therein. After the breach appellant would periodically go away from the premises but would return thereto at -different times throughout each year, when she would occupy a room, specially prepared for her in the mansion house, and upon which occasions she would exercise the same rights and avail herself of the same privileges that she had theretofore done. For a number ■of years the defendant and appellee, Isaac Shelby, a brother of the two sisters, had rented a portion and perhaps sometimes all of the premises with the exception of ■certain reservations, including the mansion house, and he boarded therein with his two sisters, paying them $400.00 annually therefor. While the relations were amicable and about the first of the year 1918, with the .joint consent and participation of the two, they rented a portion of the premises to the appellee and defendant below, Steele -Shelby, for an -agreed money -consideration, and another and larger portion -of the premises to the brother, Isaac Shelby, upon a fixed money consideration, the rent from each tenant being payable one-half on July. 1 and the other on or by January 1, therafter, and for *554 that year each tenant paid his rent strictly according to the contract by issuing a check payable to “The Misses Shelby,” which seems to have been the adopted name in which the operation of the premises was conducted. Those checks' were delivered to Florence Shelby, who endorsed them with the business name and deposited them in bank. Each tenant without entering into a new contract, as we construe the evidence, continued to occupy their respective rented portions for the year 1919, and, of course, upon the same terms, but they cultivated some of the premises that they rented differently from what they did the prior year of 1918. However, there was no change in the rental and we do not construe the evidence as showing that a new contract was made for the occupancy during the year 1919. In other words, it is our interpretation of the evidence that the occupancy of the respective tenants for that year was a continuation of the occupancy in 1918 under the provisions of section 2295 of our present statutes. If, however, that was untrue, then plaintiff would not be entitled to the relief sought for that year (1919) for the reasons hereinafter stated.

Steele Shelby did not occupy any portion of the premises for 1920, but under a contract with Florence Shelby the defendant, Isaac Shelby, rented the entire premises for that year with an agreement to pay the combined rent theretofore paid by the two tenants in 1918 and 1919, the payments to be made at the same biennial periods, and which payments he made at the stipulated times and in the same manner as hereinbefore indicated.

On March 19, 1920, plaintiff filed an ordinary action in the • Boyle circuit court against defendant, Steele Shelby, seeking to recover her alleged one-half of the rents and profits for the portion of land he rented in the year 1919 and which she fixed much higher than the contractual rent he agreed to and did pay for that year. A demurrer was sustained to that petition and is was amended by seeking to recover her one-half of the rental value of the same premises for the same year, all of'which was upon the ground that she was a joint tenant of the Arcadia plantation and that the rental of a portion thereof by defendant was made and done by her other joint tenant without her knowledge or consent and that she was not bound thereby, nor was the payment of the rent to her sister a discharge of defendant’s obligation to her *555 for her one-half. Defendant’s answer denied the material averments of plaintiff’s pleading, and he made it a cross-petition against Miss Florence Shelby, who answered by also making the same denials and averring her rights under the circumstances to rent the premises and to collect therefor, all of which she averred she had done and that her sister had obtained her net portion. Both she and defendant also stated that plaintiff, though not occupying the premises for the year 1919 all of the time, was in and out and remained there for considerable periods with full knowledge of all the facts, and that she entered no objection to the renting arrangements and that she thereby acquiesced in and ratified the rental contract. The issues were made by a reply denying such averments.

On the same date plaintiff filed a like suit in the same court against defendant, Isaac Shelby, and in which she sought the same relief for the same year, and the practice of that case was the same as the one against Steele Shelby, the issues being made and formed by like pleadings and motions.

On December 20, 1920, plaintiff filed a third suit against defendant, Isaac Shelby, to obtain the same relief against him for his use and occupancy of the premises for that year, and that case was practiced in the same manner as the other two, with the issues formed the same as in them and the causes were consolidated and upon defendants’ motion the consolidated case was transferred to equity and the issues referred to a commissioner with power to take proof ’and report to the court. He filed his report after taking considerable testimony in which he found that the two defendants occupied the premises for the year 1919 under the same amicable contract that they had occupied them in the year 1918, and that the occupancy for the year 1919 was by an automatic extension of the contract for the occupancy during the year 1918, and that defendants, having discharged their obligations for the year in question according to the terms of their automatically extended contract, were exonerated from any obligation to plaintiff and he recommended the dismissal of the petitions seeking recoveries for that year.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 942, 212 Ky. 552, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelby-v-shelby-kyctapphigh-1926.