Toms v. Holmes

171 S.W.2d 245, 294 Ky. 233, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 415
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 7, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 245 (Toms v. Holmes) 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
Toms v. Holmes, 171 S.W.2d 245, 294 Ky. 233, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 415 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opínion oe the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellee and plaintiff below, Ida Holmes, filed this action in the Barren circuit court against appellants and defendants below, Mack Toms and John King, styling her petition as “Petition in Equity”; but disclosing facts therein, showing her cause of action, to be an undisputed ordinary one triable by a jury. The parties practiced, and the court decided the controversy as if it were one properly brought in equity, and it will be so treated on this appeal.

Plaintiff alleged that she was the owner of “about eleven acres of land” which she bought in May, 1939, from Crit Edmunds and wife — it being taken from a larger tract owned by her vendors. The description of the portion conveyed to plaintiff is thus phrased in her deed: “About eleven acres of land off his farm and is that part of the farm running with Dixie Highway 31 W, beginning at a corner of John Morris land and running North to Mill road; thence Northeasterly to a point above new house and including the new house, and all the outbuildings located thereon; thence S. E. with line of Crit Edmunds to the Dixie Highway 31 W; thence' with Dixie Highway 31 W; thence with Dixie Highway 31 W to the beginning. A lane or a right of way to the *235 pond of said parcel of land is reserved as long as the said Crit Edmunds owns the remaining part of this farm. ’ ’

She further alleged that on October 19, 1939, her vendors (Edmunds and wife) conveyed the remainder of their farm to the appellant, M. C. Toms, and in that deed the description of such remainder, as plaintiff alleged, lapped over on the tract she had purchased from Edmunds in the preceding May to the extent of 2.9 acres, which she sought to recover from defendants Toms and .John King, to the latter of whom Toms had conveyed his land after receiving "his deed from Edmunds and wife. Plaintiff alleged in her petition that the small quantity of land — -the possession of which she had been so •deprived — was reasonably worth the sum of $400, and she prayed that if she should not be adjudged the owner of the land that she then recover judgment against defendants for its value as alleged by her.

Defendants answered denying plaintiff’s title, and asserting title in King, and made their answer a cross petition against Edmunds who responded with a pleading also controverting the material allegations of plaintiff’s petition and alleging ownership in the. small parcel •of controverted land in King which he had obtained from Toms, who in turn obtained it from Edmunds. Evidence was taken by depositions, and on final submission the •court, after passing on some exceptions filed to depositions then rendered this judgment: “The Court finds that the defendants, John King and Mack Toms, are indebted to the plaintiff, Ida Holmes, in the sum of $120.00 and judgment is now awarded to the plaintiff against John King and Mack Toms in said sum, to all of which ruling and judgment the defendants object and except and pray an appeal to the Court of Appeals which is .granted according to law.” This appeal is prosecuted .therefrom.

The case possesses peculiarities rarely met with, both in its practice and the final judgment. It is one, as we have seen, of strictly ordinary cognizance, being exclusively one in ejectment claiming title to the small controverted portion of 2.9 acres of land, but coupled with the consent of plaintiff to be satisfied with a judgment .against defendants for what she claimed was the value .of that small area. Therefore, it will be observed that *236 the action is not one to reform a deed so as to embrace the controverted amount of land, nor is it an action against the vendor to recover for shortage in the amount of land agreed to be'conveyed by him to plaintiff. Neither was it alleged that the purchase was made “by the acre” at an agreed price per acre so that the value of the shortage, if any, could be readily fixed.

The judgment is peculiar in that it obligated both Toms and his vendee, King, to pay the value of the alleged shortage, when neither of them had ever conveyed to plaintiff one inch of land — it being clear that if there was a shortage the one accountable therefor to plaintiff was her vendor, Edmunds. The judgment, therefore, in its last analysis, compelled both Toms and King to repurchase the alleged shortage at the price fixed by plaintiff’s proof, after they had previously purchased it from Edmunds, if their deed from him embraced the controverted portions.

At the threshold the question of our jurisdiction arises and which is discussed in brief of appellants, though no motion is made by appellee to dismiss the appeal. However, the failure to make such a motion would not confer jurisdiction on this court of the appeal if under the law it did not possess it, since consent cannot confer jurisdiction not possessed. The only issue made by the pleadings was the ownership of the contested amount of land, it being claimed by plaintiff in her petition, and denied by defendants in their pleading, in which they also claim that defendant, King, was its owner, he obtaining title thereto in the way and manner above indicated. The fact that plaintiff expressed her willingness to accept a money judgment for the value of the land did not change the nature of the action, or the issue in litigation, since the court in rendering its judgment- could not possibly have done so, except upon a finding that plaintiff owned the title to the land in dispute.

The text in 30 Am. Jur. 834, section 31, in treating-the title “Judgments” after stating that they should be construed “like other written instruments,” continues by saying: “In applying this rule, effect must be given to that which is unavoidably and necessarily implied in a judgment, as well as to that which is expressed in the-most appropriate language. Such construction should be *237 .-given to a judgment as will give force and effect to every word of it, if possible, and make it as a-whole consistent, effective, and reasonable. The issues involved in the action are also important factors in determining what was intended by the judgment.” Reading from the syllabi — which the opinion sustains — we held in the case of Hays v. Madison County, 274 Ky. 116, 118 S. W. (2d) 197, that “A court’s judgment must be read and interpreted in the light of what was before it.” In the case of Kitchen Lumber Company v. Moses, 242 Ky. 505, 46 S. W. (2d) 791, the syllabi — also correctly stating the holding of the court in the opinion — says: “Legal effect and not form of judgment determines question of jurisdiction. ” Likewise in the case of Oglesby v. Prudential Insurance Company of America, 259 Ky. 620, 82 S. W. (2d) 824, 826, we held: “that the pleadings in the cause may be looked to in aid of the judgment, and that the certainty of the latter may be obtained from consulting ■preceding parts of the record containing the necessary •data therefor.” A number of cases are cited in the opinions referred to sustaining the same principle and many others will be found listed in section 526, Volume 12, of West’s Kentucky Digest, on the subject of “Judgments. ’ ’

Moreover, the rule applicable to construction of judgments is substantially the same, with reference to what was determined therein, as that of the verdict of a jury. The case of Jackson v. Hill, 22 Ky. Law Rep. •563, 58 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 245, 294 Ky. 233, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toms-v-holmes-kyctapphigh-1943.