Shepherd v. Thomas
Shepherd v. Thomas
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming in part and reversing in part.
William Bradley died intestate and a resident of Breathitt county in the year 1875 or 1876, He owned
The appellee and plaintiff below brought this- equity action in the Breathitt circuit court against appellant and defendant below, Arpie Shepherd, averring her ownership of a one-fourth undivided interest in the tract of land and that defendant owned the other threerfourths undivided interest therein, and praying for a division of the land in proportion to the interest of each joint owner. The answer denied plaintiff’s title to any portion of the land and asserted its entire ownership by the defendant. Various amendments to the pleadings of both parties were filed during the progress of the cause and after the taking of testimony and submission of the case, the court adjudged that plaintiff was the owner of a one-fourth interest in the land and, pursuant to an agreement between the parties, it was ordered sold for the purposes of division, and from that judgment defendant has appealed and in this court insists that, (a), the court erred in adjudging plaintiff any interest in the land, but (b), if mistaken in contention (a), then she was entitled to only one-eight interest in only about 200 acres of the tract.
In support of the contention that defendant is the owner of the entire tract, and that neither plaintiff nor her sister is the owner of any portion of it, it is strongly urged by defendant’s counsel that her husband, Henry Shepherd, under whose will she obtained her interest in the land, died the owner of all of it and defendant as his sole devisee succeeded to his rights under his will. That contention is based upon the two' urged grounds: (1) That Henry Shepherd acquired title to the tract by adverse possession and a deed for a portion of it, and (2) that he acquired the title to the entire tract by a sheriff’s deed who sold it in 1894 or 1895 for taxes and in 1898 executed a deed therefor to the purchaser, Henry Shepherd. Collateral questions, growing out of the ones stated, are argued in brief for appellant, none of which we deem of sufficient materiality to merit discussion except those we shall hereafter refer to.
After the death of William Bradley, his widow occupied the land for a year or more, hut she married
Henry Shepherd, by his purchase of the shares of some of the heirs of William Bradley, became a tenant in common with the other heirs and his possession of the whole tract was that of a joint tenant and was not adverse to the other heirs unless they had actual notice of its adverse nature, or it was so pronounced and notorious as to give them notice of it, neither of which we are convinced is shown by the testimony in the record. On the contrary we think it plainly manifests a recognition on his part of an outstanding interest in the other heirs, including that of plaintiff’s mother, and we think the proof, including the fact of purchase at the sheriff’s sale, and which will hereafter be considered, was wholly insufficient to establish adverse possession and contention (1) must be and it is denied.
After William Bradley’s widow moved away from the land, plaintiff’s father, Martin Miller, occupied it with his family for a while, during which time it was assessed in his name for taxes and it wais to collect that assessment that the sheriff sold the land and at which sale Henry Shepherd became the purchaser at a mere nominal consideration. He did not take possession under that deed, as is contended by appellant’s counsel, since we construe the proof as establishing that he took possession under the deed that he obtained from Dial Bradley,
But it is further insisted that it is not shown that William Bradley had title to the entire 354 acres of the land, but only to about 200 acres thereof. Fifty acres of the remaining 150 were deeded to Susannah Bradley, the widow of William Bradley, “and the heirs of-William Bradley, deceased,” a short while after the death of William Bradley by a man by the name of Davis. It is proven without contradiction that William Bradley had purchased that tract from Davis and paid for it before his death and the parties in executing the deed endeavored to carry out that contract pursuant to the terms of purchase by William Bradley, and under the circumstances, and following the rule as laid down in the case of Fletcher v. Tyler, 92 Ky. 145, and numerous other cases from this court, we are disposed to construe that deed as conveying a life interest to Susannah Bradley with remainder to the heirs of William Bradleyj which construction, so far as the purposes of this case are con
It is further insisted that George Shepherd conveyed to Henry Shepherd since the death of William Bradley about 25 acres of land within the boundary of the 354 acres, but he was paid nothing for that land until after the institution of this suit, and then only fifteen dollars, and it is conclusively shown that when he acquired his interest in that conveyed tract the title had ripened thereto in William Bradley by adverse possession before his death and that it was perhaps at that time in the adverse possession of others. The proof is uncontradicted that William Bradley occupied, and that his deeds covered, the entire 354 acres, and we are convinced that the court did not error in holding that he died the owner and in possession of the entire tract which descended to his heirs.
It is, therefore, our conclusion that the court did not err in adjudging defendant the owner of only a three-fourths undivided interest in the tract, but did err in holding that plaintiff was the owner of a one-fourth instead of a one-eighth undivided interest. Upon a return of the case the court will carry out the judgment of sale and will make such orders as may be necessary to preserve and protect the one-eighth interest of the proceeds-due Susie Emaline Eugate until she or her heirs, if she is dead and left any, may be found, or her death duly established.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part as above indicated for proceedings consistent herewith, and each party will pay one-half of the costs of this appeal.
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