McCallister v. Folden's Assignee

Opinion op the court by

JUDGE DuRELLE

Appirming.

In 1890 William Shelby executed a deed for 153 acres of land to John W. Folden and his wife, Georgiana, the daughter of the grantor, “during their natural lives 'only, and at their death the same is to revert to the legal heirs of the party of the first part.” In 1888, W. W. tShelby ■and wife conveyed- 216 acres o,f land to John W. Folden and his wife, Georgiana, “to have and to hold the aforesaid-land 'to the parties 'oif the second part, and, upon their death without having been disposed of by deed or will, the same is to descend to the heirs of said Georgiana Fol-den.” William Shelby in 1879 had made a will in which he devised the 153-aere tract to Georgiana Folden in fee *735simple, but that will need not be here considered. Georgiana Folden died without leaving issue in 1896, and William Shelby, her father, died in 1899, leaving surviving him his son, W. W. Shelby, and a grandchild, John H. McCallister, the son of a dead daughter. After the execution of the deeds' to himself and wife, Folden made an assignment of all his property, including whatever was conveyed to liitm by the deeds, for the benefit of his creditors. In a suit brought to settle the assigned estate a sale was had, under order of court, of Folded» estate in the two tracts, as a life estate — his wife being dead at the time — and appellant McCallister became the purchaser of the 153-acre tract; the other tract being sold to some one not a party to the record. The sales were .confirmed without objection. After the death of William Shelby, McCallister having conveyed an interest to Mary T. Shelby, W. W. Shelby and Mary T. Shelby set up a claim to an undivided half interest in the 153-acre tract. McCallister and Shelby sought to recover one-half of the 216-acre tract, and McCallister sought to have the money refunded paid by him for the life estate in the 153-acre tract. Their petitions were dismissed by the trial court upon the hearing.

Nothing is- involved except the construction of the two deeds. Appellants’ claim is that, by the deeds in question, Mrs. Folden and her husband would, at common law, have been tenants by entireties, with right of survivorship upon the death of either, but by the ox>eration of section 2143, Kentucky Statutes, they became tenants in common, without any right of survivorship, and that upon the deat*h of Mm. Folden an undivided one-half interest in the land conveyed in the deed of William Shelby reverted *736to him, in accordance with the terms of the deed, and a one-half interest in the land conveyed from W. W. Shelby descended to William Shelby, the father of Mrs. Folden, and that upon the death of William Shelby this undivided one-half interest in both tracts descended to appellants, W. W. 'Shelby and John H.' McCallister; appellant Mary Shelby claiming her interest by virtue of a purchase from McCallister.

The common-law right of survivorship in joint tenancy was abolished by the act of 1796 (now section 2348, Kentucky Statutes), but tenancy by entireties of husband and wife remained as at common law until the enactment in 1852 of what is now section 2143, Kentucky Statutes. That section is as follows: “If real estate be conveyed or devised to husband and wife, unless a right of survivorship is expressly provided for, there shall be no mutual right to the entirety by survivorship between them, but they shall take as tenants in common, and the respective moieties be subject to the respective rights of the ' husband or wife as herein fixed, with all other , incidents to such tenancy.” Appellants contend that, as a tenancy by entireties might exist in an estate in fee, in tail for life, or for years (Hardenburg v. Hardenburg, 18 Am. Dec. 382; Hiles v. Fisher (N. Y. App.) 39 N. E. 337, (30 L. R. A. 305), the statute must be applied— and was so intended — to all holdings which at common law would have been tenancies by entireties, and. that there is no right of survivorship in any such case; the tenants holding as if unmarried, as tenants in common. Elliott v. Nickols, 4 Bush, 502. On behalf of appellee it is contended that the section quoted does not apply to a conveyance to husband and wife jointly of a life estate only; and, further, that if it could be applied to a life es-*737late it was manifestly not intended by the grantor in either deed that upon the death of one of the life tenants the survivor should surrender one-half the land, and that the intention in this behalf is so manifest as to amount to an express provision for a right of survivorship. Under a conveyance to husband and wife jointly, the grantees do not hold by moieties, as in the case of joint tenants, each of whom is- seized of an undivided moiety of the whole, but each of the grantees is seised of the entire estate, because both grantees are une. And for this, reason it was held in numerous cases that the act abolishing the right of survivorship in joint tenancy did not apply to this estate1. “If an estate in fee be given to a man and his wife, they are neither properly joint tenants nor tenants in common; for, husband and wife being considered one person in law, they can not take the. estate by moieties, but both am seised of the entirety, per lout et non-per my, the consequence of which is that, neither the hus>band nor the wife can dispose of any part without the assent of the other, but the whole must remain to the survivor.” 2 Bl. Comm., 182. And so, in Elliott v. Nickols, supra, it was said: “. . . All the books agree, una voce, that husband and wife not only can not compel eaoh other to make partition, but, even if they concur in the wish, they have not the power to sever the tenancy. It is a sole, and not a joint tenancy. They have no moieties, Each holds the entirety. They are one in law, and their estate one and indivisible. If the husband alien, if he suffer a recovery, if hte be attainted, none of these will affect the right of the wife, if she survive him. Nor is this by the jus accrescendi. There is no such thing between them. That takes place where by the death of one joint tenant the survivor receives an accession, — something which be had *738not before, — the right of the deceased. But, as between husband and wife, the survivor takes nothing from the decedent, acquires no new-title nor interest nor estate thereby, but takes by the original conveyance the whole, because invested thereby with the entire estate.” J What was given to Folden and wife by the deeds in question was an estate for the life of the survivor or longer liver of the two. Both deeds were from the blood kindred of the wife. Promt her the good consideration moved to support the gifts. If we look to the intent of the grantors, by ordinary rules of construction it is obvious that the grantors (did not intend, in case the husband died first, that the wife should be compelled to surrender one-half' of the gifts. Whatever rule would be adopted in one event must be applicable also to the other. We do not mean to say that under no circumstances could this statute be applied to >a gift jointly to husband and wife for the life of the sur•vivor, but that the presumption in such a case as this— that it was not intended to apply — is so strong as to bring the case within the exception of the statute, and to amount to am express provision for a right of survivorship, unless that presumption be in some way rebutted by the terms of the deed. This has been expressly held, in an opinion by Judge Burmam, in the case of City of Louisville v. Coleburne, 108 Ky., 420; 22 R., 64 (56 S. W., 681). For the reasons given, the judgment is affirmed.