Adams v. Buford

36 Ky. 406, 6 Dana 406, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 2, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 Ky. 406 (Adams v. Buford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Buford, 36 Ky. 406, 6 Dana 406, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 76 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This was an action of ejectment brought by Buford against Adams, to recover eighteen acres of land which were claimed by both parties, under Mrs. Mary Craig. It appears that, in July, 1820, Mary Craig, then the wife of William M. Craig, being seized in fee simple of the land in controversy, a deed was made purporting to convey the land in fee simple from Craig and wife to Richard Shipp; but the certificate of the acknowledgment of Mrs. Craig not being such as was requisite for passing her right of inheritance, the deed was inoperative after the termination of the coverture, which happened by the death of Craig, in 1832. Under this deed, Shipp entered, claiming the land as his own in fee simple, and was in possession until 1824, when he conveyed it in fee to Thomas Steele, who entered and was possessed in like manner until April, 1832, when he conveyed it to Adams, in fee simple.

Adams having entered, and being in possession, claiming the land as his own against all the world, leased it, in February, 1835, to Thomas Payne, until the 1st of March, 1836; and Payne, being in possession under his lease, Buford, who — as stated by one witness — knew of the defect in the deed from Craig and wife, and had said if he could buy her claim be could gain the land, entered forcibly, and ousted Payne of his possession, and occupied the land until he was turned out under a writ of restitution, awarded in a proceeding by writ of forcible entry, instituted by Payne, in September, 1835. In that proceeding, the jury in the country having found a verdict against Buford, in-, 1835, he traversed the finding, whereby the case was removed into the Circuit [407]*407Court of Woodford county, to be tried at its March term, 1836; when a verdict and judgment were rendered against the traverser. But, in the mean time (in February, 1836,) Buford had obtained a deed from Mrs. Craig, conveying the land to him in fee simple, for a valuable consideration. And claiming, title under this deed, he commenced this action of ejectment in May, 1836, against Adams, who had been restored to .the possession, and was the tenant in possession when the declaration was served upon him.

On the 8th day of September, 1836, Mrs. Craig redelivered and acknowledged the original deed purporting to convey the land from her'husband and herself to Shipp, as was proved by two witnesses, before the clerk of the Woodford County Court on the following day, and certified by him upon the deed.

Upon these facts, the Court, in an instruction given at the instance of the plaintiff, based the right of recovery substantially on the following facts, submitted to the jury: viz. that the title had been in Mrs. Craig at the date of the deed of 1820 to Shipp; that her husband had died before the date of her deed to the plaintiff; that the plaintiff was in possession of the land when this deed to him was executed, and that the defendant was in possession when the declaration in ejectment was served upon him.

Several instructions were moved for by the defendant, asserting that the deed to the plaintiff was champertous; and that the law was for the defendant: first— if the deed was executed when the defendant was in the adverse possession of the land; second — if it was made when the plaintiff had a possession acquired by forcible entry; third — if it was made during the pendency of the traverse of the inquisition by which the plaintiff had been convicted of the forcible entry; and, fourth — if the plaintiff had forcibly obtained the possession with the intent to obtain the deed.

. To the refusal of these instructions, and to the granting of that which had been given, the defendant excepted; and then introduced a witness who stated that, in the summer of 1835, he had gone with Shipp to see [408]*408Mrs. Craig on. the subject of the deed to him, executed in 1820; at which interview she said, “the land had had been sold to Shipp for a full consideration, that she never designed to take advantage of her deed, and then expressly recognized it as her deed, and said she would at any time go to the clerk’s office and re-acknowledge it if he required it; but the deed itself was not present when this conversation occurred.” To the time of introducing this evidence there seems to have been no objection; but, on motion of the plaintiff, it was excluded from the jury on the ground of irrelevancy or incompetency: to which the defendant excepted. And a verdict and judgment having passed for the plaintiff, and the defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, he has appealed to this Court.

In ejectment, the pit f claimed under a deed from the widow of C, who owned the fee at her marriage; the def’t under a deed of C and wife to S. which did not pass the wife s inheritance, owing to the insufficiency of the certificate of her acknowledgm’t. 'Evidence was given of declarations of the widow to S, prior to her deed to the plt’f, recognising her deed to S, & that she would, at any time, acknowledge it in the clerk’s office: held that the exclusion of this evidence was proper, because, giving it the utmost weight, it conduced to prove a re delivery of the deed to S. and if it had been actually re delivered, no proof or acknowledgm’t of it having been made in the proper office, within the time required by law, it was inoperative against the subsequent deed to the pit f, who was in possession of the land, and without no - tice.

[408]*408In revising the several • opinions of the Circuit Court presented by the exceptions, we shall first notice that which arises on the exclusion of the evidence just stated. It is contended that this evidence proved, or conduced to prove, the re-delivery of the deed of 1820, by Mrs. Craig to Shipp, the grantee, or that the declarations of the former amounted to a redelivery, under the circumstances, and therefore, that the evidence should have remained with the jury, as having an important-bearing on the question of title. . But without enquiring whether the evidence conduced to prove a i'e-delivery, or any thing tantamount to it — this argument is sufficiently answered by the consideration that, if the deed had been actually re-delivered, by manual transmission from Mrs. Craig to Shipp, at the time when the conversation took place, as such re-delivery could only have rendered the deed operative as a grant of her right from that time, and as no proof or acknowledgment of the redelivery was made before the clerk, or other proper officer within the time required by law for the proof or acknowledgment of deeds, nor indeed at all, the deed, notwithstanding the re-delivery proved on the trial by witnesses, would, under the -statutes regulating conveyances, have been wholly ineffectual against the sebsequent deed to Buford, duly recorded within the period prescribed, if this last deed [409]*409was valid in other respects, unless he had had notice of the prior re-delivery. For the first deed being void as to Mrs. Craig, but for the re-delivery derived no aid, as evidence of the transfer of her title, from- the previous acknowledgment and record of it made during the coverture, and to which the re-delivery whenever made had no relation or connection. And as there was not the slightest evidence conducing to show that Buford, who was in possession of the land at the time when this supposed re-delivery took place, had any knowledge or notice of it before his own purchase from Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Ky. 406, 6 Dana 406, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-buford-kyctapp-1838.