Allin's Heirs v. Hall's Heirs

8 Ky. 525, 1 A.K. Marsh. 525, 1819 Ky. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 28, 1819
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Ky. 525 (Allin's Heirs v. Hall's Heirs) 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
Allin's Heirs v. Hall's Heirs, 8 Ky. 525, 1 A.K. Marsh. 525, 1819 Ky. LEXIS 64 (Ky. Ct. App. 1819).

Opinion

Judge Rowan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Uriel Mallory, on the 12th day of May, 1780, made the following entry :

“Uriel Mallory enters 2000 acres [of land] upon treasury warrant, on the south side of Elkhorn, below the “main fork, between the lines of general Lewis and gener“al Stephens, and to run along Stephens’ line towards the “Kentucky fqr quantity;” for which a patent issued, bearing date the 1st day of May, 1792. On the 311 day of May, 1797, Mallory conveyed the said tract to Lewis Craig, and Lewis Craig conveyed the said tract, at different times and in different parcels, to the appellees respectively, who respectively took possession of, and settled upon, their several portions. On the 1st day of April, 1785, two patents were obtained by William M’Cracken, cnc for a settlement of 400 acres, the other 1⅜ a pre-emption of 1000 acres, covering the greater part of the land embraced in Mallory’s aforesaid patent. Richardson Allin and Permelia his wife, (she being the daughter and heiress o? the said William M’Cracken, who had departed this life,} instituted actions of ejectment in the Franklin circuit court, and obtained judgments therein against the appellees. Lewis Craig exhibited his bill on'the chancery side of that court, alledging Mallory’s aforesaid entry and patent, and his purchase from the said Mallory, his sale to the appel-lees, and the judgments of eviction in the ejectments aforesaid against the appellees. He insisted that Mallory’s entry was a good and valid one, and his patent thereon legally obtained, and that the claim of Allin and wife was vague and void. He prayed and obtained from the court an injunction to the judgments in the ejectments aforesaid. Al-lin and wife answered the bill of Craig, relied upon the validity of their claim, as derived from their ancestor, M’Cracken, urged in addition to the validity of their entries, the seniority of their patents. Craig’s bill, upon a final hearing, was dismissed with costs. The appel-lees afterwards filed their bill on the chancery side of the same court, against John Allin, to whom Richardson Allin and wife had conveyed pending the suit aforesaid; they set out Mallory’s aforesaid entry, patent, sale and conveyance [526]*526tp. Craig, and the cinveyanccs to them by Craig respective*-lr; insisted upon tije specialty, validity andíegality of their. claim, and urged that the claim of Allin is vague and void; they recited th® ejeot&ents aforesaid, and the obtention of judgments therein by Richardson Ailin' and wife, against them, and prayed and obtained an injunction of the said judgments. John Allin answered their bill — denied the validity of Mallory’s entry, insisted upon his senior patent, and urged, in bar of their right to sue, the suit aforesaid of Craig vs. Allin and wife, and the decrefTherein-r-that suit» be insisted, was instituted at their instance, with their assent and approbation, involved the same nm|ter, was conducted at their expense, managed according to their will, sustained by their personal efforts, and intended for their benefit; He urged, that although Craig was the nominal, they were the real complainants therein ; that some of them were the securities of Craig in the injunction bond, and that they all retained the possession of their lands, by rear son of the said suit, during the pendenby thereof. As further evincive tSet the appellees were virtually parties to the suit, be alledged that they, or most of them, had, previous to the institution of that suit by Craig, respectively released errors in the ejectment suits, as a prerequisite to the ob-tention of the injunction prayed for therein. John 'Allin, after he had answered, departed this life, and file suit was revived in the names of his heirs, the appellant?, and upon the trial and final hearing thereof, a decree was pronounced in favor of the appellees, from which an appeal was prayed and granted.

Parties and -p-ivies^to a (leet*e or Uy^and cannot red scui.s »ba same mat-4erm another

The question first presented for the consideration of this court, is the competency of the matter alledged in the aiiT swer, to bar the suit of the appellees.

There is no doijbt but that the parties to a suit, eithe.r at law or in chancery, are bound by the judgment Or decree pronounced therein, and are bound thereby, (while it reína*ns únreversed,) from re-discUssi'ng in another suit, the matters thereof; and that their privies are alike bound antj barred. This principle is so intrinsically just and fp obviously necessary, that it has obtained the place and character? 0j a ru¡e ¿j ¡aw^ V/ith all the commentators upon, and compilers of, our laws. The decree in the case of Craig vs. Alli'n and wife, purports to embrace the Same matter, embraced by the bill of the appellees, to have beep upon the merits, and as it was final and remains unreversej). [527]*527they, if they can be considered as parties thereto, must, according to the rule aforesaid, be barred or bound thereby,

.To sscer- or ihe matter involved, re-to the record, /¾⅜⅛, ul those of contract, <?;: of

To ascertain the extent of the effect of a judgment or decree, in relation either to the matters thereof, or parties thereto, the record of the suit, in which it may have been rendered or pronounced, should be explored. It affords the information most, if not solely, to be relied upon, in the trogress of silch an enquiry. The law imputes to the record absolute verity, and will not permit the matter which it imports, to be gainsayed or traversed. A record is defined to be the history of a suit, from its commencement to its conclusion, inclusive; and in every stage of its progress, the forms arjd devices of the law, are admirably adapted to the superinduction of that verity, which it ascribes to the record thereof, in relation either to the parties thereto or the matter therein. To each party there is afforded the most ample and appropriate means, of extracting from the suit all the doubt and uncertainty which may exist (herein, in relation to the personal competency of his adversary, orto the matters alledged by him.

And hence results (as we believe) the rule, that none are to be considered as parties to a suit and bound in that character, by a judgment or decree therein, but those who are named as such in the record thereof. The appellees are not named in the record of the suit of Craig against Alien ápd wife as parties thereto, and of course, according to the rule of law last mentioned, cannot, in that character, be bound or barred by the decree pronounced therein. Not being barred as parties to that suit, it remains to be enquir-ed, whether they are barred as privies1? The most general division of privies is, into those of contract, of estate, and of blood. Privity of blood is not alledged in this case, That of estate cannot be relied upon, because Craig, at the time of the institution of the suit aforesaid, bad no estate, interest, title or claim in, or to/the land in controversy, either in law/jr equity. That of contract did not exisi; for anterior to that time they had consummated their purchases, and bad in themselves the legal, as well as equitable title to the land. As privies, therefore, w'e cannot think they are bound or barred by the decree.

But it is alledged that they had an interest, and took an agency in that suit, which ought to subject them to the decree therein, as virtual, as much as if they had been express

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ky. 525, 1 A.K. Marsh. 525, 1819 Ky. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allins-heirs-v-halls-heirs-kyctapp-1819.