Ashbrook v. Quarles' Heirs

54 Ky. 20
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 6, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Ky. 20 (Ashbrook v. Quarles' 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
Ashbrook v. Quarles' Heirs, 54 Ky. 20 (Ky. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

Judge Simpson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The heirs at law of Francis Quarles brought an action for the recovery of a tract of land in Ballard county, which was in the possession of the defendant, Margaret Ashbrook. The plaintiffs, in the court below, claimed the land sued for, under a patent to Henry Quarles, bearing date in 1826, which was issued in consideration of part of a land office military warrant, entered in August, 1784. The husband of the defendant entered and settled upon the land in controversy in 1837, claiming under a patent dated in 1836, and continued to reside upon it during his life[23]*23time; and his -widow has resided at the same place ever since his death. To defeat the plaintiff’s action the defendant relied upon two grounds of defense.

1. The act of 1820, (3 Statute Law, 1043,) provides that all patents made upon surveys may upon entries of military warrants entered prior to the first of May, 1792, shall be void to all intents and purposes, so far as the same made be different and variant from the location.

First. That the patent under which the plaintiffs claimed had issued upon a survey made contrary to the location of the land in the entry, and was therefore void.

Second. That the statute of limitations barred the plaintiff’s action.

A verdict and judgment were rendered for the plaintiffs; the defendant has appealed to this court, and insists that the court below misinstructed the jury upon the questions involved in both the grounds of defense relied upon by her.

First. By the act of 1820, for surveying the military claims .west of the Tennessee river, it was enacted, that the surveyor of the lands set apart for the satisfaction of the legal bounties of the officers and soldiers of the Virginia line, should survey, without delay, all entries made in his office prior to the 1st day of May, 1792. The plats and certificates of , survey were to be certified to the register, together with the copy of the entry on which the survey was founded; and any patent issuing on a survey not made according to the entry, was to be void, to all intents and purposes, so far as the same might be different and variant from the location. (2 Statute Law, 1043.)

The defendant introduced evidence tending to show, that the land covered by the patent under which the plaintiffs claimed, was not embraced by the entry made in 1784. The testimony upon this point was conflicting. The court instructed the jury, that before they could regal’d the patent under which the plaintiffs claimed as void, they must be satisfied by “dear, satisfactory, and unequivocal evidence,” that the land embraced in it was different from that embraced in the entry. And in another instruction the jury were told by the court, that before they could [24]*24disregard said patent, they must be satisfied, beyond a reasonable doubt, that there was a variance between the entry and the survey and patent, with respect to the land embraced by them.

In the trial of issues in civil cases, it is, as a general rule, the duty of the jury to weigh the testimony when it is contradictory, and to find a verdict in favor of that side to which it preponderates.

But in a case like the present a different rule has been established by this court, in consequence of the dignity of the patent, and the verity which should attach to it, under the circumstances incident to its procurement. In the case of Ray vs. Woods & Daniel, 2 B. Monroe, 222, the court, in delivering its opinion, said:

“The military entries have been surveyed mostly in the absence of their owners, by disinterested surveyors chosen under state authority, and sent out with special instructions to make their surveys correspond with the entries ; and the register has been directed to issue no patent unless where such correspondence exists; and where a patent has issued under all these guards, bearing the great, seal of the commonwealth, it must be regarded as conferring record evidence of title, which will stand until its variance from the entry, as well as the extent and limit thereof, shall be clearly, satisfactorily, and conclusively shown; and the burthen of showing it lies upon the party impeaching the patent.”

“The denunciation of the statute ’is highly penal upon the military claimant, and to use the language of criminal jurisprudence, a rationed doubt as to the variance should be tantamount to a finding in favor of the military patent.”

The instructions of the court which are objected to, were warranted by the doctrine settled in the above case, and were correct.

Second. The first question that arises, upon the second ground of defense, is, whether the limitation [25]*25contained in the Revised Statutes, or that prescribed by the previous law, governs this case.

3. The statute of limitation, in force when a right accrues governs the case 4. The seven years limitation law saves the right which descend to heirs, if any one of the heirs is under disability when the right accrues — differing from the general limitation law, which requires that all be under disability to save the right of any. ( HosJcins v. Helm, 4 IAttell, 314; Mclntire’s hdrs v. Funk’s heirs, 5 lb. 37.) 5. One disability cannot be added to another to protect a right from the operation of the statute of limitations. (Floyd's heirs v. Johnson, &c. SLitt. 114.) There can be no accumulation of disabilities, by adding one to another, to preserve a right of entry. (Clay’s heirs v. Miller, 3 Monroe, 148.)

[25]*25Upon this question, there is no difficulty. This action, it is true, was commenced in 1853, after the Revised Statutes were adopted and went into force. But the cause of action had previously accrued, and it is expressly declared by the first section of the first article of the chapter on Limitations of Actions and Suits, page 458, that the provisions of that chapter shall not apply to cases in which the right of action had previously accrued, but the laws of limitation then in force shall be applicable to such cases.

As there had not been twenty years adverse possession in this case, the seven years limitation is the only one that has any application, or that the defendant can rely upon to protect her possession. She proved an adverse possession, by actual settlement and residence, for more than seven years next before the commencement of the action, and exhibited a regular derivation of title, from the commonwealth to her deceased husband, so that the bar is complete, and will effectually protect her, unless the plaintiffs can bring themselves’ within some of the savings of the statute.

This difference exists between the general limitation law, and the seven years limitation. Under the former, all the heirs must labor under disability, or the statute will run against all.

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Related

Floyd's Heirs v. Johnson
12 Ky. 109 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1822)
May's Heirs v. Bennett
14 Ky. 311 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1823)
M'Intire's Heirs v. Funk's Heirs
15 Ky. 33 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1824)

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ky. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashbrook-v-quarles-heirs-kyctapp-1854.