Asher v. Kentucky River Timber & Coal Co.

198 S.W. 205, 177 Ky. 774, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 663
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 205 (Asher v. Kentucky River Timber & Coal Co.) 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
Asher v. Kentucky River Timber & Coal Co., 198 S.W. 205, 177 Ky. 774, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 663 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Chief Justice Settle

Affirming.

It appears from the record in this ease that the Kentucky River - Timber & Coal Company, appellee in the present appeal, brought in the Leslie circuit court in 1912 an action in equity against George W. Asher and others, appellants in the present -appeal, to recover of the latter certain lands in Leslie county and quiet its title to same. On the trial of the case judgment went in favor of the appellee, declaring it the owner of the lands in controversy and quieting its title thereto. The land in controversy was claimed and recovered by appellee, plaintiff in that action, through the John H. Cheever 206,800-acre patent, No. 46701, issued in 1871. The appellants, George W. Asher, and others, defendants in that action, claimed, by reason of adverse possession, title to the land in con- ■ troversy under a certain patent junior in date to the Cheever patent. The issues determined in that ease were that the land in controversy claimed by appellee was covered by the Cheever patent, and that the adverse possession of the land claimed by appellants under the ’ junior patent gave the latter no.right to it. There seems to have been proof taken in the case by each of the parties , and from the judgment declaring appellee the owner of the land no appeal was ever prosecuted.

The present action, out of which this appeal arose,. was instituted against appellee in the Leslie circuit court by the appellants, George W. Asher and others, for the purpose of obtaining a new trial in the former action upon the grounds allowed- by section 344, Civil Code, it [776]*776being alleged in the petition that if given a new trial, they can produce evidence, discovered since the trial of the former action, which will prove that the Cheever patent under and by virtue of which appellee was adjudged the owner of the land in controversy does not cover or embrace it. Appellee filed a general demurrer to the petition, as amended, which the lower court sustained, and from the judgment manifesting that ruling this appeal is prosecuted.

Substantially, the only things set out in the petition by the appellants are the judgment rendered in the former case and the grounds for the new trial. The amended petition is confined to a mere statement of the pleadings in that case, and issues made. Nothing appears in either pleading from which any idea can be formed' of the proof introduced by the parties upon those issues, nor is the record of the former action, or any part of it other than the judgment, set forth in or made a part' of the record in this case. In the petition, the following averments bearing upon the grounds urged for the . new trial appear:

“They say that the defendant claimed title to and to be the owner of the tract of land in controversy, and which is fully set out and described in the pleadings and in the judgment hereinbefore set out, through and under the John H. Cheever 206,800-acre grant, No. 46701, surveyed May 4, 1871, Clay county. They say the defendant’s contention on trial of this- case in the said February term, 1915, was that the land in controversy was embraced in and covered by the said Cheever grant, No. 46701, that the evidence introduced by plaintiff in support of that contention was weak, indecisive, and of a doubtful nature, and not, as these plaintiffs think, sufficient to support the contention of the defendant on that point. . . . They say that they were vigilant in the preparation of their case for trial, and that the newly discovered evidence which is set out at length hereinafter and supported by affidavits, and which is relied upon by plaintiffs as ground for a new trial, was of such a nature that it could not have been discovered previously by the use of reasonable diligence.”

As no appeal was taken from the judgment rendered in the former action and the evidence .upon which it was based does not appear in the record of this appeal, we are unable to determine, if indeed it were proper for us to do so, whether it was sufficient to support the ver[777]*777diet. At any rate, whether appellants are entitled to the new trial sought in the present action must be determined from the newly discovered evidence. In its absence, however, we must presume that the evidence heard on the trial of the first case was as convincing as the circuit court 'found it. But, laying aside this f eatureof the case, we think it clear that the averments of the petition quoted above amount to nothing more than mere conclusions of the pleaders; they rest upon no alleged ultimate facts which would warrant the conclusions. A simple statement in a pleading that evidence was weak and indecisive upon a formerly litigated point only states the construction which the pleaders place on the evidence and amounts to nothing but an expression of their opinion as to its weight. What has been said is also true of the allegations as to the diligence employed by appellants in seeking to discover the new evidence relied on. In this respect, the pleading goes no further than to allege that in the former action appellants were diligent, and that the alleged newly discovered evidence could not have been discovered by the exercise of reasonable diligence, for the former trial. The diligence exercised is not disclosed and no facts are stated to show such diligence. To say that the alleged newly discovered evidence could not have been ascertained prior to the former trial by the exercise of reasonable diligence, without showing the steps taken which constitute the diligence exercised, furnishes no light to guide the court in ascertaining what diligence, if any, was used. Such a pleading is necessarily bad on demurrer. Cooper v. McKee, 121 Ky. 187; Schooler v. Yancy, 133 Ky. 695; Jones v. Louisville Tobacco Warehouse Co., 135 Ky. 824; Higgins v. Gose, 144 Ky. 123; C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Collingsworth, 152 Ky. 197; Turner v. Hamlin, 152 Ky. 469; Angel v. Byars, 153 Ky. 208; Cahill v. Mullins, 101 S. W. 336. In Cahill v. Mullins, supra, we said:

“When a party seeks a new trial on the grounds of newly discovered evidence which he could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the trial, he must state fully the facts disclosing the diligence used, and make it clear that by the exercise of reasonable diligence he could not have discovered and produced the evidence on the trial. The mere statement that he could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced the evidence is not sufficient. The facts upon which this conclusion is based must be set out, so [778]*778that the court may determine from them whether proper diligence was used. ’ ’

If, as further alleged in the petition, the appellants at the time of the trial of the former case, were misinformed as to the location of the Cheever patent, such misinformation counts for nothing in their effort to obtain a new trial, as they do not allege that this misinformation came from the appellee. The allegations as to this matter are:

. ‘ ‘ They say that they were misinformed as to the correct location of the aforesaid Cheever grant in the preparation of their defense to this action, and on the trial thereof in that it was represented to them that the said Cheever grant would cover' and embrace all the land in controversy; that at the time they had no knowledge that the said Cheever grant had ever been actually located on the ground by any surveyor’or engineer;

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 205, 177 Ky. 774, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asher-v-kentucky-river-timber-coal-co-kyctapp-1917.