Baker v. Grundy's heirs

62 Ky. 281, 1 Duv. 281, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 61
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 5, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Ky. 281 (Baker v. Grundy'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
Baker v. Grundy's heirs, 62 Ky. 281, 1 Duv. 281, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 61 (Ky. Ct. App. 1864).

Opinion

JUDGE ROBERTSON

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a bill of review to which the appellant pleads time as a bar. Without any saving disability, a bill of review, like a writ of error, is limited to three years. Cumulative disabilities are unavailing. In personal actions, whenever the bar begins, it runs on without regard to intervening disabilities; but in suits for land, if a litigant claimant die before his remedy shall have been barred by time, and his successor by descent labor under disability at the time of his death, the limitation is suspended during the period of the disability. But if, in such case, the descent be cast on several persons as parceners, claiming jointly, the running of the statute is not suspended, unless all of them labor under disability; and if all of them labored under disability, the suspension would continue as long as the disability of any one of them should continue. (Macher vs. May, 4 Bibb, 44; McIntire’s heirs vs. Funk’s heirs, 5 Littell, 37; South’s heirs vs. Thomas’s heirs, 7 Mon., 63.)

Consequently, although Robert E. Grundy was an infant when the decree was rendered against him, yet, as he had attained majority about two years before his death, and his right descended to several heirs, some of whom labored under no disability, the disability of some of the other heirs did not suspend the running of the limitation as to any of them.

Nor is the error in failing to reserve to Robert E. Grundy time to open the decree after attaining 21 years of age now material on the question of limitation or any other question in [283]*283this case. Had there been an3’ such ^decretal reservation, it would not have allowed more than one year; and he, in fact, had two 3rears before his death, and did not avail himself of his right to reverse or open the decree.

But fraud in obtaining the decree presents the question of limitation in a different phase. In such case the limitation in equity commenced, not from the perpetration, but from the discovery of the fraud, provided that the discovery was, under all the circumstances, made within a reasonable time. The bill of review in this case charges that the decree sought to be reviewed was obtained by fraud, which was not discovered by Robert E. Grundy before his death, nor by his heirs until just before the filing of their bill to open and change the decree-If these allegations be true, the review is not barred by time, and, in the judgment of this court, they are true. There was apparent fraud, and this was not sufficiently developed until the appellant filed an answer in this case presenting exhibit (H), not disclosed or alluded to in the original suit, and alleged, as an excuse for not using it in that suit, that he showed it to Towles, who was said Roberts guardian and counsel, and who, thereupon, consented to the decree as rendered without extending or altering the pleadings, so as to have a judicial consideration of that document.

Without that paper there was no semblance of ground for the original decree ; and, therefore, the decree was fraudulently obtained, if, as alleged by the appellant, it was obtained by showing the paper to Towles, who, as both guardian and counsel, controlled the defense; unless, as it literally and abstractly may import, it was bona fide evidence of a sale of the previously unsold residue of the “ Christy survey,” and for which the original decree was thereon obtained for about 720 acres of land.

On a full and careful consideration of all the facts, we are of the opinion that there was no such sale, and that the appellant, knowing this, made, according to his own allegations, a fraudulent use on the guardian of that specious writing, and thereby surreptitiously obtained an unjust decree for land he had neither paid for nor bought. The following facts, among [284]*284other minuter and corroborative circumstances, impel us to this conclusion as a decidedly preponderating'probability on a question peculiarly vexatious :

1. Robert E. Grundy’s father, William Grundy, owned the “Christy Survey” of 1400 acres, in Hopkins county. The appellant squatted on a portion of the land as early as 1815, and has continued to reside within the patent boundary ever since. He, some time after his first settlement, bought from Thompson 100 acres, for which Thompson held Wm. Grundy’s bond for a title, which was assigned to the appellant in March, 1830. The title was to be made to Thompson on the payment of the consideration of $ 100, payable in 1830 and 1831. Before the year 1830, Wm. Grundy had sold to Thomas Price 200 acres in one corner of the “ Christy Survey,” and to which he conveyed to Price the legal title in 1837. Before the year 1828, W. S. Briggs had sold to the appellant 200 acres within the same survey, and, there being some dispute about the title, for which appellant held Briggs’s bond, Briggs assigned to W. Grundy the bond he held on the appellant, on which Grundy obtained a judgment, which appellant enjoined for alleged want of title in Briggs, who, as well as Grundy, was made a party to the injunction suit. This controversy was settled, as between appellant and Grundy, by a compromise on the 26th of February, 1830, whereby it was agreed that the appellant should assign to Grundy, Briggs’s bond for a title to the 200 acres, that Grundy’s judgment against appellant was satisfied, and that Grundy should convey to appellant a designated portion of Christy’s Survey to adjoin the said 200 acres, and also the 100 acres sold to Thompson; and the surveyor testified that the boundaries of the portion so sold embrace 290-J- acres of land. The boundaries, as described in the memorial of the compromise, are so general as to render the identity and quantity of the land included in them, prima facie, vague and doubtful; but yet an actual survey makes them so definite and certain as to leave no room for doubt that the reported plat embraces the land, and all the land, contemplated in the compromise. Nevertheless, in his original bill against the infant heir of William Grundy, after the death of the latter, who [285]*285lived until the spring of the year 1838, the appellant claimed a conveyance of the legal title to the whole of the “ Christy Survey,” excepting only the Briggs 200 acres, and urged that claim on the compromise alone. The decree for the whole on that single basis was palpably erroneous and greatly excessive on the face of the record, and never could have been rendered but on the guardian’s consent fraudulently procured. This was so apparent, that, in one of the appellant’s answers in this case, he sets up, for the first time, the writing marked (H), in in. the following words:

“ I have this day received of Miles Baker $800, which amount 'is in full satisfaction for the balance of the Christy Survey (more or less); and 1 hand the patent of said land to James Price to hold until the deed is made to the said Baker. In the presence of the undersigned witnesses, as witness my hand this 27th day of July, 1830.
“ Witness— ^ William Grundy.
“ James Farmer, Ms “Joshua Short.” mark

This receipt is an unusual memorial of a sale of land and a convenant to convey. It is also ambiguous and indefinite. What “balance” is meant? The writing itself furnishes no clue. When was the balance sold, and for v.hat price? The receipt “in full” does not show.

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Related

M'Intire's Heirs v. Funk's Heirs
15 Ky. 33 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1824)
Machir v. May
7 Ky. 43 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1815)

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Bluebook (online)
62 Ky. 281, 1 Duv. 281, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-grundys-heirs-kyctapp-1864.