Ball v. Wasioto & Black Mountain Railroad

162 S.W. 810, 157 Ky. 166, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 247
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 28, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 810 (Ball v. Wasioto & Black Mountain Railroad) 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
Ball v. Wasioto & Black Mountain Railroad, 162 S.W. 810, 157 Ky. 166, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 247 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The appellants, ¥m, Ball and others, suing by their father, James Ball as next friend, by this action brought [167]*167in the court below, sought to recover of appellees, by way of damages, $1,000.00, as the value of a strip of land one hundred feet in width and containing six acres, alleged to have been wrongfully appropriated and used by the appellee, Wasioto & Black Mountain Eailroad Company for the construction and maintenance of its railroad bed and track; and the additional sum of $1,000.00 damages for injuries to their adjoining lands and certain buildings thereon, by the dumping of dirt and stone thereon and blasting, alleged to have been negligently done by appellees in constructing the railroad on the strip of land in question. By an amended petition appellants dismissed their action as to all the damages sued for, except the $1,000.00, claimed for the alleged loss to them of the strip of land occupied by appellees ’ railroad bed and track.

Appellants’ claim to the strip of land rests upon a deed made them by their father, James Ball, June 13, 1900, whereby they were conveyed a considerable tract of land, of which the strip in controversy is a part; but by the terms of the deed the grantor retained to himself a life estate in the lands conveyed and since the execution of the deed has retained the possession of the lands and enjoyed the use thereof in all respects as if the deed had not been made; having occupied it as a home and kept the appellants with him as members of his family. The deed was put to record on the day it was executed.

The answer of appellees denied appellants’ title to the land included in the appellee railroad company’s right of way, but admitted that on June 13, 1900, James Ball, the father and next friend of the infant appellants, together with his wife, by deed conveyed them all the land of which he was the owner, except-a small tract deeded by him to his wife at the same time, but by the deed reserved to himself a life estate in and to the land conveyed appellants, the possession of which, it is alleged, he yet retains; and likewise admitted that the right of way in controversy occupied by the railroad company’s roadbed and track, was included in the boundary of land conveyed by James Ball to the appellants, alleging, however, that the deed from James Ball to the appellants was without consideration and, therefore, voluntary and void as to the appellee, railroad company, a subsequent purchaser, for value, without actual notice thereof.

It was further alleged in the answer that the right of way in question, containing six acres, for a consideration [168]*168of $550.00 cash in hand paid by the purchaser, was by James Ball and his wife sold and conveyed the appellee, Wasioto & Black Mountain Railroad Company, March 24, 1910, by deed of general warranty duly acknowledged by' the grantors, and, on the same day, put to record in the office of the clerk of the Harlan County Court; that at that time James Ball was in possession of the land thus conveyed the railroad company and representing himself to be the sole owner thereof; and though the deed which he had previously made to his children, the appellants, was then, and had been from the date of its execution, a matter of record, the appellee railroad company, at the time of receiving the deed made it by James Ball and wife, did not have actual notice of its existence.

After the filing of such additional pleadings as were necessary to complete the issues, the case was submitted upon an agreed written statement of facts which we find in the record. The circuit court rendered the following judgment: “Came the parties by counsel and filed an agreed statement of facts and by agreement of parties to this case the jury is withdrawn and the case submitted to the court upon the pleadings and the said statement of facts for judgment; and the court having considered the record and being advised, finds and adjudges that the defendant, the Wasioto & Black Mountain Railroad Company, purchased said right of way described in the answer from James Ball and paid him the fair value of said property without actual notice of the deed from James Ball to the plaintiffs, dated June 13, 1900; and that the said defendant was a bona fide purchaser of said right of way for value, without notice and acquired the title to said right of way by its said purchase. That said deed from James Ball to plaintiffs was void as to the said defendant and that plaintiffs have no title to or right to possession of said right of way, or right to recover damages to the remainder of said tract of land. It is, therefore, adjudged that the petition be dismissed and that defendants recover of plaintiffs their costs.” Appellants’ dissatisfaction with the judgment of the circuit court, and its ruling in refusing them a new trial, led to this appeal.

It is apparent from the briefs of counsel, as well as the language of the judgment, that it rests the railroad company’s right to the ground occupied by its roadbed [169]*169and track upon section 1907,' Kentucky Statutes, which provides:

“Every gift, conveyance, assignment, transfer or charge made by a debtor, of or upon any of his estate, without valuable consideration, therefor, shall be void as to all his then existing liabilities, but shall not, on that. account alone, be void as to creditors whose debts or demands are thereafter contracted, nor as to purchasers without notice of the voluntary alienation or charge; and though it be adjudged to be void as to a prior creditor, it shall not, therefore, be deemed to be void as to such .subsequent- creditors or purchasers.

It seems to have been the opinion of the circuit court that the language of this statute implies the converse of its expressed meaning, that is, that the word “notice” in the sentence; “nor as to purchasers with notice of the voluntary alienation or charge,” means actual notice; and that a voluntary conveyance, athough recorded, will not prevail against a bona fide purchaser without actual notice from the grantor in the voluntary conveyance; and that this is true whether such conveyance was or not made with fraudulent intent. It it insisted for appellees that this construction of the statute is sustained by the following decisions of this court; Enders v. Williams, 1 Met., 346; Winter v. Mannen, 81 Ky., 123; Brown v. Connell, 85 Ky., 403; Earl v. Couch, 3 Met., 450; Ward v. Thomas, 81 Ky., 452; Sewell v. Nelson, 113 Ky., 171.

We deem it unnecessary to decide whether the statute supra is susceptible of the construction contended for by appellees and given it by the circuit court, as in our opinion the judgment was authorized upon another and wholly different ground about which there can be no doubt. Conceding that the deed .to appellants from their father, James Ball, vested in them the title in remainder to all the land therein described, including the right of way in controversy, and that the deed of general warranty that James Ball thereafter made the appellee, Wasioto & Black Mountain Railroad Company conveys the latter a fee simple to the land included in the right of way, as it is manifest that the interest in the land, exclusive of the right of way, conveyed appellants by James Ball, exceeds, in value, the right of way and what the appellee railroad ■company paid therefor, these facts, under the provisions of section 2351 and 2352, Kentucky Statutes,, estop appel[170]

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 810, 157 Ky. 166, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-wasioto-black-mountain-railroad-kyctapp-1914.