Banta's Heirs v. Clay

9 Ky. 409, 2 A.K. Marsh. 409, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 5, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Ky. 409 (Banta's Heirs v. Clay) 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
Banta's Heirs v. Clay, 9 Ky. 409, 2 A.K. Marsh. 409, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 104 (Ky. Ct. App. 1820).

Opinion

Judge Mills

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, who were complainants in the court below, set up an entry of 2040 acres, in the name of their ancestor, the calls of which are, “Beginning 40 poles below the mouth of Debon's run, which empties into Muddy “creek, on the west side; beginning as beforesaid, and running nearly W, 326 poles, thence at right-angles up the “said creek, so as to include the quantity and to bind with “the knobs.” This entry bears date the 31st of May 1781, and is elder than those set up in the answers of the appellees against it, except that of Gate’s settlement and preemption, so that if it is valid, their merits need not be enquired into, as they must yield, on account of their inferiority in date.—This has led the court into a laborious enquiry into the merits of the complainants’ entry, and the facts adduced in proof and disproof of its calls:—We say laborious, for we have seldom met with a record swelled to such an enormous size, by a multiplicity of depositions, and depositions of the same witnesses many times taken; and crowded with a mass of matter irrelevant, useless and frequently improper.

Could it be said that either party was clear of this impropriety, it might induce the court not only to impose censure, but also the penalty of costs upon his adversary, whatever might be his fortune, as to success on the main question; but as both are blameable, the court will leave both to [410]*410share the usual fate, which attends similar controversies between others; hoping that few will be found having money or time sufficient, and still fewer possessing dispositions sufficiently litigious, to produce many such records.

The court will now proceed to inquire into the merits of complainants’ entry. Muddy creek is a branch of the Kentucky river, discharging itself into the south side, the second creek above Boonesborough—its general course from south to north, and is from fifteen to twenty miles in length on a direct line or in the usual modes of travelling from head to mouth, and by its meanders, as reported or proved, by the surveyor, thirty three miles. Into it fall many tributary streams or branches, both from east and west, of different sizes, and on the west side near the number of eighteen or twenty are shewn. Muddy creek is shewn by the evidence of the two parties, to have been notoriously known, by this name, at and before the date of the appellants’ entry. From its head eastwardly, and bordering on the heads of Drowning creek and Station-Camp creek, the next parallel streams, is a range of hills usually called, and notoriously known at the date of the appellants’ entry, by the appellation of “the Knobs” In the vicinity of the entry or survey, as made and claimed, there are bald hills, by some called knobs, but they are capable of being reduced to cultivation by the husbandman, with very little inconvenience to his farm, and are too inconsiderable, and not ranged or placed in a manner suited to constitute the boundary of a survey or entry. Of course, the call “to bind with the knobs,” must be understood as applicable to the main range before spoken of, and not to the little bald mounds, scattered here and there, without order, and perhaps within the entry, as claimed by the appellants. Locate this entry as claimed by the appellants, and it cannot reach the range of knobs by many miles, when it is extended from its base. Place it at some branch of Muddy creek some miles higher up, and it might comply with the call, “to bind with the knobs.” This shews that this call in the entry is deceptive and calculated to mislead the enquirer, unless the call for the mouth of Debon’s run, shall be made so completely and fully notorious, as to correct its effect. Besides Debon’s run being one amongst many, and not exceeding one mile and a half in length, the necessity of its notoriety is proportionably increased, and it will not be sufficient to shew that it had notoriously acquired that name [411]*411by reputation, and that it was known as such to many, unless they also knew how to discriminate it from the other numerous tributary branches of Muddy creek on its western margin, many of which, notwithstanding the immense volume of proof in the cause appear to be nameless to this day. The notoriety of Debon’s run, as claimed by the appellants, must be next particularly attended to. It appears that about the year 1779, a party of Hollanders, usually styled Low-Dutch, explored the waters of Muddy creek, marked and improved them. That one of them, by the name of Duree, had one or more sons-in-law, by the name of Debon, who did not compose part of the party. That Duree chose out a place for a mill-site, on Muddy creek, which was afterwards known to many by the name of Duree’s mill-site. That they all returned to their residence in the settled part of the United States. In the latter part of the year 1779 Duree returned to this country with a large party of Hollanders and built the station called the Whiteoak Spring, about a half or three quarters of a mile from Boonesborough, that in that party there were several by the name of Duree, and several of the name of Banta; but none by the name of Debon. That in February 1781, the party went out on Muddy creek and built many cabins, with the design of settling a station, which cabins were usually called Banta’s cabins, and were situated about a mile above the run claimed as Debon’s run, on the west side of Muddy creek, and these cabins appear from the proof to have thereafter become notorious. The Indians however, having become troublesome to the new-attempted settlement, and having killed some of them they all removed about the last of April, 1781, to Floyd’s station on Bear-Grass, in the now county of Jefferson, and shortly afterwards removed to, and settled at, the Dutch station near Danville or Harrodsburgh. To give all the testimony of the complainants its full force, with respect to Debon’s run, it seems that Duree the elder marked on the branch now claimed, the initial letters of his son-in-law’s name, Joseph Debon, on a tree on the branch, some distance from its mouth, in 1779, and designed it as the claim of his son-in-law That he communicated this fact to his company who built Banta’s cabins, in 1781, that several of the company saw the marks, and that some of them discriminated the run from others by the name of Debon. Some to whom this matter was communicated in the company, and who [412]*412understood the run to be called after Debon, swore that it was notoriously known, as they believe, not only to the company, but also to the surrounding stations; but it does not appear to be true that the whole company of improvers at Banta’s cabins knew the same by that name before the date of the entry For John and Albert Voris, and Bogart who composed a part of the party did not know the run by the name pf Debon, and are now strong negative witnesses. Had the name of the run been known to the whole party of improvers and the knowledge of it had not been diffused among other companies or stations, it would in that case be a degree of special and not general notoriety, and could not be deemed sufficient to support the entry, unless the object called for, was of such remarkable character as from its nature, to excite attention, and to afford a presumption that it could not have escaped the notice of others. This however is far from being the case with respect to Debon’s run. Its diminutive size, situated among others of the same character, could only have been discriminated from them, by the arbitrary distinction of general reputation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ky. 409, 2 A.K. Marsh. 409, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bantas-heirs-v-clay-kyctapp-1820.