Bishop v. Roberts

200 S.W. 363, 179 Ky. 169, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 8, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 363 (Bishop v. Roberts) 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
Bishop v. Roberts, 200 S.W. 363, 179 Ky. 169, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 189 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Miller —

Reversing.

By their petition in equity filed in the Clay circuit court on Sept. 20, 1911, the appellees America Roberts .and John E. Roberts, her husband, instituted this action .against Alex Bishop and Perry Combs to quiet America Roberts’ title to a tract of land known as lot No. 12 in the division of the lands of her father, Perry B. Burns, deceased, and described in the petition by metes and bounds. The tract contains about 600 acres; and, the petition as amended alleged that America inherited it from her father, and that it had been conveyed to her by Dick[170]*170inson, a special commissioner appointed for that purpose by the Olay county court on April 6,1885; that the plaintiff, was in the actual possession of said tract and had been in possesion thereof to a well marked and defined ■ boundary under said deed since 1885; and, that for many . years previous to the death of Perry B. Burns, he and those under whom he claimed had held possession of all of said tract of land,, owning and claiming the same to the boundary set out in the petition.

The petition further alleged' that the defendant Bishop was asserting a claim to a part of the land therein described; and that Bishop and Combs had cut timber, therefrom of the value of $25.00; and by way of relief it asked that America Roberts’ title to the land be quieted and that she recover $25.00 damages from the defendants.

The first paragraph of the answer is a traverse of the material allegations of the petition. By a second paragraph the defendant Bishop alleged he was the actual owner and in the possession of a 100-acre survey lying on the waters of Newfound creek, which he described in a general way; that he and those under whom he claimed had been in the quiet and peaceable possession of said tract of land for more than fifty years, claiming and using it to a well defined and plainly marked boundary; that those under whom he claimed were in the actual adverse possession of all the land on the left hand fork of Newfound creek at the time the deed was made to America. Roberts in 1885, and that said deed, to the extent it attempted to convey the land so held by defendant and his grantors, was champertous and void and conveyed no title to America because said land was then held adversely to her ancestor, Perry Burns, who never owned, or claimed any land on Newfound creek; and, defendant interposed the statutes of champerty and limitations in bar of the plaintiff’s right to recover.

Bishop made his answer a counter-claim against the plaintiffs and asked that his title to the hundred-acre tract be quieted. The reply traversed the affirmative allegations of the answer and counter-claim. Passing the objection that the petition states a case in ejectment, and not a ease to quiet title, we will consider the case upon the merits.

In taking proof it was developed that Perry B. Bums had acquired title to a 25-acre tract under a patent is[171]*171sued to him in 1863; that Elisha Bishop, the father of the defendant, Alex Bishop, obtained title to the 100 acres now occupied by Alex, through a patent issued to him in 1865; that the entire 25-acre tract patented to Perry B. Burns in 1863 lay within the boundary described in the petition; that a portion of the 100-acre tract patented to Elisha Bishop in 1865, lay within the boundary described in the petition; and, according to the contention of Mrs. Roberts, Elisha Bishop’s 100-acre patent overlapped the senior Perry Bums ’ 25-acre patent to the extent of nine or ten acres.

The chancellor’s judgment declared that America Roberts Was the owner of the 25-acre tract patented to her father, Perry Burns, in 1863, describing it by metes -and bounds so as to overlap Bishop’s 100-acre tract, and that she was entitled to the immediate possession thereof. From that judgment Bishop prosecutes this appeal.

In a division of Perry B. Burns’ estate all of his lands lying upon Meadow Branch were allotted to the plaintiff, America Roberts, by commissioners appointed by the county court; and Dickinson, the special commissioner, made her deed therefor in 1885. About three years later, however, John E. Roberts, her husband, approached Morgan and Combs, the two surviving commissioners, and, claiming that a mistake had been made in their report as to the description of the land' on Meadow Branch, he asked them to make a supplemental report correcting the description. They did so; and by a corrected deed made by Dickinson as commissioner in. 1888, the alleged errors of description in the first commissioner’s deed were corrected. The petition sets out the description contained in the corrected deed.

It further appears from the proof that by patent No. 43,423 issued to Perry B. Burns in 1870 he obtained title to 200 acres of land adjoining the Elisha Bishop 100-acre patent; but as this patent of 1870 does not interfere with the Elisha Bishop patent of 1865, and is junior to it, it need not be further considered.

Waiving the several minor points raised'by the appellant, we will address ourselves to the principal objection, that the judgment of the chancellor is not sustained by the proof. We think this objection is well grounded.

The land in controversy lies near the dividing line between Owsley and Clay counties. The most prominent natural object in this neighborhood is a ridge running [172]*172in a westwardly direction and dividing' the lands lying on the headwaters of Meadow Branch on the south side, from the lands lying on the headwaters of Newfound creek upon the opposite side of the ridge; and the real question in contest between the parties to this action is whether any part of America Roberts’ land lies upon Newfound creek on the north side of the ridge. The Elisha Bishop 100-acre patent of 1865 lies upon the north side of the ridge and extends southwardly to it; its southern boundary line calling for the ridge. The judgment of the chancellor ignored the boundary set out in the petition, but declared that the northern end of the Perry-Burns 25-acre patent of 1863, amounting to nine or ten acres, extended over the ridge and upon the waters of Newfound creek, and overlapped the Bishop patent to that extent.

As we understand this case the entire controversy turns upon the location of the Perry B. Burns 25-acre patent of 1863; and upon that point there is no satisfactory proof. The plaintiff, John Roberts, himself a surveyor, when testifying concerning the location of the Perry B. Burns patent No. 43,423 for 200 acres, testified as follows:

“Q. "What other patents did you find lying in the vicinity of this Perry B. Burns patent you speak of? A. I found a 25-acre patent in the name of Perry B. Burns, dated 1863. Q. How does this patent lie in regard to that part of tlie lands in controversy in this action? A. I cannot state except as I have shown it on the map before me. I hooked it on from the second corner of the Perry B. Burns patent No. 43,423, and platted same on the map from that connection. . . . Q. You speak of a 25-acre survey made in the name of Perry B. Burns. Now does this survey cover any part of, the Elisha Bishop survey, under which the defendant, Alex Bishop, claims; if so, how much does it cover? A. The way I have it on the map shows that it covers about twelve acres of it. . . . Q. What surveying did you ever do or see done on the 25 acres you mention? A.

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Related

Pond Creek Coal Company v. Hatfield
16 S.W.2d 442 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 363, 179 Ky. 169, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-roberts-kyctapp-1918.