Blanchard v. Taylor's Heirs

46 Ky. 645, 7 B. Mon. 645, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 4, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 Ky. 645 (Blanchard v. Taylor'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
Blanchard v. Taylor's Heirs, 46 Ky. 645, 7 B. Mon. 645, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 91 (Ky. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

Judge Bkeck

delivered the opinion of the Oourt.

In 1786, a grant issued from the Commonwealth of Virginia to Anthony Thornton for thirty three thousand seven hundred and fifty acres of land, lying in the present counties of Mason, Nicholas and Bracken. In 1793, Thornton conveyed 11,775 acres of this land to Richard Taylor, attorney for Philip Buckner. The consideration of this conveyance, appears from the recitals in the deed, to have been an obligation from the patentee to the locator, which Buckner held as assignee.

In 1795, Buckner conveyed 7,180 acres, part of the 11,775, to Baldwin B. Stith. After the death of Stith, jn 1835-6, three of his heirs conveyed their interest in the 7,180 acres, to the appellant, R. T. Blanchard, whose wife was also one of the heirs, and the only one in addition to those who had made the conveyance to Blanchard.

In 1840, Blanchard exhibited his bill in the Mason Circuit Court, alledging the foregoing facts, and also alledging that under executions against the heirs of Stith, he had purchased their interest in 1839-40, in the tract of land conveyed by Buckner as aforesaid to their ancestor, and had obtained a conveyance from the Sheriff.

Relying upon these purchases from the heirs and at Sheriff’s sale, the complainant sought a conveyance of the legal title from the heirs of Richard Taylor, who had [646]*646as aforesaid obtained it by the deed from the patentee, tehim as attorney for Buckner, and which he had held in trust for Buckner and his assignees.

Decree of the Circuit Court.

The complainant further alledged, that in 1798, one Richard F. Kissam, pretending to be attorney in fact of Stith, had in that character conveyed about fourteen hundred acres of the 7,180 acre tract, to one George Williams, whose heirs, after the death of Stith, had set up claim to it, and had taken possession and sold portions thereof to sundry persons, who were then in possession residing upon the land. He alledges that the sale by Kissam was without authority, and prays to be quieted against the conveyance made by him to Williams.

By an amended bill, the wife of Blanchard, as one of the heirs of Stith, is united with him as complainant. The unknown heirs of Thornton, the heirs of Taylor, Buckner, Stith, except the complainant, and of Williams, and the tenants in possession, were made defendants.

The heirs of Williams alone resisted the relief sought, except so far as answers were filed for a part of the heirs of Thornton and Buckner, &c. as infants.

Williams’ heirs resist, upon the ground that the conveyance from Stith’s heirs to Blanchard was champertous; that he acquired nothing by his purchase at the alledged Sheriff’s sale; that Kissam was authorized to make the sale and conveyance to their ancestor. They rely also upon an adverse possession for more than twenty years, and the slaleness of complainant’s equity.

The Court below', at the May term, 1843, decreed a conveyance from Thornton, Taylor and Buckner’s heirs to the complainants to all the 7,180 acres, except as to the part claimed by the heirs of Williams, and as to them and that part of the land, reserved the case for future decision, and at a subsequent term, dismissed the bill. Blanchard has appealed to this Court.

Whether the first decree was ever carried into effect, does not appear, and it is somewhat doubtful whether the final order, dismissing the complainant’s bill, applies, or was intended to apply to the whole case, or only to that portion of it not disposed of by the first decree. The first decree granted all the relief sought by the complain[647]*647ant as to the entire 7,180 acres, except so far as it was embraced in the deeds under which the heirs of Williams set up claim. That decree was, therefore, a final disposition of the whole case, except as to the land claimed by Williams’ heirs.

“Caroline, June Court,, 1793. This deed was aehnowledged and ordered to be recorded. — Test, W. N. — Tritely ecorded, Test, J. P., D C.’.’— Held not to be sufficient evidence ol an aclinowledgment of the deed before a Comí of law of the county in which the grantor dwelt, nor is there any thing to show that such is “the usual manner ofaulhenticating such acts,’’ and there is no seal.

[647]*647Nothing remained to be done, except a conveyance to the complainant by the commissioner appointed for that purpose in the decree, upon the failure of Thornton, Taylor and Buckner’s heirs to convey as directed. That decree, so far as appears, was never set aside, and no effort has ever been made, nor is any now made, to disturb it. Being final, the Court ata subsequent term, had no power to set it aside, and the decree, dismissing the complainant’s bill, will therefore be considered a dismissal merely so far as relief was sought as to the land claimed by Williams’ heirs. Whether there is any error in the decree upon this construction of it, we will now proceed to inqure.

And first, as to the title as set up and made out by the complainant. He exhibits the patent to Thornton, and also what purports to be the copy of a deed from the patentee to Taylor, as attorney of Philip Buckner, for 11,775 acres of the land embraced in the patent, bearing date in March, 1793, and recorded in the Court of Quarter Sessions in Mason county, in December, 1794. It is objected that this copy furnishes no evidence of a conveyance from Thornton to Taylor.

1st. Because the original deed was not properly authenticated for record.

2d. Because it was not recorded within the time required bylaw.

In virtue of the 10th section of the act of 1831, the last objection would be clearly not available, provided the deed had been duly proven or acknowledged. But such appears not to have been the case. The deed was admitted to record in Mason county upon this certificate :

Caroline, June Court, 1793.
“This deed was acknowledged and ordered to be recorded, Test, William Nelson.
Truely recorded,
Test, John Pendleton, D. G.”
The right and interest of a cestui que truslin land, is subject to sale under execution since 1796, and the legal title passes by the sale to the purchaser. The land is subjectto sale and passes by it not a mere equity.

The act of 1785, provides that a deed, when the grantor is a non-resident, acknowledged before any Court of law of the county In which the party shall dwell, and when so acknowledged and certified by such Court in the manner such acts are usually authenticated by them, and offered to the proper Court, to be recorded within eighteen months after the sealing and delivering, it shall be as effectual as if it had been in the last mentioned Court. From the recital in the deed, Thornton was a resident of Caroline county, in Virginia, and this would be sufficient evidence of that fact, as has been held by this Court.

It might also be presumed that the deed was acknowledged by the grantor, although the certificate does not show' that fact. But the certificate does not purport, nor can it be presumed to be in the usual manner of authenticating such acts. No seal is attached to it, and whether William Nelson was the Clerk or the Judge of the Court, is left entirely to inference and conjecture.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ky. 645, 7 B. Mon. 645, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanchard-v-taylors-heirs-kyctapp-1847.