Brewer v. War Fork Land Co.

189 S.W. 717, 172 Ky. 598, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 240
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 7, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 717 (Brewer v. War Fork Land Co.) 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
Brewer v. War Fork Land Co., 189 S.W. 717, 172 Ky. 598, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 240 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

The appellants brought this suit against the appellee to recover from it the possession of two adjoining tracts of land, one containing fifty acres, for which a patent was issued to Hughes & Engle in 1861, the other containing one hundred and fifty acres, for which a patent was issued to Hughes & Engle in 1860.

For answer to this suit the appellee set up that it was the owner of all of the land embraced in these two patents except a small strip to which it asserted no title.

On a trial before a jury in the lower court there was a verdict and judgment; for the appellee, and the plaintiffs below prosecute this appeal.

There is very little, if any, material dispute as to the facts. It appears from the record that all the land covered by these two patents was until lately wild, unimproved and unenclosed. There was never any dwelling house or other improvement on any part of it, nor was any part of it ever enclosed by fencing or put in cultivation. The present plaintiffs derive title to the land as heirs and vendees of the patentees, and rely exclusively upon their paper title- and the constructive possession of the land embraced in these two patents that this paper title gave them.

The appellee asserts title to and ownership of the land under the doctrine of adverse possession, claiming that it and its vendors have been in the actual possession of this two hundred acres of Hughes & Engle land, claiming the same against the world, to a well-marked boundary, for more than fifteen years before the institution of this action, although it does not pretend to. [600]*600have ever been in the actual possession of any part of these two patented tracts. It places its claim of adverse possession on the following facts: M. M. Ambrose in 1848 obtained a patent to four hundred acres of land adjoining but not interfering with the land for which Hughes & Engle obtained the patents in I860'and 1861. Ambrose conveyed this land to one Rice and Rice conveyed it to one Isaacs in 1878. In 1891 Isaacs made a deed to one John Wilson by which he conveyed to Wilson a boundary of land containing by survey 636 acres, and this deed was recorded in the proper office in March, 1892. At the time Isaacs made this deed to Wilson he did not, so far as this record shows, own or have title to any land except the four hundred acres Ambrose patent. But, notwithstanding this, he conveyed to Wilson 636 acres, and this deed to Wilson included not only the whole of the Ambrose four hundred-acre patent, but all of the land covered by the two Hughes & Engle patents, except a few acres on the exterior lines of these patents.

It also appears that when Isaacs conveyed to Wilson the 636 acre boundary, the land so conveyed was accurately surveyed, and during this survey a good many trees on the lines of the survey were marked by the letters “J. W.,” indicating the name of John Wilson the vendee. The deed from Isaacs to Wilson also contains an accurate description of this 636 acres by metes and bounds and courses and distances. After Wilson obtained the deed to this land it came from him by regular mesne conveyances into the hand of the War Pork Coal Co., but at no time until within a short while and much less than fifteen years before this suit was brought did the War Pork Coal Co., or any of its vendors, ever have in actual possession any part of either of the Hughes & Engle patented lands. There was never at any time any dwelling or outbuildings on, or at any time any. cultivation of or enclosure of any part of the land covered by these two patents, which remained until shortly before this suit in the wild, unimproved condition in which it had always been.

Going back now to the Ambrose four hundred acre patent, it appears that about 1870 a house was built on this Ambrose patent some half a mile distant from the lines of the Hughes & Engle land, and at and about the site of .this house there were fencing, cultivation and improvements of various kind, although none of the im[601]*601provements or cultivation encroached upon the lines of the Hughes & Engle patents. It further appears that continuously from 1870 tenants of the various owners of the Ambrose patent, including the War Fork Coal Co., have been in the actual occupancy and possession of the house and the improvements that were put on the Ambrose patent about 1870.

It further appears without contradiction that continuously from December, 1891, when Isaacs made the deed to Wilson for the 636 acres, Wilson and all of his vendees, including the War Fork Coal Co., have been claiming all the land covered by the deed for 636 acres.

Under these facts it is the claim of the War Fork Coal Co. that as it and its vendors have been continuously, since 1891, in the actual possession of a part of the land, and have continuously claimed to be the owners of all the land embraced within the 636-acre deed, therefore it and those under whom it claims have been since 1891, and for more than fifteen years prior to the institution of this action, in the adverse possession of the whole of the 636 acres; and it was upon this theory that it succeeded in defeating the claim of the heirs of Hughes & Engle in the lower court.

It seems to ns, however, that following the rule announced by this court in many cases, neither the War Fork Coal Co. nor any of its vendors has ever been, by ■virtue of this 636-acre deed, in the actual, adverse possession of any part of either of these Hughes & Engle patents, or had such adverse possession within the meaning of the law as would defeat the title -of the Hughes & Engle heirs. When Hughes & Engle obtained these patents in 1860 and 1861 they were at once by operation of law put in the constructive possession of a-11 the land covered by both of these patents. So that by virtue of the patents they not only had the title to but were in the constructive possession of the land, and of this title and constructive possession they could not be divested by any adverse holding unless the adverse claimant actually entered upon and took actual possession of some part of the land covered by these two patents, and then by virtue of this actual entry and possession claimed to own to a well-marked boundary the land covered by these patents. For example, if in 1891, after Wilson had secured his deed from Isaacs, he had actually entered upon the land covered by these Hughes & Engle patents, and had made some improvements on [602]*602them by buildings, enclosure , or cultivation, and he and his vendees or their tenants had remained in continuous and actual possession of the'Hughes & Engle land, then this actual entry and holding continuously for fifteen years, with assertion of title to a well-marked boundary that included, as this 636-acre deed did, these lands, would have invested them with a good possessory title to these patents. But this title by adverse possession they could not secure in any other way.

The fact that the War Pork Coal Co. and its vendors had been for more than fifteen years continuously in the actual adverse possession • of the land covered by the Ambrose patent, did not have the effect of putting any of them in such possession of the land covered by the Hughes & Engle patents as would defeat the title of those claiming under Hughes & Engle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 S.W. 717, 172 Ky. 598, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-war-fork-land-co-kyctapp-1916.