Brubaker v. Poage

17 Ky. 123, 1 T.B. Mon. 123, 1824 Ky. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 15, 1824
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ky. 123 (Brubaker v. Poage) 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
Brubaker v. Poage, 17 Ky. 123, 1 T.B. Mon. 123, 1824 Ky. LEXIS 165 (Ky. Ct. App. 1824).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court, by

Judge Mills.

THÍS is a warrant of forcible detainer, brought in the nam,e of “ Robert Poage, 4rc.” against the appellants. The inquest in the country was found for Poage, and the appellants, by traverse, brought it into the circuit court, where a trial was had and a verdict found for the appellants. On motion the court granted a new trial, and at the next trial a -verdict was found and a judgment rendered against the appellants, from which they have appealed.

There was an exception to the opinion, of the court granting the now trial, and the evidence, was. spread upon the record. The new trial was granted on. the ground that the first verdict was contrary, to law. and evidence, and it is now assigned for error, that the.court ought not to have granted a new trial. We have not thought it necessary to recite the evidence then given, because most, if not ajl ofit, was given on the second al. We shall b.arely observe, in reply to this assignment, that although the evidence then given may appear somewhat contradictory at the first reading, yet when it is more nicely examined, it can all be reconciled, and it made out a ease which in law entitled the ap-pellee to a verdict, and after- decision of the inferior court, this, court ought not to disturb the proceedings.

On the last trial, various points of law were made and decided in the court below, and a new trial moved for and overruled, and, exceptions taken to all; and the same points are brought before us by the assignment of error, which now claim our attention.

On this trial it appeared that a certain James.Rice applied to the appellee for. a lease, of the premises in dispute. The appellee declined at first' giving, the lease, because there was. a tenant on the premises, which he did not wish to disturb. Rice replied, that he would-buy out the tenant; and on these conditions, the appel-lee agreed to let Rice have the farm, and be was to make additional improvements, and to stay on the land until the price paid the first tenant and these improve.; ments, were made-up in rent..

■ Written a-fwe<nT[,on'e0 andThe wid-«wofíliee.

The witnesses could not. recollect that the appellee fixed any precise time for the lease, but only observed, that he wished to keep the land for his children, and none of them were yet grown, and Rice might keep it. probably for five, six, seven, or eight years,-or more. The appellee then employed Rice to belt the trees on a portion of the adjoining land, and paid him the money for doing so. Shortly afterwards, Rice bought out the tenant then on the land, and made the stipulated belting of trees, and resided thereon until 1814, when he died.

After hrs death, his widow administered on his estate, and was on the land, and in an interview between her and the appellee, it was understood that the time Rice was to have the place had not quite elapsed, but would shortly expire, and she hesitated to surrender the possession, fearing that by doing so, she might prejudice the heirs of Rice, who set up claim thereto, under the title purchased by their ancestor. To settle, however, the extent of the appellee’s lease, they entered into the following writing:

“ Memorandum of an agreement verbally entered into on thq 20111 May, 1815, between George Poage, sen. a^orney in fact for Robert Poage, of Mason county, of the one part, and Anne Rice, of (he county of Greenup, of the other part, that js to say: That James Rice, deceased, husband of Anne Rice, took possession of the plantation on which she now lives, unde*'the authority of Robert Poage, and continued qn the same during his life, making such improvements as were equal to the rents of the same; but previous to his death, haying purchased an interest }n the claim of William Marshall, from George Brooks, which covers the said farm, and Anne Rice not knowing that she is justifiable in giving up the possession, lest she should injure the title of the heirs of James Rice, and not being willing to enter into a suit about the same, it is hereby agreed that the said Anne shall have peaceable possession of the premises for four years from the said 20th May, 1815, for the improvements, &c. done on said premises by said J. Rice, At the expiration of said term, peaceable possession is to be delivered to said Robert Poage, reserving the benefit to the heirs of said Rice, of the purchase made of [125]*125George 38rooks; and if any dispute arises between --, it is to be considered in the same light a» if it had been tried on the 20lh of May, 1815.”

[f] A written pfai^ti/r aiiti a person under whom the duces^Tshow the defendants after-proves such person was the^lainttfr js competent evidence, [2] Dcdara-of tPh* fhedefendant. succeeded, as ip <be man-nor they cn-tpro-l end held, made wh-’. t they W re hi ¡)OS-sciden, but not when they enteredj is not competent.

[125]*125This writing was signed by the parties and dated on the 6th of October, 1815.

Before the four years mentioned in the foregoing instrument had expired, one of the appellants entered, with Mrs. Rice’s approbation, and she moved away after the expiration of the term. The appellant who had so entered, leased a part of the premises to the other ap-' peilants, a&d since she moved away, he claims to hold the possession of the land for Rice’s heirs, under the adverse claim purchased by Rice, the intestate.

The appellants gave evidence conducing to show that the tenant, from whom Rice had purchased the premises, got it from a third person, and that the possession had passed through the hands of several, before ii came to Rice; but whether all those persons held under Poage, the appellee, or under some other person, the proof did not show.

Various motions were made to exclude evidence and instruct the jury, by the appellants, and some by the appellees, which the court decided, and the appellants excepted.

(1) The first objection taken to the evidence, wms by the appellants, to exclude the instrument of writing between the appellee and Mrs. Rice, as improper evi-deuce.

We can see no ground for this objection. The evi-deuce strongly conduced lo show, that one of the appel-Jants entered under her, after the execution of the writing, and the writing itself proved that she was (he tenant of the appellee; of course, they would be bound to hold and surrender in the same manner and time, to which she was bound. Besides, it was competent for Mrs. Rice, as the administratrix of her husband, to sell his lease or dispose of it as a chattel interest, and to set-tie and adjust with the appellee, the remainder of the term to which Rice was entitled at his death, to pay for his improvements or money expended.

(2) The rest of the evidence objected to, and rejected by the court, consisted ofthe declarations of who had preceded Rice himself, as to the manner in which they obtained and held ihe premises, and also of another person, who stated that he had leased to one of [126]*126them. We see no error in rejecting this evidence. The persons themselves were more competent (o prove how they held, than their declarations, not on oath, could be. Besides, these declarations were made, not at the time of their entry, as part of the res gestee,

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17 Ky. 123, 1 T.B. Mon. 123, 1824 Ky. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brubaker-v-poage-kyctapp-1824.