Burger v. Allen

277 S.W. 1032, 211 Ky. 742, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 962
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 8, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 1032 (Burger v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burger v. Allen, 277 S.W. 1032, 211 Ky. 742, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 962 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Affirming.

Briefly stated the issues of this equitable- action are: appellee, Jane Carlisle Allen, as plaintiff below, claimed to own and sought to quiet her title to a 364 acre tract of land in Martin county, Kentucky. Appellant, Joseph P. McCullen, trustee of the estate of John McKee, for that estate, claimed to own a 15',000 acre tract of land in that county, and that it embraced and included the 364 acre tract claimed by appellee, and that the title under which he claimed was older and superior to that of appellee. He also sought to quiet title. Those of the appellants hereinafter called Burger heirs claimed to own the same 15,000 acre tract of land claimed by McCullen, trustee, and they also claimed that it covers and embraces appellee’s 364 acre tract and that their title is older and superior. They also sought to quiet their title. The chancellor upon the hearing adjudged appellee to be the owner of the 364 acres claimed by her and quieted her title. Appellants, McCullen, trustee, and the Burger heirs, both have appealed.

With reference to appellee’s claim to title by adverse possession but little need be- said. By the evidence introduced for her on that question she failed to manifest her right to the relief she sought because she failed-to- ■ *744 establish, adverse possession within the legal meaning of that word continuously for a sufficient length of time to ripen into title either under the constitutional or any of the statutory provisions invoked by her.

For her title of record appellee relies upon a chain of title deducible from the grant by the Commonwealth of Kentucky to James Stepp for 2,000 acres of land' granted September 4, 1858, pursuant to a survey made-June 8, 1857.

Appellants insist that since appellee bases her right to the relief sought by her upon the 2,000 acre Steppgrant and devolution of title therefrom, - she failed to-manifest her right to it because the Stepp grant under which she claims while referred to as a 2,000 acre grant,, by its own terms excludes 1,170 acres of patented land, from the boundary given, and, as they insist, appelleefailed to establish by proof that the tract of land claimed by her was not a part of the exclusion, or was a part of that grant. The tract of land claimed by appellee herein was conveyed by Stepp, the original patentee, to John G-. Carlisle, grandfather of appellee, Jane Carlisle Allen, The original 2,000 acre patent is copied into the record. There is in the record also a copy of the deed by which its patentee conveyed the tract of land claimed by appellee to John Gr. Carlisle. Eig’hteen of the twenty lines of the boundary of the tract of land described in the deed from Stepp to Carlisle correspond exactly with eighteen of the exterior lines of the Stepp 2,000 acre boundary. The record herein contains a copy not only of the Stepp2,000 acre grant, but also of the survey under which the-grant was issued. The plat of the tract of land accompanying the survey was not copied into the record. It would show the portion of the 2,000 acre tract excluded. Since eighteen lines of the deeded boundary run and correspond with the same lines of the patent boundary,, a comparison of the boundary given in the .deed with the plat would readily disclose whether it lies -within or without the exclusion. Appellants had the record in this case copied and brought to us. The chancellor found, for appellee herein. .Appellants having failed to bring to this court that portion of the record herein, that is,, the plat of the original 2,000 acre Stepp grant, under a. .well established rule of this court we must presume that the omitted portion of the record upholds the judgment of the chancellor.

*745 Appellants insist that appellee’s chain of title filed of record herein is not complete in that properly authenticated copies of the steps in the bankruptcy proceeding, "under which the referee in bankruptcy conveyed the tract of land claimed by appellee to John Gr. Carlisle, were not filed herein. We find, however, that the records in the case of John Gr. Carlisle v. Pelphrey, et al., were filed as evidence herein. The old actions made a part of the record herein have been before this court. The records in those cases have been placed with and made part of the record in this case. We find in those old records properly authenticated copies of all the steps in that proceeding in bankruptcy which establish beyond question the validity of the deed complained of by appellants. The record herein beyond question discloses that appellee has a connected chain of title from herself through her predecessors in title back to the grant from the Commonwealth by which James Stepp was granted the 2,000 acre tract of land. The record discloses the validity of that chain of title beyond all question, provided' at the time the Commonwealth granted the 2,000 acre tract to James Stepp it was vacant and unappropriated land.

Appellant, Joseph P. McCullen, trustee of the estate ■of John McKee, and appellants, Burger heirs, both claim to own the same 15,000 acre tract of land under title of record tracing through their predecessors in title back to a grant from the Commonwealth of Virginia to Benjamin Say for 15,000 acres of land in what was then Payette county, Virginia, dated November 13,1786, made pursuant to a survey made March 29,1785. The patentee Say conveyed the 15,000 acre tract to Levi Hollingsworth. Hollingsworth conveyed it to Robert Morris. Appellant, Joseph P. McCullen, for the estate for which he is trustee, claims title to it through the will of Robert Morris. The Burger heirs claim title to it through a tax deed dated December 16, 1802, which discloses that the tract of land was sold in 1801 to pay Robert Morris’ taxes under an assessment made in 1800 by which it was assessed for taxation as being his property. We find in the record, however, a deed that was executed in 1795 by which Robert Morris divested himself of all his title to the 15,000 acre tract of land and that deed appears to have been recorded in Kentucky in the proper office ia 1799, a full year before the land was assessed for taxes as the property of Robert Morris. This record, therefore, establishes conclusively that at the time the 15,000 *746 acre tract of land was assessed for taxes as the property of Robert Morris in 1800 Robert Morris did not own it. Therefore, there was no authority for the sale of that tract of land to pay Robert Morris ’ taxes. The deed in evidence conclusively upsets the prima facie ease made for the Burger heirs of their title under the tax deed and constitutes an effective and conclusive break in the chain of title under which they claim the 15,000 acre Benjamin Say grant. Other defects in their chain of title appear in the record, some of which are perhaps as effective as that just pointed out. However, we deem it unnecessary to discuss them as their chain of title has effectively and conclusively been disconnected.

The same deed by which Robert Morris divested himself of the title of the 15,000 acre tract of land is likewise an effective and conclusive break in the chain of title under which McCullen, trustee, claims the legal title to it. He claims under the residuary clause of the will of Robert Morris and subsequent transfers of title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 1032, 211 Ky. 742, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burger-v-allen-kyctapphigh-1925.