Chriswell v. Campbell

127 S.W.2d 872, 278 Ky. 30, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 7, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 872 (Chriswell v. Campbell) 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
Chriswell v. Campbell, 127 S.W.2d 872, 278 Ky. 30, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 368 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

Tbis action was instituted by tbe appellees under Section 344, as defined by subsection 7 of Section 340, Civil Code of Practice, for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, and to set aside tbe judgment rendered in tbe Wayne circuit court adjudging tbe appellants to be tbe owners of tbe certain 75 acre tract of land in controversy, and wbicb judgment was on appeal affirmed by tbis court on December 1, 1936. Campbell et al. v. Chriswell et al., 267 Ky. 593, 102 S. W. (2d) 359.

Tbe original action was brought on August 29, 1934, by tbe appellees, J. D. Campbell et al. against tbe defendants, Bill Chriswell et al. (bere appellants), wherein by tbe petition they asserted title to this- 75 acre tract of land in controversy and that tbe Chriswells were claiming it, thereby casting a cloud upon their title, wbicb they prayed be quieted.

Tbe defendants (tbe Chriswells) answered, denying plaintiffs’ title thereto and by counterclaim set up title in themselves to tbe land, under and by virtue of themselves owning tbe patent to tbis 75 acre tract, which bad been issued to Arthur Marcum in 1866, and prajmd in turn that their title thereto be quieted.

Tbe Campbells, claiming ownership to this 75 acres in dispute, alleged that it was embraced within tbe boundary of a 316 acre tract patented to Rollan Burnett in 1835, wbicb they claimed to own.

For tbe determination of tbis issue, joined by the *32 pleadings, upon the' ownership of this 75 acre tract, trial was had before a jury which resulted in a verdict for the defendant Chriswells, upon which judgment was accordingly entered, and which judgment was later upon appeal affirmed.

Following this, in May, 1937, the present action was filed in equity, seeking a new trial upon three grounds.

As the first of these grounds, the plaintiffs alleged that since the trial of said case and since the last term of the court at which the adverse judgment was rendered against them, they had discovered a survey of adjoining land, made in 1824 in the name of Christopher Huffaker, the calls of which clearly established, as a corner, a large white oak, claimed by plaintiffs in the former action as the beginning corner of their Rollan Burnett 316 acre survey, which was disputed and denied by defendants; that the final issue between plaintiffs and defendants in said former suit was whether or not the said white oak was the beginning corner of the Rollan Burnett 316 acre survey; and that, if said white oak (as so located) was the true beginning corner of said survey, then (they alleged) the 75 acre Marcum survey (in controversy) would be included in said Rollan Burnett survey, in that the Marcum survey was a junior survey to the Rollan Burnett (Campbells’) 316 • acre survey.

They state that they did not nor could not, at or before the time of the former trial, have known of the existence of the 50 acre Huffaker 1824 survey “by the exercise of due or any diligence” by reason of same never having been transferred and because the survey books of Wayne county had long since been destroyed by fire and there was no record of the survey in Wayne countv; that, as shown by the fixed lines of this newly discovered Huffaker survey, the said 75 acre Marcum survey of 1866 lies wholly within the Burnett 316 acre survey of 1835, and also inside the Reuben Sloan “inclusive survey” of 1847, both of which surveys were owned b}’- plaintiffs and both of which were senior surveys to the Marcum 75 acre survey, under which they both claimed title.

The petition further stated that, since the original trial in July, 1935, they had found that this 50 acre Huffaker survey of 1824, which lies on the opposite side *33 of their Rollan Bnrnett survey, calls for a common corner with it, which, by actual survey, was thus located as beginning at the large white oak corner, as the beginning corner of the said Burnett 316 acre survey, by reason of the lines running exactly to the corner called for on the opposite side of said survey. Further they alleged that they did not know that this newly discovered Huffaker survey called for such common corner until within the past few weeks and could not, “by the exercise of ordinary diligence,” have discovered the fact that by its locating the corners of their adjoining tracts, they could thereby establish the corners of their land, embraced within the boundary of their Burnett 1935 patent, and that when so located, it included therein the 75 acre Marcum tract in dispute.

They further assert, as a second ground, the additional newly discovered evidence, upon which they also rely and base their right to a new trial, that they have discovered, since the trial of the original action in 1935, that some of the defendant Chris wells, who were the children and grandchildren of the aforesaid grantor, David Chriswell, and under whom they claim title to the 75 acre Marcum patent, then knew and had known for many years before that trial that their father and grandfather, David Chriswell, had (many years before his death) sold and deeded all his interest in the said Marcum survey to one Mathey Sloan, who was a grandfather of plaintiffs, and that lie had made Sloan a title to said land and also had given him his old title papers thereto, including’ the original patent, but that Sloan had lost this Chriswell deed, before placing it to record,, and that, although his grantor had agreed and was willing to issue him another deed for the land sold him, its preparation and execution were delayed and the grantor died without having executed it.

None of the defendant Chriswélls, who it is alleged knew about this conveyance by their ancestor, testified on the trial in the original action and therefore these facts known by them were not disclosed and plaintiffs state that they had not learned of these facts until a short time before the institution of the present action.

The third and last ground on which they ask a new trial is that the judgment entered in the original action was for the entire 75 acres, in which was included an pverlap of 25 acres, which the court upon the first trial, *34 or mistrial, peremptorily instructed the jury to find for the defendants.

To the petition seeking a new trial, upon these grounds as thus asserted and which appellants argue were insufficiently alleged, they demurred, insisting that it failed to state sufficient facts to legally satisfy the requirements of the code provision, supra, or so as to entitle them to a new trial.

Upon submission of the cause for judgment upon the demurrer, the court overruled it, when, the defendants declining to plead further, it adjudged that the judgment entered for the defendants in the original action be set aside, and that a new trial be awarded plaintiffs.

The defendants, assailing this ruling as erroneous, prayed and were granted an appeal, which is now before us.

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Related

Campbell v. Chriswell
144 S.W.2d 802 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.2d 872, 278 Ky. 30, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chriswell-v-campbell-kyctapphigh-1939.