Combs v. Turner

237 S.W. 37, 193 Ky. 636, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 3, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 37 (Combs v. Turner) 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
Combs v. Turner, 237 S.W. 37, 193 Ky. 636, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 47 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Moorman

Reversing.

This suit was filed in the Breathitt circuit court by Irvine Turner and Samuel Turner, the appellees, against Alexander Combs, Lewis Deaton and Alfred Combs, the appellants. The petition alleges that plaintiffs are the owners and in possession of a described tract of land; that defendants, on the 16th day of July, 1917, unlawfully entered upon the land and wrongfully cut trees standing thereon. It further alleges that plaintiffs and those under whom they claim had been in actual, open, notorious, continuous and adverse possession of the land described for more than twenty-five years, next before the commission of the wrongs complained of. The plaintiffs asked that defendants be enjoined and restrained from entering upon the land or moving any of the timber cut from it or from further trespassing on it or interfering with the plaintiffs’ possession and enjoyment of it; that their title to the land be quieted; and upon final hearing, that the injunction be made perpetual. A temporary restraining order was issued.

Defendants filed answer putting in issue the material averments of the petition, and affirming ownership and actual possession of two tracts - of land described by metes and bounds. They asked for the dismissal of the petition, and that they be adjudged the owners of the land described in the counterclaim, which embraces the land in controversy.

The judgment appealed from enjoins the defendants from entering- on the land described in the petition, [638]*638or trespassing on it, or interfering* in any way with plaintiffs’ enjoyment and possession of the same.

A question on which the decision of this case depends is, whether this is a suit to quiet title or one merely to enjoin a trespass. If the former it was incumbent on appellees to show title to the land in controversy, if the latter possession of it at the time of the trespass and the filing of the suit is a sufficient foundation for the asserted right.

The tract described in the petition was conveyed to appellees about the year 1913 by heirs of J. C. Callahan, the deed of conveyance including two tracts separately described. The land in dispute has no residence or buildings on it and has never been occupied. Appellants’ claim to the two tracts, described in their answer, rests on a patent of 110 acres issued to Elijah Bolen on the 29th day of December, 1852, and another of 50 acres issued to William Herald on March 1, 1876, the latter including the land in dispute. They showed titled derived from these patents. It is admitted that the 110 acre patent is not involved in this controversy, but it is said that the patent of 50 acres of 1876 is largely included in a previous patent of 100 acres issued to Elijah Bolen on September 10,1846. The land in controversy being included in two patents, it is contended for appellees that the junior patent, under which appellants claim, is void. It should be observed here, however, that appellees do not trace their title back to the patent of 1846, though the patent is introduced in evidence; and consequently the questions of priority and validity of the two patents as relating to each other are hot presented.

It is not shown that J. C. Callahan, whose heirs are grantors of appellees, ever had a deed to the land in controversy or that he ever lived on any part of it. All .of it, except about seven' acres, which was cleared twenty or twenty-five years ago and which in a few years was abandoned, is woodland.

The first question to be determined, as we have indicated, is whether this is a suit to quiet title, in which event the appellees must recover on the strength of their title; or whether it is merely a suit to enjoin a trespass, in which case it can be maintained by proof of their possession when the trespass was committed and the suit filed.

It is contended for appellants that appellees were required to show paper title, and having failed to do so the [639]*639judgment must be reversed. For appellees it is insisted that this is a suit to enjoin a trespass and is maintainable on tbe showing of possession in them. Undoubtedly if the character of the suit is as assumed in the premise of appellees, their legal proposition is sound. (Hall v. Daton, 24. Ky. L. Rep. 314; Crate v. Strong, 24 Ky. L. Rep. 710.) But the two contentions go at once to the inquiry suggested.

Appellees in their petition alleged ownership and possession of the land described therein. Their title was derived, as alleged, from actual, adverse and continuous possession for the necessary period of time. The relief which they sought was to enjoin and restrain appellants from cutting and removing timber from it and to quiet their title to it as against 'appellants. Appellants in their answer put in issue the title of appellees, and made claim to the ownership and possession of the land, asking that they be adjudged the owners of it. The judgment enjoined and restrained appellants from removing any timber from the land or from trespassing on it or from interfering in any way with the appellees in the enjoyment and possession of it, and thus granted the permanent relief of quieting the title of appellees as against appellants. It is apparent, therefore, that the parties, as well as the trial court, treated the suit as one to quiet title as against appellants, and such is the effect of the judgment. The suit must be so treated here.

From the conclusion just announced it follows that appellees, in order to obtain tire relief which they sought, were required to prove title in themselves. (Williams v. Brush Creek Coal Co., 149 Ky. 188; Board v. Dorris, 168 Ky. 195.) It was also incumbent on them to show actual possession of the land at the commencement of the action. But the later condition, under the decisions of this court, is not material in view of the fact that appellants were likewise asserting title, and. the court having acquired jurisdiction of the controversy could properly decide the case on its merits, regardless of whether appellees were in actual possession of the land at the time the proceeding was instituted. (Fox v. Cornett, 124 Ky. 435; Johnson v. Farris, 140 Ky. 135; Hall v. Hall, 149 Ky. 817; Sackett v. Jeffries, 182 Ky. 696; Cooper v. Williamson, 191 Ky. 213.)

Two stirveys were made with a view of locating the three patents mentioned, in both of which the 110 acre [640]*640patent of December, 1852, and the 50 acre patent of 1876 were practically identically located. Plats of the surveys are filed with the record, according to which there is a wide divergence in the location of the patent of 100 acres of September 10,1846. The plat relied on by appellees includes in the boundary of that' patent the 50 acre patent of 1876, whereas the plat relied on by appellants excludes therefrom the 50 acre patent of 1876 and likewise the land in controversy. The location of the patent of 1846 is, however, not pertinent, because, as we have seen, no attempt was made by appellees to prove paper title to the land or to establish title derived from that patent. Their claim of title, as alleged, is that of continuous and adverse possession for the requisite length of time. If, as they claim, their occupancy, use and possession and that of their vendors, have been such as to give them title by adverse possession, they can nevertheless maintain this action. (Vallingham v. Taylor, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 1059; Goff v. Lowe, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 1098; Overton v. Perry, 129 Ky. 415; Newsome v. Hamilton, 142 Ky. 5.)

In LeMoyne v. Roundtree, 135 Ky.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 37, 193 Ky. 636, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combs-v-turner-kyctapp-1922.