Conley's Heirs v. Chiles

28 Ky. 302, 5 J.J. Marsh. 302, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 8, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ky. 302 (Conley's Heirs v. Chiles) 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
Conley's Heirs v. Chiles, 28 Ky. 302, 5 J.J. Marsh. 302, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 18 (Ky. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in chancery by Arthur Conley’s heirs, to injoin a judgment in ejectment obtained against them by William Chiles. William Hays, who held a patent for eight hundred and twenty-four acres of land, sold one hundred and eighteen acres to William Bryant, undone hundred and eighteen acres to Arthur Conley, in 1793. Bryant settled on his one hundred and eighteen acres, in 1793, and afterwards sold fifty-nine acres to Taylor, and the other moiety to Hinton. Hinton sold his fifty-nine acres to Arthur Conley ; and Taylor having sold his fifty-nine acres to Bridges, the latter sold the same to the said Conley. A deed seems to have been made by Hays to Taylor in August, 1793, for the whole one hundred and eighteen acres. Taylor made a deed for the one hundred and eighteen acres to the plaintiffs, during the pendency [303]*303oí' this suit. They, and those under whom they claim, have been in the possession of this tract ever since 1793. ,

In 1794, Arthur Conley settled on the one hundred and eighteen acres, which he had bought from Hays. He held Hays’ covenant with Stephen Boyle as his surety for a general warranty title. He continued to reside on the land until his death in August, 1815, and the plaintiffs have retained the possession of it ever since. Hays, having in the mean time died, Conley sued Boyle and recovered judgment for damages, for a breach of his covenant, and the judgment having been affirmed by this court in 1810; (see II Bibb, 7.) Boyle paid the amount of it to .Conley. The record of the suit on the covenant is not incorporated in this record; but the plaintiffs and defendant both seem to have referred to it and considered it as an exhibit; and therefore, as it is on file in this court, wre will consider it as a part of the record, and notice it -accordingly. The satisfaction of the judgment we infer from the fact that this court affirmed it, and from the corroborating fact that one witness has positively sworn that Boyle paid it off; and that there is no opposing circumstance, inference or allegation.

Notwithstanding this satisfaction, and virtual rescisión .of the- contract with Hays, Conley retained the possession of the land, intending to hold it under cover of a patent to Thomas Miller for two thousand acres including it. It does not appear however, that he had derived any right whatever from Miller, (who was a nonresident,) or that he had ever notified the heirs of Hays (some of whom were minors, and all of whom were as we infer, nonresidents,) that intended to hold under Miller.

Chiles, having purchased" from the heirs of Hoys their right to the eight hundred and twenty four acres, and to another adjoining tract, also granted to. their ancestor, obtained a judgment in ejectment in 1818, against Conley’s heirs and others, which judgment, this court affirmed; see II Marshal], 212. To injoin this judgment, this suit was instituted by Conley’s hei rs. They allege that in 181)1, nine hundred and forty-nine acres of Miller’s two thousand acres, were sold by the register for taxes due to the Slate, and that John U-Waring, who had acquired the legal title thereto, from. [304]*304the register, had sold it to them in 1815; that Miller’s patent is posterior in date to that of Hays, but that his entry is older and better. They disclaim holding urn der Hays, but in an amended bill, aver that they had ascertained since the trial in ejectment, that Hays had conveyed the legal title to both Taylor and Arthur Con.ley, and exhibit the deeds which had been recorded in the county of Clarke, in which the two one hundred and eighteen acre tracts lay. They make Taylor, Hinton, Bryant, and the heirs of Bridges, defendants, together with Chiles and the heirs of Hays.

The expression ‘••abnut two miles,” when used in an entry, means or imports exactly "two miles.

None of them answered the bill, except Chiles and the heirs of Bridges. Chiles denies the material ■allegations of the bill, and insists that the plaintiffs shewed no equity. The heirs of Bridges allege, that ■the contract between their ancestor and Arthur Conley had been rescinded.

On the final hearing, the circuit court discharged the injunction, and dismissed the bill.

Preliminary, to a consideration of other and more ' essential points, we will ascertain whether or not the entry of Miller is valid.

It was made on the loth of March, 1783; and is as follows: “Thomas Miller enters two thousand acres of land on a T. W. numbered 9,530, beginning on the creek about two miles below Estill’s battle ground, on the place that Captain Estill was killed, running west five hundred and sixty-six poles; thence running north to include the quantity at right angles, exclu-. sive of all prior claims, and lands unfit for cultivation.”

The survey begins on the creek rather more than two miles on a straight line from the spot where, according to,the proof, Captain Estill fell. But if the beginning be fixed at-the- precise distance of two miles, we have no doubt that the survey will include the land in contest, or most of it. “About” two miles, must be considered as importing, according to estabr fished consfruction, exactly two miles. The call to exclude “prior claims and lands unfit for cultivation,” cannot affect the validity of the entry, as the survey Was made so as to include only two thousand acres; because a subsequent locator, seeing that it must include that quantity at least, would have no right to suppose that the two thousand acres actually included [305]*305in it, bad not been appropriated; Craig and Mosby vs. Cogar, Hardin, 381; and Carland vs. the same, I Bibb, 84.

We are of opinion that the identity and notoriety of Estill’s battle ground are sufficiently established.

The annexed diagram will aid in the application of the facts.

The battle was fought on the 22d of March, 1782, in the now county of Montgomery, and in the vicinity of Mountsterling. It is a memorable incident, and perhaps one of the most memorable, in the interesting history of the settlement of Kentucky. The usefulness and popularity of Captain Estill; the deep and universal sensibility excited by the premature death of a citizenso gallant andso beloved; the emphatic character of his associates in battle; the masterly skill and shivalric daring displayed throughout the action, (“every man to his man, and each to his tree;”) the grief and despondence produced by the catastrophe; all contributed to give to “ESTILL’S DEFEAT,” a most signal notoriety and importance, especially among “the early settlers.” All the story with all its circumstances of locality, and of “the fight,” was told and told again -and again, until even the children knew it “by heart” No legendary tale was ever listened to with as intense anxiety, or was inscribed in-as vivid and indelible an impress, on the hearts of the few of both sexes who then constituted the hope and strength of Kentucky.

Such is the traditional as well as the recorded history of this sanguinary battle between the white men and the Indians; and such too, is the testimony embodied in this cause.

It could scarcely be credited, that the scite of such a rencounter could not have been found by any rational man, exercising the usual and ordinary diligence.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ky. 302, 5 J.J. Marsh. 302, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conleys-heirs-v-chiles-kyctapp-1831.