Crider v. Crum

25 S.W.2d 1009, 233 Ky. 414, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 559
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 14, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 S.W.2d 1009 (Crider v. Crum) 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
Crider v. Crum, 25 S.W.2d 1009, 233 Ky. 414, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 559 (Ky. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Reversing.

The two above-styled cases were tried together in the lower court and in this court and will be disposed of by this opinion. These two suits were filed in the fall of 1914, and pursued a leisurely course until the spring of 1924, when they were finally submitted. Judgment was rendered in the spring of 1927, but this appeal was not taken until January, 1929. No explanation appears in the record for the long delay in the preparation and trial of these causes.

In 1865, James Crum deeded to the Honorable John Q-. Carlisle a tract of land in Martin county containing approximately 371 acres, and which we shall call in this *415 opinion ‘ ‘ the Carlisle tract. ’ ’ By mesne conveyances this tract has come into the ownership of the four appellants; the surface being owned by the appellant Martin County Land Company, the oil and gas rights by the appellant Margaret Oil & Gas Company, the timber rights by the appellant S. M. Crider, and the coal and mineral rights other than gas and oil by the Consolidation Coal Company. For the sake of convenience, however, we shall treat nil of these various appellants as one and as though all these various rights were centered in one ownership. The Carlisle tract roughly resembles a horseshoe, with the toe of the shoe pointing to the east. The outline of the horseshoe represents a ridge running from one heel of the shoe to the other heel and surrounding a hollow in the bottom of which, and flowing westwardly, is a creek known as “the left fork of Big Peter Cave Fork.” This creek passes out of the hollow formed by these ridges between the two heels of the horseshoe and finally empties into the middle fork of Rockcastle creek. The beginning point in the deed of James Crum to John G. Carlisle is located on the northern side of the horseshoe at some little distance from that heel. All of the surveyors who testified in this case, both those for the appellants and those for the appellees, agree that the boundary of the Carlisle tract running from this beginning point around the toe of the horseshoe to a point near the southern heel is well marked and well defined and could easily be run on the ground from the description found in the Carlisle deed. At this point on the southern side of the horseshoe, the trouble begins. This point is design nated in the call in the Carlisle deed as “a hickory on top of a ridge.” The next four calls in the Carlisle deed are as follows: “North 21 west 18 poles to a chestnut; north 1 west 18 poles to a hickory; north 65% west 54 poles to a chestnut oak on a hillside; north 8 degrees east 140 poles crossing Big Peter Cave to a knob on the fork ridge of Little Peter Cave Branch.” And the dispute in the suit of Meredith Crum et al. against the appellants, which is a suit to quiet title, turns on the correct locations of these calls. The dispute arises thus: Twenty years after James Crum had deeded the Carlisle tract to John G. Carlisle, he deeded a tract of land lying immediately to the west of the Carlisle tract to, as the deed designates him, “old man Adam Crum.” "Where the tract thus conveyed to Adam Crum binds on the Carlisle tract, the description in the deed to Adam Crum is *416 “thence with John G. Carlisle’s line, to a large rock in the edge of Big Petre (sic) Cave Branch, thence with said line to the top of the fork ridge of Big Petre' (sid) Cave.” By mesne conveyances this Adam Crum property has come into the ownership of the plaintiffs in the Meredith Crum et al. suit.' Now the Meredith Crum suit depends on where the Carlisle' line running between the two heels of the horseshoe, and which is a line common to-both the Carlisle tract'and the Adam Crum tract, is to bé located. Appellees contend for a location considerably to the east from -the location for which the appellants contend. The area, covered by the dispute is a little-over 32 acres. So much for the present as to the Meredith Crum suit. Turning now to the George Crum suit, we find that in 1904 George Crum and others procured from the state of Kentucky a patent for 35 acres of land lying within the description of the Carlisle tract and., approximately at the toe of the horseshoe. By mesne conveyances the tract covered by this patent has come into the ownership of the appellee George Crum. The dispute in his suit, which is also a suit to quiet title, is as to the superiority of his title under this patent to the land covered by it over the title of the appellants under the Crum to Carlisle deed. The disputes in both o.f these appeals came to a head in these suits in this fashion. The appellant Crider, claiming the right to cut the timber on the Carlisle tract, began to cut down trees on the two disputed areas. Thereupon these two suits were brought to restrain him from further cutting the timber on those areas and to- quiet the respective titles of the plaintiffs to the respective areas. In due course of time all’of the appellants were made parties defendants. All of them filed their answers and counterclaims traversing the claims of the plaintiffs, setting up their respective claims to ownership in the tract of the rights heretofore mentioned, and asking that their titles be quieted. Subsequent pleadings made up the issues, and after proof heard the court awarded the plaintiffs the relief they sought in their, respective suits, and from those judgments these appeals are prosecuted.

The George Crum Suit.

This suit may be quickly disposed of. Section 4704 of the Kentucky Statutes-, being a part of the law governing the patenting of the vacant and .unappropriated lands of this commonwealth, provides: “None but vacant land shall be subject to appropriation under this chapter. *417 Every entry, survey, or patent made or issued under this chapter shall he void, so far as it embraces lands previously entered, surveyed, or patented. ’ ’

The evidence in this case tends strongly to establish that two-thirds of the land embraced within the patent obtained by George Crum and others in 1904 is embraced in previous and earlier patents. Even the surveyor West, who testified for the appellees, admitted that a portion of this 1904 patent was embraced within the Beuben Crum patent of 1852 for 150 acres. But be that as it may, it is admitted that all of the land covered by this 1904 patent is embraced within the Carlisle tract, which was a tract of land having well-defined boundaries, although the location of one of its lines was in dispute since the location of that line, whether as appellees contended, or as appellants contend, would not affect the area of the Carlisle tract in so far as it embraced the area comprised within the 1904 patent. In the case of War Fork Land Co. v. Llewellyn, 199 Ky. 607, 251 S. W. 663, 665, the facts were these: The War Fork Land Company had purchased from B. L. Thomas and others the tract of land in dispute in that litigation, and thereafter had removed the timber from portions of the tract and had regularly listed it for taxation. The lines around the tract were well marked and its boundary was well defined. The deed for the tract was of record. Thereafter Llewellyn undertook to obtain a patent from the commonwealth for the tract in question. In the litigation between the War Fork Land Company and Llewellyn, the company did not prove its title to the tract, title to which was in issue in the suit, back to the commonwealth, nor so far as the statement of facts in the case discloses beyond the Thomas deed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 S.W.2d 1009, 233 Ky. 414, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crider-v-crum-kyctapphigh-1930.