Cummings v. Fleming County Sportsmen's Club, Inc.

477 S.W.2d 163, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 353
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 4, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 477 S.W.2d 163 (Cummings v. Fleming County Sportsmen's Club, Inc.) 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
Cummings v. Fleming County Sportsmen's Club, Inc., 477 S.W.2d 163, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 353 (Ky. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

The appellee, Fleming County Sportsmen’s Club, Inc., hereinafter called the Club, brought this action to enjoin the appellant, Frances Cummings, from obstructing a passway leading from a public highway to a 6-acre tract of land owned by the Club. Mrs. Cummings appeals from a judgment granting the injunction, based upon a finding that the passway had become a public way through public use for the statutory period of 15 years. It is our conclusion that the evidence does not reasonably support such a finding and is therefore clearly erroneous. CR 52.01.

The passway in question runs westwardly from Kentucky Highway 11 in Fleming County. The highway runs north and south. The passway provides access into a farm formerly owned by one Sanders Ringo and is called the Ringo road. Whatever may be its present status, it originated as a private passway, and that part of it now in controversy was a part of the Ringo land. Mrs. Cummings is one of the Ringo descendants and owns the Sanders Ringo place.

The Club’s tract is the west or back portion of what we shall call the Moran tract, which comprised 12 acres fronting on the [164]*164west side of Highway 11. Ringo road runs along the south line of the Moran tract and thence farther into the Ringo (now Cummings) property, which borders the west and south sides of the Moran tract. Insofar as we are now concerned the Moran and Ringo properties do not have a common source. The Moran tract was never a part of the Ringo ownership.

The Club purchased its six acres from John Graham, Jr., in 1964. Graham had purchased the 12-acre Moran tract from Ruth and Alex Fulton and Grace Crain in 1959. The Fulton-Crain title came through a 1953 deed from the Moran heirs.

Since it fronted on the highway, so long as the Moran 12 acres remained intact there was no occasion or necessity for its owners to use Ringo road for access to their own property. As a matter of fact, some of the previous Ringo and Moran owners had long ago constructed a boundary-line fence along the north side of Ringo road, closing it off from the Moran tract, and the remains of this old fence still existed when the Club purchased its six acres from Graham in 1964. Graham, however, was under the impression that Ringo road was a public way, and although he admitted that he recognized the old fence as marking his south boundary line, in his deed to the Club he described the property conveyed as bounded on the south by the center of Ringo road and made no provision for access to Highway 11 through that portion of the Moran tract which he retained, and which lay between the Club property and the highway. Despite the old fence, which evidently was pretty well broken or fallen down by that time, Graham testified that from the time he acquired the Moran tract (1959) he freely used Ringo road to reach its rear portion. On the other hand, Fulton, his immediate predecessor in title, testified that he had never used Ringo road for such access, as follows:

“My right of way came out on the main highway down there, there was a gateway there and everything. I did not use it, I didn’t have no right to use it for it didn’t belong to me. There was a fence on both sides of their road coming down through there. I had no way to get to mine from hers, there was a fence on both sides of the road.”

Fulton’s co-owner, Grace Crain, her husband, and an elderly member of the Moran family who once lived on the Moran tract all testified to the same effect.

When the Club purchased its six acres from Graham (1964), one of the members, being concerned with respect to the status of Ringo road, went to a lawyer who represented Mrs. Porter (Mrs. Cummings’ mother, who then owned the Ringo property) and inquired about it. After consulting with Mrs. Porter the lawyer told the Club’s representative that she did not want the road torn up, but if the Club or the county would take care of it the Club could use it. R. C. Donahue, president of the Club at the time of the purchase from Graham, testified that shortly thereafter Mrs. Cummings and her mother, Mrs. Porter, came to see him and told him they owned the road and if the Club was going to use it “we had to upkeep it and I agreed to that.” He therefore presumed that the Club’s use of Ringo road was with their consent. As Herd Shrout, secretary of the Club, explained it, “that was when we first went out there; that we would sort of take care of the road for the use of it.”

Now to digress for a moment. The Club’s complaint, filed on October 19, 1968, alleges that “plaintiff and its predecessors in title have freely, openly, notoriously and adversely used the Ringo Road which leads from Kentucky Highway 11 to the realty of the plaintiff as a means of ingress and egress from and to their realty for a period of over 15 years.” This allegation, which in substance is that the Club and its predecessors in title have acquired a private easement by adverse user, is conclusively refuted by the evidence. The judgment, however, finds that from the highway to a gate west of the Club’s club[165]*165house building Ringo road is a public way, “used for long years as a roadway to the area now occupied by the clubhouse.” Thus the judgment does not follow and is not supported by the pleadings, because nowhere in the pleadings was it alleged or suggested that Ringo road is or ever was a public road. Nevertheless, since the parties tried the case and have briefed it here as if that were the issue we shall decide it on that basis.

It is undisputed that until the early 1930’s when Highway 11 was constructed along the route of the old Maysville-Mt. Sterling Turnpike, the Ringos maintained a “Patent” gate at the entrance to Ringo road at the turnpike. It was kept closed. Other gates were and still are located farther back. When the new road was built a deep cut was made at this entrance, which therefore had to be relocated. As relocated, the entrance now runs at an angle along part of the old turnpike and cuts across the extreme southeast corner of what was theretofore the Moran tract. According to Mrs. Cummings, the new approach was constructed by the state highway department, but just how much of it came off the Moran tract and whether it was paid for by the state are questions not answered in the evidence. Anyway, instead of replacing the gate Dave Porter (father of Mrs. Cummings) put a fence along the south line of Ringo road from the highway to a point some distance to the west of where the Club’s building now stands, at which point he installed a cattle guard. Thereafter, and until some time after 1964 when the Club removed the old line fence along its north side, Ringo road from the highway to the cattle guard lay between two fences, the old line fence and the newer fence erected by the owners of the Ringo property.

The overwhelming weight of the evidence is that Ringo road is and always was a private passway. Sanders Ringo had it rocked from the old turnpike in to his residence, and beyond that it was a dirt road leading to the fields and tenant houses. As one of the witnesses said, “It has to be a private road it didn’t go nowhere but to Uncle Sanders.” Naturally, it has been freely used by anyone having occasion to do business with or pay social calls on the occupants of the property, but since it did not lead to any place in which the general public would have had an interest in going, there could scarcely have been much if any occasion for the general public to use it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
477 S.W.2d 163, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummings-v-fleming-county-sportsmens-club-inc-kyctapp-1972.