Drane v. Gregory's Heirs

42 Ky. 619, 3 B. Mon. 619, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 26, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 Ky. 619 (Drane v. Gregory's Heirs) 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
Drane v. Gregory's Heirs, 42 Ky. 619, 3 B. Mon. 619, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 80 (Ky. Ct. App. 1843).

Opinions

Judge Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action of ejectment was brought on the demise of Caroline Gregory’s heirs, to recover land which had been conveyed in fee by her deceased husband, by deed made during the coverture, which professed to pass her title, but from a defect in their execution and authentication, were invalid as to her. The land was a part of 1300 acres patented to her father, George Muse, who, in 1790, devised "the residue of his estate,” of which it was a part, to his daughters, Kitty and Caroline. In 1797, William Gregory, the husband of Caroline, caused the tract to be divided by three of the Commissioners who had been appointed by the Shelby County Court, under the act of 1792, and shortly afterwards took possession of the equal half which had been allotted to his wife, and by subsequent deeds, made at different periods, under some of which the defendants claimed, seems to have conveyed away the whole of that half. These deeds all show, upon their face, that they were made in right of the wife.

From this statement it is apparent that so far as the defendants, or those under whom they claim, entered upon and held the land in contest under the deeds of Gregory, they could not, according to the doctrines settled by this Court in the cases of Shackleford and Miller, and Shackleford and Smith, reported in 3, 4, 5, and 9 Dana, in defence of this action, brought by the heirs of Mrs. Gregory, after the death of her husband, rely upon their possession during his life as adverse, or set up an outstanding adverse title, or one acquired after their entry. It is, therefore, deemed sufficient to say, on this branch of the [620]*620subject, that the Court did not err to the prejudice of the defendants, in giving or withholding instructions.

—And it is not error for the Court in such caseto refuse, on defendant’s .motion, to exclude such deeds of conveyance from the jury. They were properly before the jury to show the character of the defendant’s entry and holding. A deed from the husband & wife, conveying all the lands in the Commonwealth of Kentucky and Virginia to which thegrantorswere entitled, under a certain will * ‘which they had not heretofore sold and conveyed.,” does not embrace,by such terms, lands which they had sold and conveyed but by deed, which was ineffectual to pass the wife’s right of inheritance.

Nor was there any error in refusing, on motion of the defendants, to exclude the deeds or any of Ihem, so far as they purported to pass the title of Caroline Gregory. The only legitimate object of this instruction was answered by the instruction given on motion of the plaintiffs, that the deeds did not pass Caroline Gregory’s title; and they were properly before the jury, because they showed that the land was held and conveyed by Gregory in her right, and they tended to show under what right it was held by the defendants; and even those deeds which did not cover the land in controversy were properly retained, because they tended to show that Gregory had claimed and conveyed the whole of that part of the patent which had been assigned to his wife in the division.

It is contended, however, that the Court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that if Gregory and wife had parted with their title, they should find for the defendants. This instruction was intended fo apply to a deed duly executed by Gregory and wife, and properly authenticated, but made after the several deeds above referred to, purporting to be from the same grantors, by which subsequent deed, after reciting that they had become entitled, in light of said Caroline, to many tracts of land in Kentucky and Virginia, of which they had not acquired possession, &c. they conveyed to Isaac Watkins all the' right, title and interest “which they, the said William and Caroline now have or hold, in and to all the lands in the Commonwealths of Virginia and Kentucky, and to which they are entitled under the wills (named in the deed) and which they have not heretofore sold and conveyed.” But as the Court, in pursuance of the construction which this Court had previously given to the same deed, in reversing and remanding this case, instructed the jury, that if the land in contest was embraced by the previous deeds from Gregory and wife, it was not conveyed by the deed to Watkins; and as it was proved, without contradiction, that the land was embraced by the previous deeds, and there was no evidence to authorize a finding that it was not so embraced, the instruction as asked by the defen[621]*621dants, was not only useless, but misleading, and it was therefore properly refused.

The finding of the jury was authorized by the evidence. The suit was commenced before the limitation operated.

It is further contended, that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, in finding that the defendants, and those under w'hom they claim, first entered upon and possessed the land in contest, under the deeds of Gregory, in right of his wife, and that the Court, on this ground, should have granted and erred in refusing a new trial to the defendants : but upon scrutinizing the evidence, we are satisfied that the jury were fully authorized to find the fact referred to as they have found it. For, although it may be that both Crabb, the alienor of Gregory, and the defendant, Stephen Drane, the alienee of Crabb, entered within the patent of Muse, before Gregory conveyed to Crabb, it does not appear that such entry was made by either upon the land in contest, or that either of them had any possession of that land until Crabb first acquired it from Gregory, and Drane obtained it afterwards from Crabb, but the contrary is to be inferred. And with regard to the defendant, Stephen T. Drane, the evidence clearly and without contradiction conduces to prove that Mitchell, under whom he claims by deed, and to whom Gregory had many years before conveyed by one of the deeds first above mentioned, entered and held under Gregory’s deed.

There was no error, therefore, in refusing to grant the new trial on the ground just noticed. And assuming the fact to be as the jury have found it, that the possession held by the defendants was originally taken and transmitted to them under the deeds from Gregory, and under and not adversely to the title of Mrs. Gregory, it follows upon the principles settled in the cases above referred to, that the lessors of the plaintiff, as heirs of Mrs. Gregory, having commenced this action before any limitation, beginning to run from the death of Gregory, (which was wdthin three years before the commencement of the suit,) could have barred them, have a right to recover the whole of the land thus held by the defendants, unless they are wholly or partially precluded by reason of the facts and considerations now to be noticed.

Where there is a severance in fact of a joint tenancy and possession held for 20 years, according to such division, the title will be a title in severalty to the ■extent of such' separate possession.

It appears that by the will of George Muse, this land was devised to his two daughters jointly, so that they held it as joint tenants ; and the bill of exception states, that it was proved that the joint tenant, Kitty, had been a feme sole for fifty years before the commencement of the suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ky. 619, 3 B. Mon. 619, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drane-v-gregorys-heirs-kyctapp-1843.