Elkhorn Coal Corporation v. Bradley

288 S.W. 326, 216 Ky. 599, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 975
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 326 (Elkhorn Coal Corporation v. Bradley) 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
Elkhorn Coal Corporation v. Bradley, 288 S.W. 326, 216 Ky. 599, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 975 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

'Commissioner Sandidre—

Affirming.

Ownership of the coal and minerals in and under a certain 100 acres of land in Floyd county, Kentucky, is in issue herein. Appellees instituted the action to quiet their title, and appellant by counterclaim sought the same relief. The parties trace their title to a common source. William Bradley, through whom both parties claim, appears to have owned a large tract of land in Floyd county; and appellant claims title to the coal and minerals under a deed from him to Walter S. Harkins, dated .June 30, 1890, which purported to convey the minerals in and under his entire boundary, including the 100 acres claimed by appellees, and the right to a conveyanc'e thereof which accrued under an instrument of writing, the effect of which is in controversy, which William Bradley executed and delivered to one R. W. Harris on August 23, 1887, and a supplemental writing endorsed thereon October 26,1889. Appellees claim under what they term a title bond executed and delivered by William Bradley to James Bradley, dated August 24, 1888, and continuous, actual, open, notorious and adverse possession thereunder ever since.

The chancellor upon the trial below adjudged that appellees, who were plaintiffs below, are the owners of the minerals in and under the 100 acres in controversy, quieted their title, and dismissed appellant’s counterclaim. Hence the appeal.

On August 23, 1887, William Bradley, who then owned the legal title and was in possession of a large tract of land estimated to contain 305 acres, executed' and delivered to R. W. Harris the paper under which, as appellant claims, the equitable title and right to a conveyance of the coal and minerals thereunder first arose *601 in favor of its remote grantor, W. S. Harkins. It recited that William Bradley, in consideration of $8.35 paid, and 52% cents per 'acre to be paid upon the acreage of the tract being ascertained by survey to be made by Harris, “on conditions hereinafter stated have sold to R. W. Harris all the coal, metal and mineral products on and under” the land described. The conditions under which the sale was made were: “If the said R. W. Harris, or his assigns, shall not within 6 months from date hereof pay, or cause to be paid to said William Bradley, his heirs-or assigns, the sum of 52% cents per acre, as ascertained by survey of land herein described, then this bond and ail agreements pertaining to same to become void. ’ ’’ It was further provided that if Harris should make payment as specified Bradley worild convey all the coal, metal and mineral products on or under the described tract of land. The most that can be said is that the instrument in question was a conditional sale and agreement to convey, which in effect granted to Harris the option to pur- . chase the tract of land at the price of 52% cents per acre, provided he would exercise the option or perform the conditions within 6 months from its date.

By the instrument itself William Bradley! and R. W. Harris only were made parties to it. William Bradley appears to have signed it by mark, and the names of Riley Bradley and James Bradley appear signed to it immediately under the name of William Bradley. James-Bradley, who so appears to have signed it, is- the same James Bradley to whom William Bradley subsequently conveyed the 100 acre tract in controversy herein, through whom and through which conveyance appelleesclaim the coal and minerals in and under it. The parties hereto take opposing positions as to the significance to' be attached to the fact that James Bradley signed that paper. Appellees insist that he was required to sign it by Harris, to whom the option to purchase the minerals-was granted, because he then was living’ in his own home, separate and apart from his father, on the 100 acre tract included in. the larger boundary, which gave notice of his-claim to ownership, and in order that if the option should be exercised he also could be compelled to join in the deed of conveyance. Appellant contends that James Bradley signed merely as a witness, since he was not made a party to the instrument by its own terms, and that his having- *602 so signed was Ms representation to Harris and those claiming under him that, though living in a separate home on the large boundary of land mentioned in the instrument, he made no claim to ownership of any part of it. Hence that he is estopped. A determination of Avhat effect must be given to the fact that James Bradley signed the instrument in question seems to be unnecessary, because, conceding appellant all that it contends with reference thereto, if James Bradley signed merely as a witness and thereby in effect represented to Harris that though he Avas living in a separate home on the large boundary of land described in the option he made no -claim to ownership of any part of it, that situation could be held to obtain no longer than the instrument which he signed which created it Avas valid. Harris does not appear to have exercised his option to purchase the coal and minerals under the William Bradley tract of land or to have met the conditions imposed upon him by the conditional sale and agreement to convey within six months. From the record herein Harris does not appear to have taken any of the steps required by the terms of his option or conditional purchase within the period of six months from its date. Nothing else appears to have been done until the 26th day of October, 1889, nearly 18 months .after the option had expired, when there Avas endorsed on it a writing which recited receipt of $5.00, in consideration of which the time for surveying' the tract of land was extended 30 days from that date. That endorsement was signed by William Bradley alone, and the record does not establish that James Bradley, through whom appellees claim, had any knowledge that the extension of time was given or that the option which was originally granted to Harris which he had signed as above indicated was in that way attempted to be revived by the parties. The record does not establish that the surveying which Harris Avas to do to establish the boundary and ascertain the acreage of William Bradley’s tract of land was done within the 30' days from the date of the endorsement on the original instrument. The deed by which William Bradley purports to convey the coal .and minerals under his large boundary of land, which included the 100 acres claimed by appellees, was not executed until June 30, 1890, and then was made, not to R. W. Harris, mentioned in the option and endorsement on it, but to W. S. Harkins. No connection between Harris *603 and Harkins is established by the evidence herein except, that Joseph I). Harkins, a son of W. S. Harkins, testified that he found among the papers in his father’s files the original deed from William Bradley to him dated June 30, 1890, which purports to convey the coal and minerals under the entire William Bradley 305 acres, and also the option or conditional contract of purchase above mentioned, with the endorsed extension from William Bradley to B. W. Harris. No assignment of the Harris option to Harkins appears and any connection between the two must be supplied by the mere fact in evidence that the option to Harris and the deed to Harkins were both found among the papers of W. S. Harkins, who died some time since.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 326, 216 Ky. 599, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elkhorn-coal-corporation-v-bradley-kyctapphigh-1926.