Finlay v. Granger

9 Ky. 175, 2 A.K. Marsh. 175, 1819 Ky. LEXIS 210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 1, 1819
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ky. 175 (Finlay v. Granger) 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
Finlay v. Granger, 9 Ky. 175, 2 A.K. Marsh. 175, 1819 Ky. LEXIS 210 (Ky. Ct. App. 1819).

Opinion

Judge Owsley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a contest for land under adverse conflicting claims.

By a decision of the circuit court, Finlay was decreed to surrender his legal title derived under an entry of prior date to that under which Granger claims.

Reliance appears not to have been made by Finlay upon the validity of his entry; but if it had, there is nothing in the record upon which, according to the most benign construction, the entry could be sustained.

In reviewing the decree of that court, therefore, our attention will be confined, principally, to the entry under which Granger, the complainant there, asserted the superior equity. It is as follows:—

“December 16, 1783—John Rogers enters 68,728 1/2 acres “of land, upon seven treasury warrants, No. &c. on the wa"ters of Nolin, waters of Green river, to lie joining an en-"try of Jacob Vanmeter and Gill, opposite the mouth of “Valley creek, and south from the same; running thence “south, binding on Larue’s entry of 6000 acres to the south “east corner; also from the said beginning cast, with Van-“meter’s lines to William May’s entry of 400 acres, con-"tinuing up the creek, binding on Henry Funk’s survey, of “500 acres; also on Philips’entry of 400 acres, to the up-“per corner; thence off south so far that a line from the “end of the said line west will include the quantity.”

The first object to which the attention of those who might be desirous of ascertaining the land embraced by this entry would be drawn, is the entry of Vanmeter and [176]*176Gill, But on searching the book of entries, the enquirer would be unable to find an entry in the names of those persons; he would discover, however, that, on the 10th of November, 1783, prior to the date of Rogers’ entry, Samuel Gill made an entry of 1000 acres "on the south west or up-"per side of Nolin, to begin on Nolin opposite the mouth of “Valley creek; thence up the creek 600 poles; thence off “at right angles from the said creek south-westwardly for “for quantity.”

Having found the entry of Gill, and pursuing that, in accordance to the description contained in the entry of Rogers, it lies “on Nolin, opposite the mouth of Valley creek," the enquirer could entertain no reasonable doubt, but that it should be adjoined by the entry of Rogers.

And as Nolin and the mouth of Valley creek are proven to have been generally known at the date of Gill’s entry, there could be no difficulty in ascertaining its position by a survey beginning on Nolin, opposite the mouth of Valley creek, and running up Nolin, with its meanders, 600 poles when reduced to a straight line, and thence off at right angles to the general course of the creek, so far that a line parallel to the general course of the creek, and a line at right angles thereto, from the beginning, will include the quantity.

Having ascertained the position of Gill’s entry, the enquirer would naturally conclude that Rogers’ entry should adjoin it upon the line opposite, and parallel to the general course of Nolin, but at what point upon that line Rogers should begin his entry, is certainly not as clear as it might have been made, and as respects the present contest, as the effect would be the same to begin on any part of the line, is not material to decide. We think, however, that from the call to run from the beginning east with Vanmeter’s line, the locator most probably intended Gill’s south-eastern corner should form the beginning of Rogers’.

In proceeding from the beginning with the calls of Rogers’ entry, the next object that arrest the attention is Larue’s entry of 6000 acres. It is in the following words:

"3d February, 1783—John Larue enters 6000 acres, “&c. joining his 1000 acre tract on Nolin, on every vacant “side—beginning on his south east corner; thence South, “thence east so far as right angles shall include the quanti-"ty of vacant land fit for cultivation."
“On the 7th October, 1780, John Larue entered 1000 [177]*177acres, about eight or nine miles below Summers’ Valley creek, beginning at the mouth of Sandy creek, running up Nolin creek one mile, and up said creek one mile, and thence east and north for quantity.”

Sandy creek is not proven to have possessed notoriety at the date of this entry, but a creek of that name running into Nolin about nine miles below Valley creek, is delineated upon the plat, and as no other creek calculated to deceive, is shewn; an enquirer, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, and pursuing the direction contained in the entry, would be conducted with sufficient certainty to the land embraced by the location.

The 1000 acre entry should be surveyed by lines extended up Nolin with its meanders one mile from the mouth of Sandy creek, when reduced to a straight line, and up Sandy creek from its mouth, with its meanders, one mile, when reduced to a straight line; and from the termination of the distance on Sandy creek, a line should be extended east so far that a line north would include the quantity, by intersecting a line extended east from the termination of the distance on Nolin.

A survey thus made would present a south east corner, at which Larue’s 6000 acre entry should begin.

The 6000 acre entry should be surveyed in a square, with a line extended south so far that a line east, and other lines at right angles, will include the quantity.

By this mode of laying down the 6000 acres, we are aware, that the call “adjoining his 1000 acre tract on every vacant side,” will have no operation; but that call is evidently vague and indefinite, and should not control other express calls, or tend to destroy an entry containing a precise and certain location.

From Rogers’ beginning, therefore, a direct line should be extended to the north east corner of Larue’s 6000 acre entry, and from thence with Larue’s line to his south east corner. By thus extending the line from Rogers’ beginning, there will be a slight departure from the course called for in his entry; but that departure is made unavoidable by the call for Larue, and there is no other rational mode of extending that line by which to comply so aptly with the call, “binding on Larue to his south east corner.”

Pursuing the calls of Rogers, in the order contained in his entry, the next objects to which the attention is drawn [178]*178are William May’s entry of 400 acres, and Henry Funk's survey of 500 acres.

An entry calling for Jacob Funk's entry will be construed to join Henry Funk's, if there be no entry in the name of Jacob,and Henry’s calls corresponding with the entry calling to adjoin it. An entry calling for another, which is vague, partakes of the vagueness of the other to every possible extent;—but for land not within the influence of that uncertainty, it may be good.

May’s entry is as follows:—“10th April, 1783—William “May enters 400 acres, &c. adjoining Jacob Funk’s entry “of 500 acres, about two or three miles below the mouth of “Middle creek, on the lower side, to run out on both sides “of the creek and down the same for quantity.”

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ky. 175, 2 A.K. Marsh. 175, 1819 Ky. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finlay-v-granger-kyctapp-1819.