Ford Motor Co. v. Potter

330 S.W.2d 934
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 11, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 330 S.W.2d 934 (Ford Motor Co. v. Potter) 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
Ford Motor Co. v. Potter, 330 S.W.2d 934 (Ky. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

MOREMEN, Judge.

Appellants, Ford Motor Company and Fordson Coal Company, hereinafter called Ford, have appealed from a judgment wherein Barton S. Potter and others, hereinafter called Potter, were adjudged to be the owners of a tract of land lying on the headwaters of Ulysses Creek and of Lower Jack’s Creek in Clay County. A ridge separates the two watersheds, and the land, involved here is divided by it into east and west parts. About three-fourths of the land is situated on Lower Jack’s Creek, —or Jaw Bone, its tributary — and the remaining one-fourth on Ulysses Creek.

Ford claims complete chain of title to the property by reason of a senior patent issued to Chastain and Marcum (No. 41603 —surveyed September 9, 1868) and to De Groot (Nos. 44338, 44349, and 44351 — surveyed April 13, 1870). Potter claims under a junior grant issued to Jesse Eversole for 100 acres. The Eversole patent is No. 45741 and was issued by the Commonwealth on September 30, 1871, as the result of an appropriation by survey made January 5, 1871, on a warrant from the Clay County Court issued to Justine Ev-ersole and assigned by her to her son, Jesse Eversole, who was the patentee. Therefore, Ford is claiming under a senior patent, and Potter under a junior patent.

KRS 56.190 (prior to 1944) provided that every patent, insofar as it embraced land previously patented, was void. A statute of such substance had been in effect for many years — at least since 1835. Warfield Natural Gas Company v. Danks, 271 Ky. 452, 112 S.W.2d 674. The General Assembly of 1944 amended subsection (2) of KRS 56.190 by adding “unless the previous entry, survey, or patent itself is void; in which case the first subsequent lawful entry, survey, or patent, whether issued before, on, or after June 13, 1944, shall be valid * * In Day v. Knuckles, 297 Ky. 157, 179 S.W.2d 220, 222, it was remarked : “The amendment purports retroactive effect,” but it was not found neces[936]*936sary to pass upon its constitutionality. The act was amended, we suppose, because in a great number of opinions, this Court had stated without qualification that a junior patent on land covered by a senior patent is void. This rule also had been supplemented by cases in which it was held that land which had been embraced in a void patent could not again be patented as vacant or unappropriated land. Eastern Ky. Land Co. v. Ferguson, 65 S.W. 830, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 43; Kirk v. Williamson, 82 Ky. 161, 6 Ky.Law Rep. 108; and Stoffler v. Edgewater Coal Co., 198 Ky. 523, 249 S.W. 753. We have not, however, treated junior patents as being without value. They have been useful in situations such as where a junior patentee obtains posses-sory interest in the land by adverse dominion, and by the junior patent proves the boundary of his claim. Gatliff Coal Co. v. Lawson, Ky., 247 S.W.2d 375.

The junior patent in this case has such a use although we believe the decision should be controlled, not by KRS 56.190, but by KRS 56.200. This latter section, which has seldom been invoked during the course of the massive land litigation of this state, reads:

“An actual settler on any vacant and unappropriated land has a preemption right to any number of acres, not exceeding one hundred, to be laid off as nearly as possible in a square, his improvements in the center. Before any other person shall locate the same land, three months’ notice of intention to do so must be given to the actual settler, describing the land intended to be taken up or appropriated. If the actual settler does not within three months from the giving of such notice, have the land entered and surveyed preparatory to obtaining a patent for it, the person giving the notice may enter and survey the land and proceed to obtain the patent.”

The prime inquiry in this case concerns the legal status of an actual settler on vacant unappropriated land in this Commonwealth under the above statute.

Narration of the facts should begin with the troubled Civil War period. Woolery Eversole lived with his wife and family in what was then Clay, now Leslie, County on what was then known as Old Cow Branch of Caney Fork. Soon after war broke over the country, the community in which they lived was subjected to raids, foraging and pillaging from guerillas and other marauding bands. Woolery Eversole decided to enlist in the Union Army but before leaving he desired to find a safe place for his family to live. He found such a place on land which is the subject of this suit and which at that time was one of the wildest and most remote sections of the county, and there he settled his family. He enrolled in the army, was mustered into service January 15, 1862, and died October 7 of the same year in a hospital at Nashville, Tennessee.

On the land a house was built, some acres of land were cleared about it and an orchard was set out. Even now the chimney rocks are there; the clearing is still discernible and some of the apple trees are still standing. This was on the Ulysses side of the ridge.

Some time thereafter another member of the clan, John Estep, built a cabin on the Jack’s Creek side of the ridge which he inhabited for a short time. Justine Eversole’s son, Jesse, lived with his mother on Ulysses Creek until his marriage on January 19, 1870, at which time he moved into the cabin which had been built by his uncle, John Estep, and thereafter Jesse built a new house, cleared a substantial area, planted an orchard and performed other duties of husbandry. He lived there until the land was sold to Bowling in 1880.

We believe it may be fairly concluded from the evidence that the Eversoles continuously lived on and cultivated the land from 1862 to 1880. It is best to point out here that the land awarded Potter by the lower court amounted to about seventy [937]*937acres. This was due to the fact that the trial court held the title claimed by Ford to a part of it, under the Chastain and Marcum grant, was good because of a previous deed by one of the Potters’ remote grantors. Potter apparently concedes that this is so and it will not be necessary for us to discuss this phase of the case.

The claim of the De Groot grants which were surveyed April 13, 1870, and patented in September of the same year requires some discussion. It appears that De Groot and his associates patented vast areas of land in eastern Kentucky by a method of surveying a base line for many miles and annexing to this base line two hundred acre surveys on both sides. One of these base lines passed through the Lower Jack’s Creek and Ulysses Creek watersheds, and one of the two hundred acre surveys, which was projected, covered the ground which had been settled by the Eversoles.

There was no attempt made by Ford to prove that De Groot, before the surveys were made, gave notice to Jesse Eversole or his mother, Justine, of his intention to appropriate the land.

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Bluebook (online)
330 S.W.2d 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-motor-co-v-potter-kyctapp-1959.