Fordson Coal Co. v. Napier

88 S.W.2d 985, 261 Ky. 776, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 750
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 20, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 985 (Fordson Coal Co. v. Napier) 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
Fordson Coal Co. v. Napier, 88 S.W.2d 985, 261 Ky. 776, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 750 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Affirming..

This suit involves the title to a small tract of land in. Leslie county, which the Fordson Coal Company claims, is included in the Sizemore and Gibson 200-acre patent owned by it. The appellant filed an equity action in the Leslie circuit court against the appellees, and in its-petition averred that they were trespassing upon a portion of its land by wrongfully cutting timber therefrom, and it sought to enjoin them from continuing to do so- and to recover damages for the trespasses they had already committed. It also asked that it be adjudged to be the owner of the land. The appellees in their answer asserted title in themselves to the land upon which the alleged trespasses were committed, and denied appellees’ alleged title thereto. Upon submission of the case, the court dismissed appellant’s petition, thereby determining that it was not the owner of the land in controversy.

"When the patent was granted, the land was located in Clay county, and the survey was made by Alex "W. Chastain, the county surveyor. The surveyor’s certificate was filed August 29, 1870, and the patent, known as patent No. 44844, was issued February 16, 1871. The land was thus described in the surveyor’s certificate:

“Beginning* on four beeches and an elm 60 poles below the mouth of Little Laurel fork the beginning corner to a 100 acre survey made for Joseph S. Gilbert and Moses S. Gilbert thence with a line of said 100 acres N. 55 E. 40 poles to a stake a corner to said 140 acres thence with said line S. 35 E. 60 poles to a stake in said line thence N. 55 E. 160-poles to a stake on the divide between Short Creek and the waters of the Little Laurel fork thence with said divide S. 35 E. 260 poles to a stake on said divide thence S. 55 W. 400 poles passing at-Ed. Sizemore’s Rockhouse to a stake on the divide between Little -Stinnett fork, Little Laurel fork and the Trace branch of Lambs Tongue Hollow of Main. *778 Laurel fork thence with said divide N. 35 W. 250 poles to a stake a corner to a 100 acre survey made for said Sizemore and Gibson thence with a line of said 100 acres N. 35 W. 200 poles to a stake a corner to said 100 acres thence with another line of the aforesaid 100 acres N. 55 E. 160 poles to the beginning.”

Accompanying the certificate was a plat made by the surveyor. The description of the land in the patent is the same as the description in the surveyor’s certificate, except that the fifth call reads:

“Thence S. 55 W. 400' poles passing Ed. Size-more’s Rockhouse to a stake on the divide between Little Stinnett fork, Little Laurel fork and the Trace branch of Lambs Tongue Hollow of Main Laurel fork.”

It will be noted that the word “at,” which appears in the surveyor’s certificate, was omitted from the description of the land in the patent.

Three surveyors, who had surveyed and platted the Sizemore and Gibson patent, No. 44844, testified at the trial of the case; one as a witness for appellant, and two as witnesses for the appellees. Each filed a map as .an exhibit with his deposition, and these maps were referred to frequently in the evidence and have been referred to in briefs of counsel. It appears that all of the original maps were lost. What purport to be copies of two of the maps have been filed, but it is apparent that the colors and numbers on the substituted maps differ from those used at the trial, which makes it difficult to grasp the significance of some of the evidence and many of the statements in the briefs. Most of the uncertainty, however, is as to the • proper location of lines of the original survey which have no bearing on this controversy. The correct determination of the issue presented by this appeal depends solely upon the location of the fifth line of the patent. All parties agree on the location of the beginning point, and they agree as to the location of the first and second lines of the patent. From that point they are unable to run out the survey and make it close without changing materially the bearings or distances, or both, and they are unable to agree , as to where and how these changes shall be made. All parties agree that the original surveyor actually sur *779 veyed only the first, and second lines, and from that-point located the survey by protraction. In running the third call which reads, “N. 55 E. 160 poles to a stake on the .divide between Short Creek and the waters of the Little Laurel fork,” C. H. Queen, who surveyed, the land for appellant, altered the bearing and distance-to S. 87 E. 183 poles in order to reach the divide between Short creek and the waters of the Little Laurel fork. J. M. Culton, who surveyed the land for appellees, shortened the distance to 75 poles, and reached a point on the ridge between Potato Knob branch and Laurel fork. The fourth call of the patent reads: “Thence with said divide S. 35 E. 260 poles to a stake on said divide.” In order to reach the fifth corner called for by the patent, the appellant’s surveyor ran from the fourth corner fixed by him in a southwesterly direction, not in a straight line, but following the ridge, a distance of 265 poles. Culton ran a straight line from the fourth corner fixed by him, but changed the-bearing 10 degrees and extended the distance to 283. poles. He reached the same point as Queen, however, for the fifth corner. W. H. Mattingly, who also surveyed the land for appellees, but whose map is not in the record, fixed the fifth corner at the same location. His third and fourth lines coincided approximately with the lines as surveyed by Queen. The fifth line is the only one which affects the land in dispute. No two of the surveyors agree upon the location of the sixth corner. The fifth line of the survey reads thus in the original certificate upon which the patent was issued: “Thence S. 55 W. 400 poles passing at. Ed. Sizemore’s Roekhouse to a stake on the divide between Little Stinnett fork, Little Laurel fork and the Trace branch of' Lambs Tongue Hollow of Main Laurel fork.” It is appellant’s contention that the last part of this call mentions a monument which controls the line, and it therefore disregards the reference to Ed Sizemore’s rock-house and alters the bearing and distance of the line and runs straight from the fifth corner to the top of the divide between the three water courses referred to in the call. Queen’s fifth line, instead of running S. 55 W. 400 poles, runs S. 20 W. 224 poles, and passes Ed Sizemore’s rockhouse at a distance of more than one-fourth of a mile. Culton followed the bearing called for in the original certificate of survey, but he shortened the distance to 215 poles and fixed the sixth corner *780 at a point on the divide between Big and Little Laurel forks. . Tbe line as run by Culton excludes tbe land in ■controversy from tbe Sizemore and Gibson patent, No. •44844.

In 1890, J. L. Lewis, a surveyor, was employed by ■one of appellant’s predecessors in title to locate this patent. He located tbe fifth corner at the same point fixed by Culton, Mattingly, and Queen. He ran the fifth line to Ed Sizemore’s rockhouse following the bearing called for in the original certificate of survey, and made that the sixth corner to the survey.

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487 S.W.2d 937 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1972)
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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.2d 985, 261 Ky. 776, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fordson-coal-co-v-napier-kyctapphigh-1935.