Fordson Coal Company v. Potter's Executors

35 S.W.2d 298, 237 Ky. 311, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 585
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 6, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 298 (Fordson Coal Company v. Potter's Executors) 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 Company v. Potter's Executors, 35 S.W.2d 298, 237 Ky. 311, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 585 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson

Reversing.

Mrs. N. J. Potter and J. M. Culton owned the Chastain and Marcnm 200 acre patent on Pish Trap branch in Olay county. J. C. Marcum owned a body of land lying south of this patent. He was cutting some timber which they claimed under their patent. On March 29, 1913, Mrs. Potter filed an action against him praying judgment against him for damages and the quieting of her title. While this action was pending, Marcum made a contract with the Peabody Syndicate by which he agreed to sell the syndicate his land extending up to the dividing ridge between Pish Trap branch and Lunce branch. The Chastain and Marcum patent crosses this ridge and includes some land south of the ridge. The Peabody Syndicate learned this, and refused to accept a deed from Marcum to the top of the ridge. Thereupon, Marcum proposed to Mrs. Potter and J. M. Culton to 'buy the land in their patent south of this ridge at $7.50 an acre. The Peabody Syndicate had as its surveyor J. R. Richards; he surveyed the land; and Mrs. Potter, and J. M. Culton on December 18, 1918, executed .a deed to J. C. Marcum for the 34.1 acres so surveyed by him at $7.50 an acre. Thereupon Peabody Syndicate accepted a deed from Marcum .for the entire boundary he had sold them. The following order was entered in the suits which Mrs. Potter had brought against J. G. Marcum:

“It is agreed by and between the plaintiff, N. 0. Potter and the defendant J. G- Marcum, that each of the above styled actions be.dismissed settled, and that plaintiff pay all the cost in each action.
*313 This agreed settlement is made between the parties in order to enable the party hereto to sell and convey the land from which the timber complained of in said actions was cut; and the plaintiff, N. C. Potter has this day conveyed said land to the defendant, J. C. Marcum, for the consideration of seven dollars ($7.00) per acre paid to the plaintiff, N. C. Potter, and J. M. Culton, who, it is agreed, owns an undivided interest in the said land.”

Richards did not make a survey of the Chastain and Marcum patent, and, as a result, he made a mistake in locating the south line of the Marcum patent, and in fact located it 30 poles north of the true line. The situation is illustrated in the following map in which the lines 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,1 indicate the 200-acre patent. The line A, C, B, indicates the dividing' ridge between the Fish Trap branch and Lunce branch. A, B, indicates the line which Richards surveyed as the south line 'of the patent; A, C, B, A, the 34.1 acres which Richards surveyed.

In 1926 Mrs. Potter and J. M. Culton brought suit against the Fordson Coal Company, which was the vendee of the Peabody Syndicate, asserting title to the land lying south of the line A, B, and between it and the line 4, 5, which is about 50 acres. They alleged, in substance, that they had not conveyed this land, that it was not embraced in the deed, and by an amended petition prayed that certain words in the deed be corrected. The land conveyed is thus described' in the deed, which literally follows Richards’ survey:

“Beginning at a stake in the fourth line of'Chastain and Marcum’s 200-acre patent No. 41608 on top of the ridge between Lunce’s Branch of Elk Creek *314 and Pish. Trap Branch of Red Bird River; thence with the top of said ridge as it meanders. (Here follow over 100 calls running with the ridge, giving course and distance in feet from one tree or natural object to another.) Thence south 38-00 05' East 30.0 feet to a stake, where the top of said ridge intersects the fourth line of Chastian and Marcum’s 200 acre patent No. 41608; thence with said fourth line reversed South 86-00 40' West 3,023.6 feet to the beginning, containing 34.1 acres, more or less.”

Before the deed was made, the land was accurately surveyed to determine the boundary and quantity of the land to be conveyed. The deed follows strictly the survey in boundary and quantity. Marcum paid appellees for 34.1 acres of land. By what rule is the land conveyed by the deed to be determined? These rules have been laid down.

“While lines of a patent, will be extended in. order to Yeach a designated object, this.will not be done where it is evident from all the facts that the surveyor simply made a mistake as to the location of the object; he supposing it to be at one place, when, in fact, it was at another. ” Bryant v. Strunk, 151 Ky. 97, 151 S. W. 381, 383.
“The rule that courses and distances must yield to natural objects and established boundary lines, in fixing the boundaries of lands, does not apply, when it is evident that the call for a natural object or an established boundary line was made, under the mistaken belief that it existed at the point where the surveyor reported it to be, when in fact the natural object and boundary line was not at that point.” Albertson v. Chicago Veneer Co., 177 Ky. 293, 197 S. W. 831, 835.
“The effort always in locating a line called for in a deed of conveyance is to retrace on the land the original survey or location thereof, and all general rules adopted by courts to assist in doing so, including the one relied upon by appellant to the effect that courses and distances give way to called for and known objects, must themselves give way to the original location when that is clearly established, as in this case, by the marked line above referred to.” Profit v. Wentworth Oil Co., 206 Ky. 784, 268 S. W. 549, 550.
*315 “In all such eases, where it comes to locate again the survey so made, the object is to reproduce if possible, or as near as may be, what was originally done in appropriating the land by the survey.” Morgan v. Renfro, 124 Ky. 320, 99 S. W. 311, 313;, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 533.

See, also, Louisville Property Co. v. Lawson, 156 Ky. 294, 160 S. W. 1034; Louisville Cooperage Co. v. Collins, 228 Ky. 269, 14 S. W. (2d) 1090.

It is undisputed that the surveyor in fact ran the lines A, C, B, A, on the plat. He simply made a mistake as to the location of the south line of the patent as shown by the proof, by reason of his running by a paper which by mistake gave the length of the third line of the survey as 49 poles when it should have read 79 poles. The fourth line of the survey lies south of the top of the ridge and does not touch it. The line he ran controls as between the parties to the deed, and the fact that he designates this as running with the south line of the patent does not chang-e the effect of the deed, which is limited to the land he in fact ran off as between the parties to the deed, and as between them the mistake might be corrected.

It remains to determine whether the same rule applies to appellant,'who bought the property from the Peabody Syndicate for value, paid the consideration, and accepted the conveyance of the land from it without any notice that the lines of appellees’ patent had not been correctly located. It earnestly insists that, as against it, appellees are estopped by the deed which they executed to maintain that the line A, B, is not “the fourth line of the Chastain and Marcum’s 200 acre patent” as recited in the deed, since it purchased the land in good faith under the deed and relied on it.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.2d 298, 237 Ky. 311, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fordson-coal-company-v-potters-executors-kyctapphigh-1931.