France v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

160 S.W. 757, 156 Ky. 126, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 372
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 757 (France v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.) 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
France v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 160 S.W. 757, 156 Ky. 126, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 372 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

This action of ejectment involves the title to, and possession of, a parcel of ground twenty-five and seven-tenths feet in width and one hundred feet in length, lying in front of an enclosed half acre lot, in the town of More-head, owned and occupied as a place of residence by the appellant, Luke France.

The petition sets forth the boundary of the half-acre lot and of the parcel in controversy lying in front thereof, and alleges appellant’s ownership of both; also, that the appellee has wrongfully taken possession of the strip of ground in controversy by constructing two sidetracks thereon; the last leaving a space of but four or six feet between its outer rail and the line of the half acre lot. By the prayer of the petition, judgment is asked for the recovery of the ground in controversy and damages for the appellee’s alleged wrongful possession and detention thereof.

The answer denies appellant’s title to the parcel of ground in controversy and alleges appellee’s ownership and rightful possession thereof, under title acquired by deed of date November 11, 1880, from John Hargis, the [128]*128then- owner thereof, to the Elizabethtown, Lexington & Big Sandy Railroad Company, appellee’s predecessor and vendor, and by deed from the latter, of a later date, to appellee.

On the trial of the case in the court below .and after the introduction of all the evidence, the jury, in obedience to a peremptory instruction from the court, returned a verdict in favor of appellee. Appellant filed a motion and grounds for a new trial, which was over-; ruled, and from the judgment entered upon the verdict, he prosecutes this appeal.

It. is manifest from the evidence in the record that appellant has no title to the ground in controversy, unless it lies outside of the boundary of the six and half acres of land conveyed, by the deed of John Hargis of; November 11, 1880 to the Elizabethtown, Lexington & Big Sandy Railroad Company, and by the latter to appellee. This was the view taken of the case by the trial court, and the peremptory instruction directing a verdict for appellee was given upon the theory that the evi-' dence introduced in appellants’ behalf, not only failed to show that the ground in controversy was outside of the. boundary of the Hargis deed, but that the evidence, as a whole, clearly showed it to be within the boundary of the Hargis deed, which, consequently, sustained appellee’s claim of title thereto. In this conclusion, we concur.

The Hargis deed not only describes the six and a half acres, conveyed to appellee’s vendor, by metes and bounds, courses and distances, but further- describes it as extending fifty feet on either side from the middle of the main railroad track; and it is patent, from the language of the deed, that the main track had been constructed, or at any rate surveyed and located, prior to the execution of the conveyance. After this deed was made, Hargis conveyed several different tracts of land abutting upon appellee’s right of way. Among these, was the half acre lot of ground upon which appellant now resides, which was conveyed by deed from Hargis to John Strider, by Strider to Richard Peyton, and by the latter to appellant. These deeds were all made after that from Hargis to appellee’s vendor of date, November 11, 1880, and ever since the execution of the deed of November 11, 1880, the location of the lines of appellee’s right of way, as described and fixed thereby, according to the evidence, have been universally accepted [129]*129until appellant, shortly before the institution of his action, set up claim to the parcel now in controversy lying immediately in front of his half acre lot. It further appears from the evidence that such claim was not mad.9 by appellant until appellee, in order to handle its increased traffic, found it necessary to, and did, construct, on the ground in controversy and other portions of its right of way, at each end thereof, two additional tracks for the use of its cars. The last of these tracks and the one lying nearest to appellant’s lot is known as an “interchange” track; that is, a track upon which loaded cars of freight are placed for removal by a connecting carrier, the Morehead & Northfork railroad, which has but. lately been constructed.

It is to be borne in mind that appellant and appellee derived title to their respective lands from a common source, John Hargis being the grantor of both. It is evident that the front line of appellant’s lot cannot be located within the line of the deed from John Hargis to appellees’ vendor, because his deed, and those of his vendors, Strider and Peyton, called to run with the line of the Hargis deed on the south side of the main railroad track; and the only evidence introduced in his behalf which tended to show that the boundary of appellant’s deed included the land in controversy, was furnished by the testimony of one Cassity, who, previous to the institution of the action, made a partial survey of the lines of the Hargis deed, at appellant’s request. Cassity attempted to survey but two of the calls in the deed from Hargis to appellee’s vendor; and, while endeavoring to find the line on the south side of the main track for which appellant’s deed calls, he ran by the calls of the deed from Hargis to appellee’s vendor, S. 22 degrees, 11 minutes E., a distance of, perhaps, 1,247 feet and, by some calculation for variation of the compass, apparently so fixed the line as to leave the ground in controversy within the boundary of the appellant’s deed; according to his own admission, this running of the south line was without regard to the requirement contained in the deed from Hargis to appellee’s vendor, that it must be run and established “fifty feet parallel with and from the center of said railroad”, which, if done, would have included the ground in controversy in appellee’s right of way.

[130]*130" Tt, however, appears from the evidence, that -.Cassity, during the progress of the trial, by direction of the court, made the measurement from the center of the main or original railroad track, directly in front of appellant’s lot, and thereby found that the track nearest the line of appellant’s lot, (i. e., the interchange track) is situated wholly within the fifty feet mentioned in the deed from Hargis and wife to appellee’s vendor. Other witnesses introduced by appellant, two or three of whom have lots situated on a line with appellant’s lot and bordering on appellee’s right of way, and have by suit, set-up claim to such parts thereof as lie in front of their respective lots, testified as to the location of the south line of appellee ’s right of way and fixed it as claimed by appellant. But others, including the witnesses, Day and Carey, established the line as claimed by appellee, by identifying certain objects and monuments which were built upon the right of way many years ago, such as a section house, windmill, old depot, etc. In addition, Carey, a former postmaster at Morehead and county judge of Rowan County, who has lived in the community since 1874 and has all along been thoroughly acquainted with the-lines of appellee’s right of way, testified that he, at one time, owned several- of the lots abutting upon the fight of way and situated on a line with appellant’s lot, and that the front line of the lots formerly owned by him and of that owned by appellant has always been recognized and known to be fifty feet from the center of appellee’s main line of track.

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Related

France v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.
185 S.W. 815 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1916)
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Gillespie
177 S.W. 451 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 757, 156 Ky. 126, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/france-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-kyctapp-1913.