Frazier v. Ison

170 S.W. 977, 161 Ky. 379, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 170 S.W. 977 (Frazier v. Ison) 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
Frazier v. Ison, 170 S.W. 977, 161 Ky. 379, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 83 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Nunn

— Reversing.

This is an action in ejectment instituted by appellant to recover possession of land and $200 damages for timber removed therefrom. When the issues were made up, it appeared that the controversy involved title to only [380]*380a 50-acre survey. The case was submitted to a jury, and they found for appellee. Prom that judgment this appeal is taken.

In April, 1870, George Ison entered upon a survey of 200 acres on Kingdomcome creek, in Letcher county. In January, 1876, Joseph Hall obtained a patent on 4,800 acres, the boundary of which embraced the 200-acre survey of George Ison. George Ison and his son, the appellee, John Ison, claiming through his father, lived upon and have been in the continuous actual adverse possession of the 200-acre tract ever since it was surveyed in 1870, and their title to' it is therefore not disputed.

In September, 1882, George Ison made a survey of the 50-acre tract, which, it is claimed, and, for the purposes of this case, may be admitted, adjoins the 200-acre survey. The Joseph Hall patent is older than and embraces the 50-acre survey.

In August, 1895, Joseph Hall sold the 4,800 acres to D. L. Fields, and in January, 1897, Fields conveyed the same to the appellant, James H. Frazier. Frazier and his grantors have never had more than constructive possession of the fifty acres.

In October, 1890, George Ison, by one deed, sold and conveyed to his son, the appellee, three distinct boundaries, one describing the 200-acre survey, and, as appellee claims, another the 50-acre survey. While there is some doubt as to the 50-acre survey being included, it may be accepted as a fact for purposes of this case.

It must be conceded that, unless John Ison and his father, through whom he claims, have been in continuous, open and actual adverse possession of the 50 acres for more than 15 years, then the title of appellant under the Joseph Hall patent must prevail. George Ison and his son have always lived within the 200-acre survey. Although the boundary of the 50-acre survey is clear-ly marked, yet that alone is not sufficient to constitute adverse possession. Neither will the fact that the prior 200-acre survey was in possession, extend that possession over to and include the adjacent 50 acres surveyed subsequent to the Hall patent, although both surveys were transferred by the same deed.

The only acts of actual adverse possession of the 50-acre survey are the following: Some sixteen or eighteen years prior to the trial of this case, or about the year 1895, a son of appellee cut down some trees with which to build a house, and made about 6,000 rails. No fence was ever [381]*381built around any clearing, if such it could he called, and no land was ever cultivated, nor was it cleared so that it ■coiild be cultivated. About the time the trees were out, the son died, the house was never built, and no further attempt was made to occupy the land. It is proven that shortly after this another son went on the 50-acre tract and put up some of the rails, but not to the extent of making an enclosure of any sort. This son did not remain on the land. Several times since then Ison has had a surveyor run the lines. The sum and substance of the testimony is that some timber was cut and the boundary surveyed.

In Wilson v. Stivers, 4 Dana, 634, the court said:

“It is well settled by repeated adjudications that the settlement and residence of Stivers and those under whom he claims, outside of the elder patent, did not give them possession of the interference. And it has been also repeatedly decided that, under such circumstances, the occasional use of the land within the interference, as by cutting timber on it, though continued for twenty years, does not give such possession as bars the right of entry under the elder patent. ’ ’

To the same effect is Dillard v. McGee, 3 J. J. Mar., 552; Caskey v. Lewis, 15 B. Mon., 27.

In Smith v. Morris, 7 J. J. Mar., 442, the court said:

“Before the junior patentee can acquire such a possession, we deem it essential that he should have entered upon the interference and commenced an improvement of a permanent character, if it be woodland in the wilderness state, and carried on the improvement begun by continued acts, until it shall be completed. If an improvement so made shall be enjoyed until there is twenty years complete from the date of such entry, then the statute may be applied from the date of the entry and commencement of the work; but occasional chopping within the interference and carrying away timber will not do.”

In Trotter v. Cassady, 3 A. K. Mar., 365, this court said on the subject of adverse possession:

“It is necessary that the possession claimed as adverse should be shown to be continued and uninterrupted. Or, in other words, if there is any period during the twenty years in which the person having the right of entry could not find an occupant on the land on whom he could bring and sustain his ejectment, that period cannot be counted against him as part of the twenty years.”

Since it appears that appellee had not had the actual [382]*382and continuous adverse possession of the 50-acre tract, then his only claim to possession is constructive, and comes from the record title of the junior survey. But at that' time, those claiming under the Hall patent were already in the constructive possession of this 50 acres, and the law does not recognize a constructive possession of the same land at the same time in two claimants, and in case of conflict of titles depending on constructive possession, the older title prevails.

In Bowling v. Breathitt Coal, Iron & Lumber Co., 134 Ky., 249, the facts are almost identical with the facts of this case, and the court said:

“So the question comes to this, can a man who is living on a tract to which he has title and which is outside of the plaintiff’s claim, obtain adverse possession of' land within the plaintiff’s older patent by simply taking a deed to it and continuing to live outside of the lap?”

Then, referring to the case of Trimble v. Smith (4 Bibb, 257) and many others cited, the court continued:

“If, in a case like this, a man could, while living on land which he admittedly owned, gain title within an elder patent which adjoined him, by simply marking off a boundary and taking a deed from some one to it, when there was nothing on the land to put the owner on notice of his adverse claim to it, there would be no security for land titles, and the entire doctrine that the settlement of the junior patentee, when without the lap will give him no possession within the senior patent, would have to be abandoned. The plaintiff, having the title to the land, was in the constructive possession of it. The defendant could not defeat this constructive possession by merely living on an adjoining tract of land not included in the plaintiff’s patent, and claiming land within that patent.”

Whitley County Land Company v. Powers, 146 Ky., 801, is, perhaps, the leading case and the latest expression of this court on the subject, and, as the facts of the case at hand are almost identical, we apply the rule there stated and quote as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stephens v. Kidd
181 S.W.2d 688 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1944)
Harmon v. Overton Refining Co.
109 S.W.2d 457 (Texas Supreme Court, 1937)
Kentucky Union Co. v. Beatty
61 S.W.2d 45 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)
Griffith Lumber Company v. Kirk
14 S.W.2d 1075 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)
Phillips v. Alma Coal Co.
7 F.2d 42 (Sixth Circuit, 1925)
Simpson v. Howard
256 S.W. 21 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1923)
Kentucky Coal Lands Co. v. J. D. Hughes Lumber Co.
218 S.W. 1024 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)
Bird v. McHargue
205 S.W. 957 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1918)
Burnett v. Miller
191 S.W. 659 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
Lee v. Pittman
191 S.W. 506 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
Tennis Coal Co. v. Sackett
190 S.W. 130 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1916)
Brewer v. War Fork Land Co.
189 S.W. 717 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1916)
Taylor & Crate v. Asher
286 F. 721 (E.D. Kentucky, 1916)
Pratt v. Boggs
186 S.W. 901 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1916)
Altoona Trust Co. v. Ison
186 S.W. 515 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 S.W. 977, 161 Ky. 379, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-ison-kyctapp-1914.