Friel v. Grayson Road Corporation

11 S.W.2d 943, 226 Ky. 794, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 943 (Friel v. Grayson Road Corporation) 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
Friel v. Grayson Road Corporation, 11 S.W.2d 943, 226 Ky. 794, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 176 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas—

Affirming.

'The directions indicated in this opinion, while not absolutely true to the points of the compass, are sufficiently so for an understanding of the facts and for the purposes of the case. For some years prior to 1903, S. P. Brickey owned a tract of land near Ashland, Ky., containing about 45[4 acres. Beginning with that year he commenced to verbally allot portions of it to his children in making a division of it among them, and when he made an allotment the selected donee took possession. The length of the divided tract ran east and west and its width was north and south and it was bordered on the south by a county road known as the Brickey road. Somewhere near the center of the length of the tract a road running *795 north and south intercepted the Brickey road at a right angle, and the land lying west of that road and south of the Brickey road was' owned by the Ferry heirs, the northeast corner of their tract being at the southwest corner of the junction of those two roads, there being no road through the divided tract north of the Brickey road. One of the sons who shared in the allotment so made was Emmett F. Brickey, who on February 6, 1911, received a deed from his father for his portion of the division. The beginning corner of the description of that deed reads:

“Beginning at a corner an iron pipe 3 inches in diameter and 2 feet long, drove.”

Every one connected with this case agrees that the corner so described was on the north line of the Brickey road and the preponderance of the proof locates it at the south terminus of an old cross-fence running north and south and built for the purpose of dividing the Brickey farm into fields. The description then runs east with the road 200 yards and continues around the boundary to the beginning corner, but so as to convey to the vendee therein a passway from his northwest corner some distance west from the cross-fence and along its line, after inclosing the passway, to the beginning corner. In 1912 the elder Brickey executed a deed for the same purposedo his son S. P. Brickey, Jr., whose allotted portion was supposed to lie immediately west of the tract allotted to his son Emmett. In describing the beginning corner in the deed to S. P. Brickey, Jr., these words were used:

“Beginning at an iron pipe on the north side of the road in the line between S. P. Brickey and Ferry’s heirs the same being a corner to Emmett Brickey. ’ ’

That description then runs west from the beginning-corner and the second one from the last goes to the line of Emmett Brickey; thence south therewith to the beginning. ■

Before the filing of this action one of the plaintiffs and appellees, Grayson Road Corporation, purchased the tract conveyed to S. P. Brickey, Jr., together with other portions of the original S. P. Brickey, Sr., tract, with the purpose of subdividing and improving it for residential purposes; but prior to that time Emmett Brickey sold and conveyed the portion of land deeded to him in *796 such division to the appellant and defendant below, Pat Priel. The plaintiff Grayson Road Corporation subdivided the' land and made a plat of it with the necessary streets and alleys .indicated thereon. One of the blocks of the plat was No. 12, and it contained 24 lots, the first 11 of which abutted- on the east the line upon which stood the cross-fence above mentioned and which plaintiffs construed (and we think correctly as will'hereinafter appear) was the west line of the tract conveyed to Emmett Brickey by his father and' then owned by defendant. After improving that subdivision with macadamized streets and concrete walks, plaintiff spent a large sum of money in piping water and gas to and over the entire subdivision, the leading pipes for each of which were as much as a mile in length, and it also constructed to and over the subdivision electric wires for providing electricity for domestic purposes by the purchaser of the lots. The first 11 lots of block No.. 12 of the subdivision were about 125 feet deep and fronted on an open street in the subdivision designated as' Floyd street, the west boundary of which was practically a continuation of the road running north and south and intersecting Brickey road as we have hereinbefore described, and the west line of that street'was also practically opposite the Ferry heirs ’ line hereinbefore referred to. After the subdivision was made the Grayson Road Corporation sold to the other appellee and plaintiff below, Boyd County Realty Company, lots Nos. 8 and 9 in block 12, and it constructed residences thereon at a cost of about $7,000 each. Thereafter defendant concluded that his west line began at a point on the Brickey road opposite the east line of the Ferry-heirs and from thence north so as to take in practically all of the first 11 lots in block 12, including those upon which plaintiff Boyd County Realty Company had constructed its two residences.

That conclusion, however,-was not reached by defendant until he had first demanded of plaintiffs that he be permitted to extend his west line 11 feet over on to the first 11 lots of block 12, because, as he contended, his south line as called for in his deed was 600 feet instead of 589 feet by actual measurement. After that contention made by him was ignored, he then tried to purchase from the Grayson Road Corporation a vacant lot (one of the 11) lying between his west line'and Floyd' street, so as to enable him to reach the water and gas pipes' in it; and to thereby convey those commodities to his prem *797 ises. He was unable to do so and he then tried to induce an employee of the owner to purchase the lot and then convey it to him so that he might accomplish the same purpose, and that effort on his part was likewise unavailing. „ It was after such preliminary moves on his part that he concluded he was the owner of practically all of lots No. 11 in block 12, and that conclusion was rested chiefly, if not entirely, on the description of the beginning corner of the tract conveyed to S. P. Brickey, Jr., by his father, and which was described as being “in the line between S. P. Brickey and Ferry’s heirs, the same being a corner to Emmett Brickey.” After he so interpreted his deed and made the latter contention, and after, as we have said, the subdivision was made and the residences alluded to were constructed, he, without the knowledge of either of the plaintiffs, began the construction of a wire fence running from the northwest corner of the junction of Floyd street with Brickey road, and being the point opposite the line of the Ferry heirs, and which took in as a part of his land practically all of lots 1 to 11 in block 12, including the two residences mentioned.

Immediately following that trespass by him, plaintiffs filed this equity action in the Boyd circuit court to quiet their title to the land so trespassed upon, and to obtain a mandatory order requiring defendant to remove his fence and to enjoin him from further trespasses. The answer was a denial, with a paragraph asserting title in defendant to the involved land, followed by a' prayer that his title thereto also be quieted. The reply denied the affirmative allegations in the answer and also interposed pleas of champerty and estoppel.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 943, 226 Ky. 794, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friel-v-grayson-road-corporation-kyctapphigh-1928.