Gentry v. Piercy

193 S.W. 1017, 175 Ky. 174, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 193 S.W. 1017 (Gentry v. Piercy) 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
Gentry v. Piercy, 193 S.W. 1017, 175 Ky. 174, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 276 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Miller

Reversing.

[176]*176This is a contest over the appellant’s right to use a spring located upon appellees ’ land.

When James Wade, of Metcalfe county, died in 1864, he owned a farm of 340 acres. He left surviving him- a widow and several children, Mrs. Martha Charlton- and Mrs. Williams, the wife of Jabez Williams, being two of them.

In a partition suit instituted in 1867, fifty acres adjoining a dower tract of 117 acres, was allotted to Mrs. Charlton. A spring was located upon the Charlton tract, about 30 feet from the division line between that tract and the dower tract, and about 60 yards from the Wade residence. The water seeps through the surface at a point upon the dower tract, forming what is called the “sink hole spring.” The stream soon disappears, however, and again appears below in what is called the big spring, upon the Charlton tract. This last named spring is the subject of this controversy.

James Wade had, for many years before his death, lived in a residence located upon what afterwards became the dower tract; and, he had used the big spring as an appurtenance to his residence for a period which extended beyond the memory of any of the witnesses;— beginning at least seventy-five years ago.

In 1876, Jabez Williams bought the dower tract and moved upon it; and the sisters, Mrs. Charlton and Mrs. Williams, continued to live upon these adjoining tracts until Mrs. Williams’ death in 1898.

In former days the occupants of the James Wade residence had cleaned out the sink hole spring and had taken water therefrom for household purposes by means of a “telegraph” system which carried the water to the house over a wire after the bucket had been raised by a windlass. This use had, however, been discontinued many years ago.

On January 4, 1899, the appellant, George N. Gentry, bought the Williams (dower) tract of 117 acres; moved upon it, and has lived in the James Wade residence continuously ever since. Gentry sold fifty acres of his tract, but still owns 67 acres upon which the residence is located.

When Gentry bought the Williams tract the big spring was enclosed within the bam yard lot; and, he testified that he then thought the spring was upon his land. At any rate, he continued to use it for stock water [177]*177continuously and without objection, until September, 1914. About thirty-five years ago, John Charlton, the husband of Martha Charlton, built a division fence which placed the big spring within the Charlton enclosure.

In 1901, Mrs. Charlton conveyed her fifty-acre tract to her niece, the appellee, Daisy Piercy, reserving to herself, however, a life-estate. In 1902, Mrs. Charlton died, and Martha Piercy, as guardian, thereupon took possession of the Charlton fifty-acre tract.

On September 15, 1914, the appellee, Martha C. Piercy, as guardian of her daughter, Daisy Piercy, built a woven wire fence across the passway which led from Gentry’s bam lot to the big spring, thereby completely cutting him off from the use of it. At that time Gentry had upon his farm six horses and ten head of cattle, besides his milch cows, that were dependent upon the big spring for water. Some years before Gentry had dug a well near his residence; but it was a weak stream and furnished water barely sufficient for household purposes. As a result of this deprivation, Gentry was compelled to move about one-half of his stock to another tract of land he owned about a mile away. Under this arrangement Gentry was compelled to send a man each morning and evening to the other farm for the purpose of feeding and watering the stock; and, this he continued to do from September 1914 until the next spring, a period of about four months, and until the wire fence was removed pursuant to an order in this case.

On December 31, 1914, Gentry brought this action against Daisy Piercy and her guardian, claiming a right-of-way to the spring and the use of the water thereof, and asking that the defendants be enjoined from interfering with him in the exercise of that right. He also asked for $125.00 damages, for being unlawfully deprived of the use of the spring.

A large amount of proof was taken; and upon a trial the chancellor dismissed the petition. Gentry appeals.

The proof shows, without contradiction, that James Wade and those who held under him had used the big spring located upon'the Charlton tract, in connection with his residence located upon the Gentry tract, for a period of at least seventy years before the erection of the wire fence in September, 1914. Gentry had owned the James Wade residence and had used the big spring [178]*178in connection therewith for nearly sixteen years before the wire fence was erected, and was so using the house. and spring when Daisy Pierey obtained her title to the Charlton tract, in 1901.

Gentry rests his right to the use of the spring upon the fact that it was an appurtenance attached to the residence of James Wade and necessarily and impliedly went with the Williams tract, when the Wade farm was divided between the heirs in 1867; and also upon the further fact that having used the spring and the passway thereto under a claim of right for more than fifteen years, he has, independent of the first ground relied upon, acquired an easement in the use of the spring and the passway thereto, by prescription.

The appellees meet the first claim of an easement in the spring and the water therefrom as appurtenant to Gentry’s land under an implied grant, by showing that many years ago — the exact date is not given, but when Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Charlton were living upon these two adjoining places — Mrs. Charlton threatened to prevent Mrs. Williams from further using the big spring, and that Mrs. Williams bought from her sister the right to use the spring during the life of Mrs. Williams. It is alleged and shown that in payment for this right Mrs. Williams removed an old log cabin that was located upon her place and attached it to Mrs. Charlton’s house, as a kitchen. And, as an estoppel to Gentry’s claim by prescription through his own use for more than fifteen years, appellees alleged in their answer, and have shown, by proof, that Gentry stated on one or more occasions that he was using the water from the big spring with , the consent of Peter Pierey, the father of Daisy Pierey.

The alleged trade between Mrs. Charlton and Mrs. Williams was never reduced to writing, and was made long before Gentry bought the Williams tract in 1899; and, he knew nothing of it at the time he bought. Gentry stoutly denied that he ever used the water from the big spring with the consent of anybody, insisting that he used it as a matter of right, and that Peter Pierey had no- right to grant the use of the water, to anybody.

In Rollins v. Blackden, 112 Me. 459, Ann. Cas. 1917 A 878, the court, in considering this question at some length, said: ...

[179]*179“An easement to take water from another’s spring or well is an incorporeal hereditament. It may he created by grant or by prescription.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 S.W. 1017, 175 Ky. 174, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gentry-v-piercy-kyctapp-1917.