Griffith v. Griffith's Exr.

153 S.W. 229, 152 Ky. 185, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 632
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 S.W. 229 (Griffith v. Griffith's Exr.) 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
Griffith v. Griffith's Exr., 153 S.W. 229, 152 Ky. 185, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 632 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court, by

Judge Miller.

Affirming.

William Griffith was bom in Bath county, Virginia, in 1813; Agnes H. Gilliland was born there in 1817. In 1840, William Griffith married Mary Sophia Boss, also of Bath county, by whom he had five sons and two daughters, namely, Nathaniel, Charlton, Orlando, John William, Hezekiah, Louisa, and Lucy. Nathaniel and Hezekiah are the only survivors. Lucy died without issue; Louisa left a child, while Charlton, John William and Orlando left one or more children.

In about 1852, William Griffith removed with his family from Bath county, Virginia, to Cedarville, West Virginia, where he remained with his family until about 1861, when he abandoned them and returned to Bath county, where he remained until about 1865. He then disappeared from Bath county. Shortly after his departure from Bath county, his wife and son, Nathaniel, went to Bath county for the purpose of ascertaining what had become of the husband and father, William Griffith. They learned that he had resided in Bath county during the whole of [186]*186the war between the States, but that he had taken a woman and left that county shortly before the arrival .of his wife and son. In the same year of their visit to Bath county, William Griffith reappeared in Cedarville, and remained with his family two- or three months. He then left Cedarville -and went to--Marietta, Ohio. His son Nathaniel found him living in Marietta with Agnes Gilliland, and a man named William Preston Gilliland, and called “Preston,” who was her son. Nathaniel Griffith returned to West Virginia, and some two or three years later he again visited his father, who was then living near Covington, Kentucky, with Agnes Gilliland and her son Preston Gilliland. Nathaniel remained in Kentucky with Ms f ather some two or three months, working on a railroad, and then returned to Cedarville. Two- years later Nathaniel again returned to Covington to visit his father, but failed to find him. He did, however, find 'Sidney Gilliland, Preston’s older brother, living near 'Covington. Sidney was married, and had three children. He told Nathaniel that his father, William Griffith, was in Bock-castle county, Kentucky, and Nathaniel proceeded to Boekcastle county in search of his father. He found Mm there, living with Agnes Gilliland and her son Preston, and remained about a month with them. Nathaniel then returned to' his home in Cedarville, and never saw or heard of or from Ms father again during his lifetime. The date of this visit to Boekcastle county, Kentucky, was about 1875.

During the several visits- of Nathaniel to his father in Kentucky, his father requested him not to disclose his whereabouts to his- wife, Mary -Sophia Griffith, promising Nathaniel if he would obey him in -this respect, he would give Nathaniel whatever property he had at -his- dleath. William Griffith further told his son Nathaniel that he had never married Agnes-, and would never do so.

Mary Sophia Griffith died in Virginia in 1885.

William Griffith died in Garrard county, Kentucky, on February 18, 1887. It subsequently appeared that the illicit .relation 'between William Griffith and Agnes Gilliland had begun prior to-1837; -had continued practically, without intermission, from that date until his death in 1887, a period of more than 50' years-, and that Sidney and Preston Gilliland were the issue of that relation.

[187]*187Sidney Gilliland, the oldest child of this illicit love, was born in 1837, while William Preston Gilliland, the younger, was born May 29,1840, about four months after the marriage of Ms father to Mary Sophia Ross. It does not appear when Sidney and William Preston Gilliland assumed the name of Griffith, but neither they nor their mother had assumed that name in 1863, at which time Preston Gilliland, then a soldier in the Confederate Army, and encamped before Richmond, Va., wrote a letter to Ms mother; in wMch he addressed her as “Mrs. Agnes Gilliland,” and signed himself as “Wm. P. Gilliland.”

Upon their removal to Kentucky, it seems that Agnes Gilliland took the name of Griffith, and during their residence in Kentucky, she went as the wife of William Griffith, and was treated by th)e public as entitled to that po^ sition..

In 1884, William Griffith bought a farm of 100 acres in Garrard county from Miriam Patterson, and he and Agnes and Preston moved upon it, and continued to live there until the father’s death in 1887. After his father’s death, Preston continued to live upon the farm with his mother, and managed it as he had theretofore done, until her death in 1901. William Griffith had died intestate. In 1891, Preston Griffith bought what is known as the Todd farm for $4,000.00; and subsequently, in 1892, he raised a part of the purchase money by giving a mortgage upon the Patterson farm, which Ms father, William Griffith, owned at the time of his death. In the mortgage Preston refers to the land wMch he therein mortgaged as being “the same land conveyed to me by Miriam Patterson.” Preston subsequently paid this indebtedness, >and seems also to have paid a part of the purchase money of the original Patterson place, which had been conveyed to his father. Preston died on July 28, 1908, leaving a will by which, after making three specific devises aggregating $1,700.00, he gave the remainder of his estate to Ms brother, Sidney Griffith. He appointed the appellee, W. T. Champ, as his executor, with full power to sell and convey his real estate'. The will speaks in general terms, and devises to his brother .Sidney “all the remainder of all properties wMch I own or may own at the time of my death.”

On October 17, 1908,. this action was brought by the heirs of Sidney Griffith against Champ, executor, to recover the Patterson farm and the Todd farm, and on [188]*188March 25, 1910, Nathaniel Griffith and Hezekiah Griffith, uniting with the heirs of the other children of William Griffith by his legal wife, Mary Sophia, filed their cross-petition herein, claiming the Patterson farm as the heirs at law of William Griffith, deceased. The executor defended the title of Preston Griffith to the Patterson farm, under a plea of adverse possession by Preston Griffith since the death of his father in 1887, while the Virginia heirs claim that Preston’s adverse holding began only with the death of his mother, Agnes, in 1901. The.circuit judge sustained the claim of the children of Sidney Griffith, and dismissed the cross-petition of the Virginia heirs, upon the ground that Preston Griffith had held the title to the Patterson farm “by adverse possession, and the said alleged cause of action set forth in the petition of Nathaniel Griffith and others is barred by the statute of limitations.” From that judgment Nathaniel Griffith and the other Virginia cross-petitioners prosecute this appeal.

The claim was originally made that Preston Griffith by his use and occupation of the Patterson farm without ’rent, before and after his father’is death, had acquired the money with which to buy the Todd farm; and the Virginia claimants sought also to recover the Todd farm, for that reason. That claim, however, has been abandoned, and we have here to determine only their claim to the Patterson farm.

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Related

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221 S.W. 228 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W. 229, 152 Ky. 185, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-griffiths-exr-kyctapp-1913.