Hensley v. Lewis

128 S.W.2d 917, 278 Ky. 510, 123 A.L.R. 537, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 442
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 19, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 917 (Hensley v. Lewis) 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
Hensley v. Lewis, 128 S.W.2d 917, 278 Ky. 510, 123 A.L.R. 537, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 442 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court (by

Judge Fulton

Reversing.

In and prior to the year 1921, one H. C. Lewis was the owner of something over 100 acres of land on both sides of a county road in Leslie County known as the Cutshin Road. On January 26,' 1921, he conveyed to James Wooton, then husband of appellant and now deceased, a portion thereof known as lot No. 1, containing about one acre, described as follows: '

“Beginning on the lower corner of Stoke Bowling; thence with meanders of the road to point to be agreed upon by the parties aforesaid; thence up the hill to another point; thence around the hill to the Dan Wooton lot; thence down the hill with said lines to the beginning, said tract containing one acre.”

On December 24, 1921, H. C. Lewis also conveyed to James Wooton lot No. 2 immediately north of and adjoining lot No. 1, containing about one acre, described as follows:

“Beginning at edge of county road; thence running with county road to opposite the corner of lot whore said James Wooton now lives; thence running with county road 8 poles; thence up the hill 20 poles; thence 8 poles around the hill to the fence of the James Wooton; thence with the fence down the hill to the beginning.”

James Wooton conveyed the two above-described tracts to his wife, who has remarried and is now the appellant in this case. In 1931 H. 0. Lewis conveyed to appellee, J. C. Lewis, a boundary containing approximately 100 acres, the exterior lines of which included the two lots previously conveyed to Wooton. There is no question about this, however, since appellee acknowledges ownership in Wooton of the land conveyed to him by H. C. Lewis.

The question presented for decision is, what land was actually embraced in the two deeds to James Woo-ton and what rights the appellant acquired in the public road by which the two lots are bounded on the west.

*513 A new state highway was constructed which ran close to the northwest corner of lot No. 2, and the county road above mentioned intersected this highway a short distance north of the northwest corner of that lot. The appellee, without any proceedings being had for that purpose in the county court, changed the course of the county road so as to intersect the state highway at a point about 80 feet south of the point of the original intersection, the new county road, as located by him, running over his land on the west side of the old county road. Appellee, after the county road was moved, constructed a storehouse building’ which began at the edge of the new state highway and ran back across the old county road and for a distance of approximately six feet beyond the east edge of the old road.

Appellant brought this action, which was originally in ejectment, describing lots 1 and 2 as above and alleging that appellee was in possession of a part thereof. The action was transferred to equity on motion of the defendant. Appellant later filed an amended petition which set out her claims in detail, alleging that the storehouse building was six feet beyond the edge of the old road and on her land; that she was the owner to the center of the old road and that by reason of the abandonment of the old road and the moving thereof to a new location by appellee, she became the owner of all land down to the new location of the county road. This, if true, would result in giving her ownership of the entire store building and a small amount of additional land. The appellee denied the allegations of the petition and also pleaded that appellant was estopped to assert the claim made in this action by reason of the fact that she and her husband stood by and permitted the erection of the store building without making any protest and without asserting any claim to the land on which it was built or any portion thereof. The trial court found that appellee did not have any land owned by appellant in his possession and entered judgment dismissing the petition. This appeal is from that judgment.

The solution of the controversy depends mainly on what was the western boundary of the two tracts conveyed to James Wooton, that is, whether or not his deeds should be construed as conveying to him to the center of the county road. It is appellee’s theory that the two lots were fenced shortly after they were pur *514 chased and that Wooton took title only to the fence which was bnilt by him a few feet east of the eastern or upper edge of the county road. It is appellant’s theory, however, that she has title to the center of the old county road and that these fences do not control and locate the western boundary, since the fences were built as near to the road as possible, there being a steep bank at the edge of the road making it impossible to fence thereto.

The evidence was directed largely towards the proper location of the second corner of the second lot conveyed to Wooton by H. C. Lewis, several surveyors testifying on this question, but we regard the location of this corner as of no great importance. The north and south lines of the two lots were located by fences built shortly after the conveyance of the lots to Wooton, thus establishing the frontage of both lots on .the county road. The northern fence of lot No. 2, called by the parties herein the “lower fence,” begins at a point slightly north of the store building and runs up the hill in a northeasterly direction. This fence was built shortly after the second lot was conveyed to Wooton and definitely establishes that line regardless of the correct theoretical location of corner No. 2 in the description of the second lot. By the building of this fence and acquiescence therein by the parties for a long period of time, this was definitely established as the line. As said in Bain v. Tye, 160 Ky. 408, 169 S. W. 843, the rule for determining what property has been conveyed by a deed, where the description is ambiguous, is that the intention of the parties should generally control, and where the parties have by their acts given a practical construction thereto, the construction so put upon the deed by them may be resorted to to aid in ascertaining their intention. As confirming the correctness of this construction, H. C Lewis stated in his testimony, “The fence that runs down there and past the store is alright..” We therefore have no difficulty whatever in determining that the north line of lot No. 2 is located far enough north to include the store building and that appellant has title to a portion of the land on which the store is built, if the deeds to James Wooton are so construed as to run to the center of the old county road.

In Williams v. Johnson, 149 Ky. 409, 149 S. W. 821, it is said:

“It seems to be the universally recognized rule that *515 the conveyance of land bordering on a pnblic highway conveys title to the center of the highway, subject to its use by the public, whether it is so expressed in the deed or not; and where a conveyance, or a bond to convey, designates the public highway as one of the boundaries of the tract, it will, in the absence of language showing a contrary intention, be construed as including the highway itself to the center or middle thereof.”

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 917, 278 Ky. 510, 123 A.L.R. 537, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hensley-v-lewis-kyctapphigh-1939.