Hill v. Kerr

125 S.W.2d 1005, 277 Ky. 105, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 618
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 1005 (Hill v. Kerr) 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
Hill v. Kerr, 125 S.W.2d 1005, 277 Ky. 105, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 618 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

Robert Hill, here the appellant, filed this suit in the Whitley circuit court against Fred Kerr and wife, Harriet Kerr, and Will Petry and wife, Sally Ann Petry, wherein he alleged and charged that each of them was claiming about one-half acre of his land.

It appears that there is no connection between the appellant’s claim of title against the land of the Kerrs and that against the land of the Petrys, or, that is, his claims represent entirely separate controversies unrelated to each other.

If the defendants have been misjoined in the one .action, no objection having been raised before making defense, the failure to make motion at proper time operates as a waiver. Bryant v. Stephens, 82 S. W. 423, 26 Ky. Law Rep. 718.

Appellant, by his petition, alleged that he is +he owner of a certain parcel of land, as.therein described and set out, located in Whitley county, Kentucky, and -that two of his neighbors, the defendants, Kerr and Petry, who respectively own separate farms adjoining’ his, were each claiming about one-half acre of land adjoining and properly embraced within the exterior boundary of his land.

As stated above, there is no sort of connection, in title or claim, between Kerr and Petry as to the separate farms respectively owned by them and each of wMch, in part, borders on the Hill farm.

*107 The defendants each filed a separate answer. The defendants, Kerr and wife, by their answer denied, on information or belief, that Hill owned any part of the land described in his petition, or, more particularly,, that he owned any land within the defendants’ boundary, even if the Hill deed, by its calls as to actual courses and distances, included the one-fourth of an acre of the Kerr land sued for.

The defendants, Petry and wife, by their answer likewise traversed the petition and further pleaded that plaintiff and defendants had agreed upon establishing- and rebuilding a conditional line, fence between their farms and that plaintiff had nimself pointed out and designated the course and location of the agreed line and fence and had driven the stakes by which it was to be located and built, it being further agreed that plaintiff should build Ms half or portion of said line fence and that the remaining part should be 'built by these defendants; that in compliance with said agreement, defendants had built the line fence upon that portion of the partition line as agreed upon and that they had not claimed nor encroached upon any lands- not owned by them and not upon their side of the partition line fence,, etc.; and that by reason of the agreement and conduct of plaintiff, in causing the partition line fence to be constructed where it is now located, he is now estopped from holding out or claiming that the true line separating the lands of plaintiff and defendants is located at any other place than that upon which it was agreed, said fence should be and was constructed.

We will now turn our attention to a consideration, of the Kerr branch of these two controversies alleged, and presented in the petition.

The testimony introduced by plaintiff in his own. behalf, by his brother, Aaron Hill, and also by his surveyor, Moore, is to the effect that an old fence had stood for years on the division line between the two farms at this point where Hill is claiming Kerr has crossed over the line and fenced in and taken over one-fourth of an. acre of his land.

Appellant’s contention in support of this claim is that if the actual courses and distances called for in Ms deed be surveyed out, a triangle, containing one-fourth of an acre of his land and included in the exterior calls of Ms deed, will be shown to have been fenced in and *108 .included in the adjoining Kerr field by the new fence as now located.

In support of such contention, he alleges ownership in himself and to sustain such allegation he first introduced a number of deeds executed by his brothers and sisters and also three deeds made to his father, A. B. Hill, under which he has acquired and holds title to the farm. Further, plaintiff introduced as his witness Mr. Moore, whom he had employed to survey the boundary lines of his farm and who testifies that, by running the lines only by the calls of Hill’s deeds, it is shown that about one-fourth of an acre of Hill’s land has been taken and is included within the fence which Kerr contends marks the division line between their farms.

On this point, Aaron Hill, a brother of plaintiff and testifying for him, states that he has been acquainted with plaintiff’s farm for a long time, some fifty years', and knows the land adjoining that Fred Kerr •claims he owns; that he was acquainted with the old fence, alike referred to in the deeds under which plaintiff and defendants respectively claim title to these adjoining lands; and that, while this old fence, located on their division line, was rebuilt about twenty-five or thirty years ago, the new fence, replacing it, was placed on practically the same line, because plaintiff’s- father, A. B. Hill, in rebuilding his part of the division fence, put the new ground rails from the creek to the top of the .hill, but “didn’t put them exactly in the same bed of the fence” and in some places went across the main fence bed; that he'didn’t know how much it was changed, but sometimes it “went half on one side and half on the other,” but further testified that the new fence is practically in the same place as the old line fence which it replaced.

Further, B. P. Sawyers, when testifying as the defendant Kerr’s witness, states 'that this new division fence ^ line, replacing the old rail fence which marked the division line some twenty-five to thirty years ago, runs on the same line on which the old fence stood; that he knows this because he' built the wire part of the new fence and^ that the plaintiff’s father, A. B. Hill, under whom plaintiff claims title, himself there built the rail part of the fence.

Defendant Kerr, both by his own testimony and that of his witnesses, showed record chain of title to the *109 land involved, extending back to the commonwealth, which commenced with an eighteen acre patent granted by it to Andrew Kerr in 1848, who thereafter, with his wife, in March, 1865, conveyed it to Jacob Stinson, who in turn conveyed this patented land, with other lands, in 1883 to Louisa Carr and Emma Carr (or Kerr), his deed containing this description of the land here involved:

“Prom the gum corner to the county road, thence a straight line to a white oak; thence crossing the road to a fence, running with said fence to the woods to a stake in the original line.”

Also, the defendant Kerr showed that the fence line called for in this boundary had never been moved, but has been repeated in all the deeds as the exterior or division line between his land and the plaintiff’s adjoining land and across which the latter now desires to reach and take this one-fourth acre of defendant’s land which lies within this fence, but which plaintiff nevertheless claims belongs to him, as coming within his boundary according to a survey made under the calls of the later deeds conveying his tract of land and which call for this fence as the division line between his and.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 1005, 277 Ky. 105, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-kerr-kyctapphigh-1939.