Howard v. Carmichael

35 S.W.2d 852, 237 Ky. 462, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 622
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 852 (Howard v. Carmichael) 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
Howard v. Carmichael, 35 S.W.2d 852, 237 Ky. 462, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 622 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

This appeal is a continuation of a suit in which a judgment was reversed in Carmichael v. Old Straight Creek Coal Corp., etc., and Howard, etc. v. Cary-Glendon Coal Company, etc., 232 Ky. 133, 22 S. W. (2d) 572.

As will be learned from that opinion, the major portion of the land of Daniel Howard was partitioned between his widow and thirteen children. A few years later the survivors executed a mining lease for the entire boundary as a unit. This lease came into the ownership of the coal companies, which entered upon mining activities. It was subsequently held the Howards had no title to a part of the boundary, known as the Gibson land. One of the two companies involved then became the owner in fee of this Gibson land. Mining operations were conducted bn both tracts as a unit. Portions of the original Howard land were used for transporting coal and disposal of refuse and water from the Gibson mines and for obtaining timber used therein. They also used the miners’ houses on the Howard property in connection with the operations of the plant.

Lucy Carmichael and other heirs, lessors of the Howard property, sought injunctive relief and damages for such uses and also asked judgment for the recovery of some back royalties. Judgment was awarded and the damages distributed proportionately among the lessors. It was held by this court that, since the misuse of the property did not arise out of the joint lease, but constituted trespasses against and upon particular portions of the Howard land allotted to the respective heirs, only those individual landowners whose property had been thus invaded were entitled to the damages which had been awarded. So the judgment was reversed, with directions to hear proof and determine over and upon which separate lots of the Howard land trespass had been committed, and the extent thereof, and to award or distribute the damages accordingly. The amount of back *464 royalties was held properly apportioned in the same manner as royalties theretofore paid under the lease. An injunction was also authorized against the coal companies.

Upon the return, the case was referred to the master commissioner, and, on exceptions to his report, the court found and adjudged:

(1) That the portion of the Daniel Howard land which had been allotted to his widow as dower, after her death, by agreement in April, 1905, was divided among the remaindermen, and that by that division and through purchase of the interests of others the land constituting the dower was now owned by seven of the heirs, namely, S. C. Howard, John C. Howard, Noah Howard, Wilson Howard, and Lucy Daniel (now .Lucy Carmichael), Henry Howard, and George Howard (subsequently his heirs); that S. C. Howard had sold his'parcel so acquired to the predecessors in title of the coal company; and that John C. Noah,.and Lucy, through adverse possession, had acquired title to their allotted parcels. No reference is made in the judgment to the parcels of the other three.

(2) That the' evidence respecting the removal of timber from the property of the Howards was so indefinite and uncertain that it could not be determined what amount had been taken, "nor .the particular portion of the land from which it was removed or its value.

(3) The use of the miners’ houses on the Howard land being authorized by their lease, although the occupants may also have worked in the mine within the Gibson boundary, no burden was placed upon them so long as the defendants were mining and running coal from the Howard lands, and therefore nothing should be awarded on this item of claimed damage.

(4) That the use of the Howard land in transporting the coal from the Gibson lease and the dumping of the refuse therefrom was confined -to and.damage had resulted to the separate land of (a) John C. Howard, which he had acquired in the original partition and also in the division of the dower tract; (b) of Lucy Carmichael acquired originally and her dower; and (c) the dower parcel of Noah Howard. It was adjudged that these three were entitled to the damages to the exclusion of the other heirs.

(5) That the damages of $6,933.97 should be divided as follows: Lucy Carmichael, 55 per.cent.; John C. Howard, 35 per cent.; and Noah Howard, 10 per cent.

*465 (6) Perpetual injunctions were issued against the coal companies from continuing the trespass.

(7) The costs incurred in the hearing and trial on these matters should be paid out of the damages which had been recovered and paid into court in June, 1929, while the case was pending in the Court of Appeals.

This appeal is prosecuted from that judgment by all of the heirs against Lucy Carmichael and the coal companies. Cross-appeals have also been granted, so-the entire judgment is before us for review..

The judgment sustained .the report .of the commissioner, except that he had reported that he was unable to say whether the dower tract had been divided, and had made a different apportionment of the damages, the court reducing Lucy’s share from 66 per cent, to 55 per cent., increasing John’s from 24 per cent, to 35 per cent., and leaving Noah’s at 10 per cent.

. • The appellants, who are the Howard heirs except Mrs. Carmichael, attack the judgment ' upon these grounds:

(1) There had been no division of the dower tract nor did the pleadings warrant such judgment. Consequently, each heir is entitled to a proportionate share of the damages to the dower tract.

(2) The value of the timber removed should have been awarded in addition to the amount fixed by the first judgment.

(3) • Under the evidence, the damages were not properly divided.

(4) Compensation should have been allowed for the use of the miners ’ houses in connection with the Gibson property.

(5) Interest should have been awarded on the amount of damages from date of judgment, as payment to the clerk of the court pending the first appeal was unauthorized.

(6) An attorney’s fee should have been allowed appellants’ counsel, under section 489 of the Statutes; that is, they are entitled to contribution.

The appellee, Lucy Carmichael, in her cross-appeal joins with the appellants in their contentions respecting an additional judgment for the value of the timber and for the interest. She is opposing their other contentions. The coal companies claim no interes,t is chargeable, and also contend that there was no division of the dower *466 tract. They argue that the damage for timber removed was included in the original judgment.

1. As mueh of the trespassing was committed upon that portion of the Daniel Howard property allotted in the partition proceeding to the widow as her dower, a very material issue is made respecting the judgment that this dower had been divided by agreement on April 15, 1905, and that S. C. Howard, John C. Howard, Noah •Howard, and Lucy Carmichael had acquired title by adverse possession to the parcels set apart to them respectively. S. C. Howard subsequently conveyed his parcel to the defendant Car’y-Glendon Coal Company.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.2d 852, 237 Ky. 462, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-carmichael-kyctapphigh-1931.