Howard v. Watkins

276 S.W. 1075, 211 Ky. 75, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 1075 (Howard v. Watkins) 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. Watkins, 276 S.W. 1075, 211 Ky. 75, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 815 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*76 Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Reversing.

As the issues of this equitable action are presented to this ¡court by the appeal, it appears that there is in controversy a tract of land containing approximately 166 acres. Appellant, Jacob Howard, Sr., claims title to-it under a 3,000 acre grant surveyed for William S. Howard March 6, 1845, and patented to him July 6,1846. The appellees, Idress Watkins, and others, claim the title to the same land under a 3,000 acre grant surveyed November 2, 1795, for Richard Noel and patented to Joseph Craig, assignee, on May 27, 1797. The appellees here were plaintiffs below, and to manifest their right to the relief sought in their petition it was incumbent upon them to establish that the location of the Joseph Craig 3,000 acre survey when properly made embraces and covers the 166 acres of land in controversy. The chancellor adjudged that that survey when properly located covers the land in dispute. While there is in ¡controversy only a comparatively small tract of land, we find from the record that the location of many thousand acres of land has been called into play as bearing upon the question in issue. As frequently is true we find that there is one outstanding question around which the entire controversy centers. The land in controversy is located in Bell county, Kentucky, on a large creek now known as “Puckett’s creek.” The chancellor adjudged that the Joseph Craig 3,000 acre grant is located on that creek. The description of that tract of land, as set forth in both the survey and the patent, describes it as “3,000 acres of land lying on Crank’s creek, a branch of Cumberland river.” It further recites it “to adjoin John Latham’s entry of 1,000 acres on the upper line on the creek,” and “beginning on the north side of the creek at the upper end of the clover bottom on an ash tree marked W. H.” From the foregoing quotations, descriptive of the location of the 3,000 acre tract of land, it becomes apparent and both parties concede that the ¡chief question for us is to determine whether or not the “Crank’s'creek” mentioned in the survey and patent is the same creek which now is known as “Puckett’s creek,” or whether or not the surveyor mistakenly in describing this land called what was then known as Puckett’s creek, Crank’s creek.

In the great amount of surveying that was done in the preparation of this cause no surveyor and no wit *77 ness claims to have found any of the timber marked as corners or line trees on the Joseph Craig 3,000 acre boundary. There is some testimony in the record to the effect that formerly there stood at or near the point made the beginning corner of the survey as located for appellees an ash tree. This testimony came from a witness more than 80 years of age. He, however, did not claim ever to have '-observed that that tree was marked as a corner or ever to have heard anyone claim that it was so marked. None of the appellees who now claim the land in controversy under the Joseph Craig 3,000 acre grant ever heard of that grant or knew that it existed until within the last ten or fifteen years'. That is true although they and their ancestors for some three generations have lived upon lands- located on Puckett’s creek. Their ancestors laid warrants upon and took patents from the Commonwealth to other tracts of land lying within the Joseph Craig 3,000 acre grant if it should 'be located upon that creek, and lived upon and clearly from the testimony claimed to -own only to the boundary of their júnior grants.

On September 12,1798, there was surveyed for John Bailey 410 acres of land and a patent issued to him for same February 7, 1801. That tract of land is described as “beginning at an ash tree marked ‘W. H.,’ standing on the north bank of Puckett’s creek.” It se,ems to be generally conceded that the maps filed with the record in this case represent the- correct or approximately correct location of the John Bailey 410 acre survey. The Joseph Craig 3,000 acre grant recites that it begins “at an ash tree marked ‘W. H.’ on the north bank of Crank’s creek,” and the John Bailey 410 acres grant recites that it begins “at an ash tree marked ‘W. H.’ standing on the north bank -of Puckett’s creek.” It is insisted for appellees that the ash tree referred to as the beginning corner of the Bailey survey is the same ash tree referred to as the'beginning. corner -of the Joseph Craig 3,000 acre survey and that the location of the Bailey survey and its beginning -comer locates the ■beginning corner -of the Craig survey. - We find that William Henderson, a deputy surveyor, made both the Joseph Craig 3,000 acre survey and the John Bailey 410 acre survey, the latter being made less than three years after the former was made. The fact that the Bailey survey was said to begin on an ash marked “W. H.” does not indicate that it had previously been so marked. *78 If the ash tree which was made the beginning corner of the second survey had been the beginning corner of the former one, undoubtedly it would have been marked as such. It hardly seems probable that the same surveyor starting the second survey on the same tree less than three years after having marked it as the beginning corner of the Craig survejr would have failed to note that fact. The John Bailey survey does not mention the Craig survey, nor do any of its lines run coincidentally with any of the lines of the Craig survey. It does not seem probable that the same surveyor in 1795 would call the creek' “Crank’s creek” and in 1798 would call it “Puckett’s creek” if the two surveys were located on the same creek.

Two days after making the 3,000 acre survey on Crank’s creek, under which appellees claim, the survey being made for Richard Noel and the patent subsequently issuing to Joseph Craig under an assignment, the same surveyor, with the same chain carriers, surveyed for the same Richard Noel another tract of 3,000 acres. It is described as “beginning at the left side of the Cumberland river on the west side of a gully that malees out of Crank’s creek into the river at John Lath-am’s lower corner, 2 beeches and a poplar.” It will be observed that this survey, as did the other 3,000 acre survey made two days previously, speaks of the creek as “Crank’s creek.” Appellees insist that the testimony in the record unquestionably establishes that the second 3,000 acre survey made for Richard Noel is properly located as beginning just below the mouth of the creek now known as Puckett’s creek, and that as the two surveys were located on the same creek and made within two days of each other there is left no room for doubt that the surveyor either mistakenly called what was then Puckett’s creek, Crank’s creek, or that the creek now known as Puckett’s creek then was known as Crank’s creek. There is in the record the testimony of several witnesses who own lands on the Cumberland river below the mouth of Puckett’s creek.who testify that their titles run back to the Richard Noel 3,000 acre survey’ made November 4, 1795. The patent for the 3,000 acre Noel survey which began below the mouth of the creek was issued to Richard Noel by the Commonwealth of Kentucky on May 27,1797. There was filed in the record as evidence a copy of the deed by which the other children of Richard Noel conveyed to one of his sons the *79 3.000 acre grant, under which those now owning lands located on the river below the mouth of Puckett’s creek claim title.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 1075, 211 Ky. 75, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-watkins-kyctapphigh-1925.