J. Walter Wright Lumber Co. v. Baker

395 S.W.2d 365, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 26, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 395 S.W.2d 365 (J. Walter Wright Lumber Co. v. Baker) 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
J. Walter Wright Lumber Co. v. Baker, 395 S.W.2d 365, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 142 (Ky. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

The appellant company, which we shall call “Wright,” brought this action for damages and injunctive relief against the cutting and removal of timber within the overlap of three conflicting patents, the senior of which was not owned of record by either of the parties at the time the suit was commenced. During the course of the trial (by depositions), the defendant-appellee Baker acquired by deed the record title to a major portion of the senior patent, embracing the area in question. Baker duly amended his counterclaim demanding that his title be quieted. Wright pleaded cham-perty. After the taking of further proof on both sides a judgment was entered in Baker’s favor. Wright appeals.

The senior patent is DeGroot 43192, surveyed March 4, 1870. Wright owns De-Groot patents 43213, 43214 and 43215, surveyed March 5, 1870, all of which have been held and conveyed together and for purposes of constructive possession are thus to be regarded as a single tract. Cf. Parsons v. Dills, 159 Ky. 471, 167 S.W. 415, 416 (1914). Wright also owns Ballenger Garrison patent 59770, surveyed in 1883, and Joseph Waggoner patents 45941 and 45942, surveyed in 1864. All six of these patents of Wright’s lap on DeGroot 43192. However, the overlap of Waggoner 45941 is not within that portion of DeGroot 43192 deeded to and claimed by Baker, and that of Waggoner 45942 appears to cover only a very negligible part of it, if any.

It may be assumed for purposes of this case that until the present controversy arose no one ever had entered into actual possession claiming under color of title of DeGroot 43192. When Baker cut the timber in question he was claiming through the Garrison patent, and admittedly his title was inferior to Wright’s chain under the same patent as well as under its three DeGroot patents. To defeat Baker’s senior record title under DeGroot 43192 Wright relies on proof of adverse possession under color of title of its junior DeGroot patents 43213, 43214 and 43215 (and, perhaps, under the Garrison patent), and cites the case of Ford Motor Company v. Collett, Ky., 303 S.W.2d 553 (1957), which involved another group of DeGroot patents lying immediately west of DeGroot 43192.

In Ford Motor Company v. Collett it was held that since no one was in possession under an elder patent (Gilbert) the entry of an adverse claimant under color of a conflicting junior title, “coupled with its continuous actual occupancy and cultivation of part of its boundary, while claiming to the limits of its deed, constituted possession of the entire boundary.” However, it must not be overlooked that the actual possession of the junior titleholder in that case was within the overlap.

“The rule is well settled in this state that the actual occupancy by a junior paten-tee of that part of a tract of land which does not interfere with the elder grant does not give him possession of the part within the interference, although the elder patentee never actually entered upon any part of the land included in his patent.” (Emphasis added.) McCoy v. DeLong, 22 Ky.Law Rep. 719, 58 S.W. 704 (1900). Otherwise, as pointed out in Trimble v. Smith, 7 Ky. (4 Bibb) 257 (1815), the senior owner might be divested of his title without any possibility of knowing that the junior claimant was holding against him. To the same effect, see Wilson v. Stivers, 34 Ky. (4 Dana) 634 (1836); Burt & Brabb Lumber Co. v. Sackett, 147 Ky. 232, 144 S.W. 34, 37 (1912); Tennis Coal Co. v. Sackett, 172 Ky. 729, 190 S.W. 130, 139 (1916); Morgan v. Big Woods Lumber Co., 198 Ky. 88, 249 S.W. 329, 341 (1923); and Ramsey v. Hughes, 212 Ky. 715, 280 S.W. 99 (1926).

The evidence of possessory activities focused on four clearings, which for identification were numbered 1 to 4. The chancellor found as a fact that Wright did not [367]*367establish sufficient possession of any of these clearings to ripen into title.

Clearings 3 and 4 are irrelevant as a matter of law, because neither is within DeGroot 43192 or within the boundary of any senior patent that overlaps it.

Clearing 1 is wholly within DeGroot 43214 and Garrison 59770, both of which patents are owned of record by Wright. It is also partially within DeGroot 43192 but not in the portion covered by Baker’s deed. Nevertheless, had Wright been able to prove 15 years’ adverse possession of this clearing by it or its predecessors under color of one or the other of its two junior title chains, it would have established title by adverse possession throughout the interlap of the boundary under which it was claiming during the period its possession was ripening into title. That is because, when a junior claimant with colorable title enters upon the interlock at a time when the owner has no actual possession anywhere on his land, the junior claimant’s possession extends throughout the interlock. 2 C.J.S. Adverse Possession § 198, p. 802; Miniard v. Napier, 167 Ky. 208, 180 S.W. 363, 366 (1915).

It was shown that No. 1 was an old clearing, dating back as far as 1890, and that for an unspecified period of time it had been tended by John Whitehead, one of Wright’s predecessors in title to part of the Garrison chain. However, not only did the evidence fall short of proving any particular 15-year period of continuous adverse possession by Whitehead, but the descriptions in the deeds under which Whitehead claimed were not sufficient to establish color of title extending into that part of Garrison 59770 which laps the portion of DeGroot 43192 here in controversy. In other words, the description was not clear enough to define the interlock, if any. It is doubtful that Whitehead actually claimed beyond the ridge separating the Stinnett Creek and Elisha Creek watersheds, and certainly the evidence was not such that the chancellor would have been forced to conclude that his color of title extended westwardly to the far limits of the Garrison patent, as apparently contended by Wright’s main witness. In order for a deed to constitute color of title as a basis for extension of possession by an adversary entrant it must describe the land with reasonable certainty. Lipps v. Turner, 164 Ky. 626, 176 S.W.2d 42, 44 (1915).

Clearing 2 was opened by John Whitehead in 1930, that being the same year in which he conveyed the tract embracing No. 1 to Wright’s predecessor, Fordson Coal Company. Probably some sort of swap was made in which Fordson bought off Whitehead’s conflicting claim of title to part of Garrison 59770 and put him in possession, as its tenant, of what became No. 2. This clearing is within the overlap of Wag-goner 45941, DeGroot 43213, and DeGroot 43192. It was farmed by Whitehead and his family for a number of years. Assuming they were in fact tenants of Fordson, there is no doubt that this possession extended throughout one or the other (or perhaps both, but we need not decide) of the overlaps of Waggoner 45941 or DeGroots 43213, 43214 and 43215 (bearing in mind that the latter three are one) on DeGroot 43192. There was, however, a direct conflict of evidence on the point. Members of the Whitehead family (some of whom are related to Baker by marriage) insisted that the clearing was abandoned in less than 15 years. Again this was for the chancellor to decide. Wright bore the burden of proving adverse possession, hence the risk of non-persuasion.

It was shown also that from 1930 to 1946 Wright’s predecessor, Fordson, leased out a portion of the property in controversy, Baker himself having been the lessee for 10 years of this time.

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Creech v. Miniard
408 S.W.2d 432 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1965)

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395 S.W.2d 365, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-walter-wright-lumber-co-v-baker-kyctapp-1965.