James v. Davis

189 S.W. 440, 172 Ky. 381, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 222
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 440 (James v. Davis) 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
James v. Davis, 189 S.W. 440, 172 Ky. 381, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 222 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hurt

Affirming.

The appellants are the children and grandchildren of Hawkens Jackson, who died twelve or thirteen years ago. On August 9th, 1848, a patent was granted to Haw-kens Jackson for one hundred acres of land on the Trace Pork of the Left Hand Pork of Brushy Creek, in Pike county. On the 13th day of April, 1912, the appellants instituted this action in the Pike circuit court for the recovery of the tract of land, which had been granted to their ancestor, against the appellee, Sam M. Davis, who they alleged was unlawfully in the possession of it and withholding it from them, and sought the re.covery of the possession of the land from him, as well as to recover of [382]*382bim the sum of five hundred dollars, the value of the timber trees, which they alleged he had cut from the land1 and appropriated to his own use, and the further sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, which they alleged he had damaged the land by cutting other timber trees from it. The appellee, Sam M. Davis, denied the ownership or right of possession of the land by the appellants and alleged that his wife, Ida Bell Davis, was- the owner of the land, and that she, and those under whom she claimed, had been in the adverse possession of the land for more than thirty years, before the action was filed, and relied upon the fifteen-year statute of limitations and upon the thirty-year statute of limitations, in bar of the appellant’s cause of action. The appellants denied that the land was owned by Ida Bell Davis, or that she, or those under whom she claimed, had been in the adverse possession of it for either fifteen years or thirty years. The appellants, also, filed an amended petition making Ida Bell Davis a party defendant to the suit. Thereafter, the appellees, Sam Davis and Ida Bell Davis, his wife, filed an amended answer, in which, they alleged, that Hawkens Jackson had sold this land to John M. Davis, in consideration of one yellow mare and thirty-five dollars in money and had executed and' delivered to John M. Davis a writing, in which the terms of the sale were set out and in which he obligated himself to execute and deliver to John M. Davis a deed to the land, and that the writing was dated on the 21st day of September, 1849. At such date, they alleged that Hawkens Jackson delivered the possession of the land to John M. Davis, and that he and those claiming under him, including these appellees, had been in the actual, open, hostile and adverse possession of the land, claiming it as their own, from that time until the bringing of the suit, a period of more than sixty-two years. The averments of the amended answer were denied by a reply, and it was further alleged that the writing, by which it was claimed, that Hawkens Jackson had sold the land to John M. Davis, was a forgery. The appellees, also, filed a deed from John M. Davis to appellee, Sam M. Davis, dated the 8th day of July, 1885, and a deed from Sam M. Davis 'to the appellee, Ida Bell Davis, dated the 3rd day of January, 1896, both of which deeds were recorded very .shortly after their execution and presumably embrace ^and convey the lands in controversy from John M. Davis [383]*383to appellee, Sam Davis; and from him to the appellee, Ida Bell Davis.

The suit was originally brought at law, but by agreement of parties it was transferred to the equity side of the court’s docket and proof was taken by depositions and in all respects it was conducted and tried as an equitable action. The court below adjudged that the writing relied upon as the evidence of a sale of the land by Haw-kens Jackson to John M. Davis and of date of September 23rd, 1849, had never been executed by Hawkens Jacks bn and was invalid, hut it further adjudged, that the appellees had manifested a title to the lands by an adverse holding of it, by them, and those under whom they claimed, for the statutory period necessary to vest title in the occupants, and dismissed the petition. From this judgment the heirs of Hawkens Jackson prayed an appeal to this court.

(1) It is insisted by the appellants, that the appellee, Sam M. Davis, is not a competent witness and should not have been permitted to testify, and that the evidence given by him should not now he considered. This contention is based upon the fact that both he and his wife,. Ida Bell Davis, are parties to this action, and that she is claiming to be the owner of the land, which is sought to be recovered by the action. Exceptions were not filed to the deposition of Sam M. Davis, and the trial court did not pass upon the question of his competency as a witness. The deposition of Ida Bell Davis was not taken. Section 606, subsection 1, of the Civil Code, provides, that in actions, which might have been brought by or against a wife, if she was unmarried, either the husband or wife may testify, but, not both of them may testify. In such eases the wife, when she is the real party in interest in the suit, may elect to testify herself or to have her husband testify for her, but both of them' may not testify. As the claimant and in possession of the land in controversy, she could have been sued for the recovery of the possession of the lands, if she was an unmarried woman; and if she was an unmarried woman she ,could maintain an action for their recovery, if ejected from the possession. Hence, her husband was a competent witness for her, she not having testified. Taylor, Jr., & Sons v. Johnson, 30 R. 656; Wise v. Foote, 81 Ky. 10; Howard v. Tenney, 87 Ky. 52; Glover & Durrett v. Suter, 18 R. 1018.

[384]*384(2)’ The testimony relating to the claim, of appellees, to having the lands in their adverse possession for fifteen years and for thirty years, before the institution of the suit, for their recovery, is meager and not very satisfactory. It is apparent that the court could have been much more enlightened as to the true state of the facts if the parties had have been zealous to have done so. The contention of appellee is, that Hawkens Jackson, the patentee of the land and who died in 1901, 1905 or 1906, sold the land on the 21st day of September, 1819, to John M. Davis, the father of appellee, Sam M. Davis, in consideration of one yellow mare and a promissory note for thirty-five dollars. In the answer it is alleged that this sale was by parol, and that John M. Davis took possession of the land and held possession of it from the date of the sale of it to him until 1885, when he, by deed, conveyed it to appellee, Sam M. Davis. The appellee, Sam M. Davis, held it in possession from that time until 1896, when he, by deed, sold and Conveyed it to the appellee, Ida Bell Davis, who has held it in possession since that time. This, if true, is a continuous possession of the land by Ida Bell Da,vis and those under whom she claims the title to the land for a period of time, exceeding sixty-two years before the filing of the action by the appellants for its recovery. The description of the land, ■ as to lines and objects called for, in the deed from John M. Davis to Sam M. Davis, and the description of the land patented to Hawkens Jackson cannot be recognized as the same tract of land from the mere reading of the descriptions in the'patent and deed, and the description, as given, of the lands conveyed by Sam M. Davis to Ida Bell Davis, in the deed, which he executed to her, is not similar to the description given of the lands, which are embraced in the patent to Jackson and the deed from John M. Davis to Sam M. Davis. While, the.

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.W. 440, 172 Ky. 381, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-davis-kyctapp-1916.