Jones v. Patterson

66 S.W. 377, 139 Ky. 717, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 28, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 377 (Jones v. Patterson) 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
Jones v. Patterson, 66 S.W. 377, 139 Ky. 717, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 2 (Ky. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Burnam.

[718]*718The controversy in this case involves the title and ownership of about three thousand acres of land located upon the waters of the south fork and the tributaries thereof of Quick Sand Creek in Breathitt county, Kentucky. The appellees, Patterson and the Davis heirs, claim under fifteen Kentucky patents issued to Robert P. Davis in 1867. There is also a controversy between Patterson and the Davis heirs as to the ownership of the land, but both agree that appellants have no interest therein. The appellants, J. S. Stone, D. D. Jones, D. R. Clark, C. J. Little, Taylor & Crate, claim a possessory title dating from an alleged entry upon the land by one Preston Howard their remote grantor. They also claim to trace their title to a patent issued to James Reynolds by the Commonwealth of Virginia on the 18th, day of July, 1784, containing 126,140 acres of land. They also allege that the Davis patents are void for the reason that the land embraced therein is covered by ■the Reynolds patents and numerous other senior patents granted by the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

The action was originally brought at law by appellant against J. W. Cardwell for trespass. They alleged that they were the owners and in possession of about three thousand acres of land. The appellee Patterson intervened in this" suit and asserted title to twenty-two hundred acres of land embraced within the boundaries claimed by appellant by virtue of a conveyance from Davis and the Davis heirs. He also alleged that certain deeds, under which appellants claim, were forgeries, and asked that he be adjudged the owner of the land claimed by him. Appellants in their response to Patterson’s petition averred that his claim was a cloud upon their title and ask that it be quieted. Patterson in a subsequent [719]*719pleading responded that no one had ever had the actual possession of the lands in controversy, that they were uninclosed wild lands. He also made his pleading a cross-petition against the Davis heirs, who replied denying title in the appellee Patterson, and asserting title in themselves. And in an amended answer which they make a counterclaim against appellants, the Davis heirs assert ownership in themselves and allege that appellants had forcibly entered upon the land and sought iu recover of them both possession and damages. The trial court sustained the title of appellees, and gave judgment against appellant for the possession of the land, refusing the relief sought by Patterson against the Davis heirs, and also that sought by them against Patterson. Both of whom base their claim upon the 14 patents to R. P. Davis in 1867, which make out a prima facia case for the appellee for the whole of the land in controversy.

We will first direct our attention to an examination of the facts upon which appellants rely to establish their possessory title to the land in controversy, and also their claim that it had been previously patented and that by reason thereof the .patents to Davis were void. It is conceded that Preston Howard lived for many years at the mouth of a stream known as Howard’s Pork, which empties into the South Fork of Quick Sand Creek, and that Howard’s Pork has three tributaries known as Wilson, Calhoon and Haggin’s Forks, which empty into it about one mile and a half above its mouth, and that the lands in controversy are situated on these three forks above what is known as Plat Rock on Wilson Pork, the rock house on Calhoon Pork and a beech and lynn on the Haggin’s Pork, and it is earnestly insisted by appellees that none of appellant’s gran[720]*720tors ever had any possession above these well known marks. A great deal of difficulty and uncertainty arises from the fact that the records of the Breathitt county court were burned in 1873, it being insisted that the titles which were subsequently recorded were to a large extent fictitious and forgeries.

Preston Howard’s first paper title to any of the land in dispute is a deed executed to him on the third day of March, 1841, by Coleman Williams, in consideration of $150 paid cash in hand. Williams conveyed a certain tract of land described as:

“Beginning on the south bank of the South Fork of Quick Sand Creek at two sycamores and a sugar tree, 20 poles above the upper corner of a one hundred acres survey in Perry county, thence running up the creek on both sides, including its tributaries to a conditional line made by Williams and Howard.”

And in 1853 Howard obtained a patent for fifty acres on Howard’s Fork extending up to a poplar, beech and flat rock on the Wilson Fork. He settled his son Russell on that part of his boundary which was located farthest from the mouth of the creek. In 1864, Howard moved away from this tract of land and went to Jackson county, where he resided until his death. In 1886 in consideration of $1,000, he conveyed to Stephen Carpenter all of his land in Breathitt county on the waters of the south fork of Quick Sand Creek, which is described as beginning at a:

“White walnut on a small island, near an old school house at the lower end of the farm, and running to a conditional line between Preston Howard and Henry Williams at a double maple at the mouth of a small drain on the south side of the south fork of Quick Sand Creek; thence a straight line across said creek, thence with Howard’s outside line so as [721]*721to include all the land owned by Howard lying between him and Henry Williams, Robert Davis and Russell Howard, going still around with his outside line to the beginning, containing four hundred acres to same, more or less.”

When this deed was again recorded after the burning of the county clerk’s office, it was altered so as to call for - fourteen hundred (1,-100) acres instead of Jour hundred (400) the original deed being in existence and filed in this record, makes this fact apparent. After his purchase Stephen Carpenter occupied the Howard residence near the mouth of the creek until February, 1873, when lie conveyed to William Kash, and on the same day Kash conveyed to Elizabeth Williams the boundary conveyed to him. Both of these deeds call for 600 acres. The land conveyed is described as lying on the south fork of Quick Sand Creek, and does not embrace the 150 acres above it, which had been previously sold by Stephen Carpenter to Samuel Carpenter. After his purchase Williams occupied the old Howard house about fifteen years. During this interval, it does not appear that he ever acquired any additional land, but in June, 1889, he executed a deed to a boundary to the appellant, which lie'represents as containing 2,640 acres. At this point for the first time the deed purports to convey a tract of 2,000 acres of land which it is claimed Preston Howard held under a marked boundary whilst he lived in Breathitt county, and under a deed from Thomas Sewell, and to have been in Howard’s deed to Stephen Carpenter, and toll ave passed from Carpenter to Kash .and Kash to-Williams. This two thousand (2,000) acre boundary extended to the waters of Calhoon and Haggin’s Forks of Howard’s Creek and not only covered the [722]*722boundary of land embraced in the deed from Stephen to Sam Carpenter, but also includes the greater part of the land covered by the patents issued to Davis, and which are included in the lands claimed by appellee, Patterson. The deed referred to from Thomas, Sewell to Preston Howard purports to convey a certain tract of land lying on the south fork of Main Quick Sand Creek, and is described as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 377, 139 Ky. 717, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-patterson-kyctapp-1902.