Kentucky Coal Lands Co. v. Baker

159 S.W. 943, 155 Ky. 344, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 262
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 16, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 943 (Kentucky Coal Lands 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
Kentucky Coal Lands Co. v. Baker, 159 S.W. 943, 155 Ky. 344, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 262 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

This action in ejectment was brought in February, 1912, by the appellee, Mat Baker, against the appellants, the Kentucky Coal Lands Company, and Hiram Napier, its tenant. In its answer, after denying title in Baker, the company for itself and Napier, set up various defenses, which, so far as seem pertinent to a decision of the case, will be noticed in the course of the opinion.

The litigation involves the title to and possession of a tract of land containing about one hundred acres, for which William Begley obtained a patent in 1834. In 1840 William Begley sold and conveyed the land to Edward Begley, who died intestate about 1864 leaving surviving him six children, who by inheritance came into the title.

The appellee, Baker, asserts title to this land and the right to the possession of it under conveyances from some of the Begley children and under proceedings had in and a conveyance made by the circuit court of Leslie County in a suit brought by the Commonwealth to forfeit this land for non-payment of taxes.

The coal company exhibited a paper title to a large body of land, including the land in controversy, tracing back to the Commonwealth, but it is conceded that the patents under which it asserts title to the land are junior to the patent issued to William Begley under which Baker claims. This being the condition of the record, the coal company does not depend on its paper title but insists that it is entitled to the land by virtue of its payment of taxes and adverse holding under the provisions of section 4076b of the Kentucky Statutes.

In 1908 a suit was brought in the Leslie Circuit Court by the Commonwealth against the heirs of Edward Begley, known and unknown, for the purpose of forfeiting this land for the non-payment of taxes under [346]*346the act which is embraced in the section of the statute mentioned. This suit was brought by the Commonwealth under section 4076d, which is section three of the act, and there was named as defendants the heirs of William Begley so far as they were known, “and other owners and claimants of said land under said William Begley whose names, if any, are unknown.” Neither Mat Baker nor the coal company were parties to this suit. The defendants filed an answer, which was replied to, and thus the matter stood until the February term of the court in 1911. At this term of the court the defendants withdrew their answer and confessed the allegations of the petition, and thereupon a judgment was entered forfeiting all title, interest and claim of the defendants to the Commonwealth. The judgment further provided that the cause should be kept on the docket for the purpose of giving the defendants time to redeém. the land, as provided by the act.

At the May term of the court, 1911, which was the term succeeding the term at which the judgment of forfeiture was entered, a judgment in conformity with section 4 of the act was entered reciting in substance that Mat Baker as purchaser from the Begley heirs of three-sixths of the land forfeited had filed his petition and asked to be allowed to redeem the land. The judgment further recited that the formalities of redemption required by the act were dispensed with and Baker was permitted to and did pay to the sheriff the full amount of tax, cost and penalties due on this three-sixths of the land. It is further recited:

“That the said Mat Baker, as vendee of the said Ace Begley, Sallie Collins, A. B. Dixon, Jr., Cynthia Dixon and Sallie Sizemore, is now the legal owner in fee simple of an undivided three-sixths interest in the tract of land mentioned and described in the petition and judgment of forfeiture herein, and described in this judgment.
“It is, therefore, adjudged by the court that the judgment of forfeiture as to the undivided three-sixths interest in said tract of land, which judgment of forfeiture was rendered and entered at the regular February term, 1911, of this court herein, be and the same is now satisfied and discharged, and the title of the said undivided three-sixths interest in said tract of land is here and now re-transferred from the Commonwealth [347]*347of Kentucky, and all other parties to this suit, to the said Mat Baker, and he is now adjudged to hold the said three-sixths interest in said tract of land, discharged and free from all taxes and claims for taxes upon the part of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, or any other person, for and during all the time heretofore elapsed and up to and including the date of entry of this judgment.”

The record in the case before us further shows that, previous to the entering of this judgment, allowing Baker to redeem three-sixths of the land, he had purchased from the Begley heirs named in the judgment the three-sixths interest he was allowed to redeem. It is upon these purchases from the Begley heirs and this judgment of redemption that Baker relies for title to an undivided three-sixths of the .land in dispute.

The coal company insists that neither tlie purchase of these interests or the judgment of redemption invested Baker with title to the three-sixths claimed by him, and we will first dispose of this feature of the case.

The forfeiture act provides in section four, which is section 4076e of the statute, for the redemption’of land forfeited to the Commonwealth, and recites that before or during the term of the circuit court next succeeding the term at which the forfeiture judgment was entered, any of the defendants in privity with the title so forfeited may redeem the same' in the manner pointed out in the section by the payment of taxes and penalties. It further recites:

“That no person except a defendant, and no defendant except as herein provided, shall be allowed to purchase back from the Commonwealth the title so forfeited to, and invested in it, except such defendant as may, but for such forfeiture, establish in such proceeding a title thereto in himself upon which he could maintain an action of ejectment.”

As before stated, Mat Baker was not named as a defendant to this forfeiture action, but we do not construe section four as limiting the right to redeem to the persons who are named in person as defendants in the forfeiture suit. The statute provides that the forfeiture suit shall be instituted “in the name of the Commonwealth of Kentucky as plaintiff against said tract of land and the owners or claimants of said land as defendants, naming them, if their names are known to him, and if their names are unknown to him, designating [348]*348them as the unknown owners and claimants thereof, for the purpose of declaring the title or claim of said defendants' forfeited to this Commonwealth, and selling same.”

And we think that any person who has or claims an interest in the land forfeited and who could maintain an action in ejectment upon his title, may redeem the land. The right of redemption is allowed not only to. the named defendants hut to the unnamed defendants who have such interest and title in the land as we have described. In other words, Baker having an interest and title in the land forfeited, would come under the description of one of the unknown defendants proceeded against, and have the right, upon exhibiting such title as would authorize him to maintain an action in ejectment, to redeem the land. The statute was not designed to deny the right of redemption to the owner of the land merely because he' was not named in person as a defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 943, 155 Ky. 344, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-coal-lands-co-v-baker-kyctapp-1913.