Kentucky River Coal Corp. v. Sumner

241 S.W. 820, 195 Ky. 119, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 2, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 820 (Kentucky River Coal Corp. v. Sumner) 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 River Coal Corp. v. Sumner, 241 S.W. 820, 195 Ky. 119, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 284 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

This action was filed by May, Robert, William and Dennis Sumner, infants under the age of fourteen years,, ■by their guardian, F. F. 'Sumner, against the appellant and defendant Ibelow, Kentucky River Coal Corporation, to enjoin it from trespassing on a tract of land in Letcher county containing 112.8 acres which plaintiffs alleged they owned by virtue of a deed executed to their mother and them by their grandfather and grandmother, William and Dianah Melntire, on November 26, 1910. They alleged that defendant claimed to he the owner of the minerals under the land by virtue of a contract executed by the two Mclntires and the father and mother of plaintiffs to the Swift Coal & Timber Company on March 8, 1911, which was perfected by .a deed executed 'by the same parties to the same company on May 5, 1911, at which time the balance of $1,103.00 of the agreed purchase price of the minerals was paid by cheek issued to plaintiffs’ [121]*121father, the other $25.00 of the consideration having been paid in the same way and to the same person at the time of the execution of the purchase contract on March 8, 1911. The prayer of the petition asked that defendant, who is the vendee of the Swift Coal & Timber Company, be enjoined from attempting to exercise any of the rights alleged to have been acquired under the before mentioned contract or deed to the Swift Coal & Timber Company; that each of them be cancelled and held for naught, and that plaintiffs be quieted in their possession. The answer, as amended, denied plaintiffs’ title and alleged that defendant and its immediate vendoi*, Swift Coal & Timber Company, were innocent and bona fide purchasers of the mineral without notice, either actual or constructive, of the deed under which plaintiffs claim title; and, further, that such deed had been materially and fraudulently altered after its execution by the Mclntires by writing therein immediately after the name of Victoria Sumner as grantee the words ‘ ‘ and her children, ’ ’ thus making it appear that the grantees were “Victoria Sumner and her children,” when in truth and in fact the mother was the only grantee in the deed when it was executed, which, if true, would deprive plaintiffs of any interest in the subject matter of the litigation a,nd defendant would be vested with full title thereto under the deed above mentioned of May 5,1911. Appropriate pleadings made the issues and after the taking of considerable testimony, a large portion of which is wholly incompetent and irrelevant, the court upon submission sustained plaintiffs’ contention and by its judgment granted them the relief they sought, to reverse which defendant prosecutes this appeal.

It is vigorously argued by counsel (1), that at the time of the procuring of the contract of March 8, 1911, which was afterwards perfected by the deed of May 5, 1911, the deed under which plaintiffs claim was not recorded, nor had it been legally lodged therefor, and hence defendant’s vendor was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice, either actual or constructive, and it thereby obtained title to the minerals, which prevailed over plaintiffs’ title, if any; (2), that (a) although plaintiffs’ deed was recorded at the time of the execution of the deed in defendant’s chain of title of May 5, 1911, that deed related back to the date of the contract of March 8, pursuant to which it was executed, and (b) that although plaintiffs’ deed was on record May 5,1911, and had been [122]*122since April 22 before then, it was not indexed and could not and was not found by an examination -of the index book in the county court clerk’s office, and (3), that the deed under which plaintiffs claim to own the title was fraudulently altered as heretofore indicated. These various contentions will be disposed of in the order named.

1. One of the essential requisites to make a subsequent purchaser without notice a bona fide or innocent one so that his equity will prevail over a prior title of which he had neither actual nor constructive notice, is that his purchase should be for a valuable consideration which has been paid by him. 27 R. C. L. 703-704; 39 Cyc. 1701-1702; Hardin’s Executors v. Harrington, 11 Bush 367; Winlock v. Mundy, 156 Ky. 806; Rader v. Shaffer, 186 Ky. 802, and many other cases cited in the notes to the texts and referred to in the opinions in those cases. If, therefore, there were no other objections to the contention of counsel the rule referred to would not entitle his client to prevail because, as we have seen, the consideration for the acquisition of the minerals was not paid until May 5, 1911, some three weeks after plaintiffs’ deed was recorded and from which date defendant was charged with constructive notice and which its vendor possessed at the time the latter paid practically all of the consideration, the $2'5.00 paid at the time of the obtention of the contract for the deed being a mere nominal part of the consideration, and, as recited therein, was only in consideration of that contract. Independently, however, of that fact, which in itself is sufficient to dispose of the case, we think it perfectly clear from the evidence that the Swift Coal & Timber Company had actual knowledge of the deed under which plaintiffs claimed at the time it took its contract on March 8,1911. The representative of that company who prepared and obtained that contract was L. "W. Fields. He knew that Mr. and Mi-s. Sumner, the latter being a daughter of the Melntires, resided on the land in a separate house. He also knew, as he testified, that Mr. Mclntire had been and perhaps at that time was engaged in dividing his land among his children and that the particular tract in question h!ad been in some manner allotted to Mrs. Sumner, and for that reason he procured her and her husband to execute the cqntract and the Melntires to do so because he understood in some indefinite way that they had retained some interest (which they had), in the deed executed to Mrs. Sumner and her children. This much is practically acknowledged by Fields. How[123]*123ever, Mr. Sumner testified that he told Fields at the time, not only of the existence of the deed, but that it was executed to Mrs. Sumner and her children, which fact is not denied by Fields, 'but he says that if he was so informed he did not at the time he testified have any recollection of it. Even if it should be found that he was not so informed he admits knowledge of enough to put him and his principal, for whom he was acting, upon inquiry which, if diligently pursued, wPuld have revealed the true facts. This principle of law has been so often announced and is so fundamental as relating to the doctrine of notice that we deem it unnecessary to encumber this opinion with reference to authorities and adjudged cases; however, some of the more recent ones from this court so holding are: Burdine v. White, 173 Ky. 158; E. K. Bonds & Co. v. Ford, 175 Ky. 827; Wells v. Derrickson, 184 Ky. 384, and May v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co., idem 493. But, with the positive -statement by Mr. Sumner as -to the information he gave to Fields concerning the deed and with only a negative denial thereof by the latter authorized the conclusion that the correct terms of the deed were imparted to him and he was thus actually notified, independently of any duty to investigate. It, therefore, necessarily results that none of the points relied on under ground (1), are available.

2. In support of point (a) in ground (2), reliance is had on the case of Tennis Coal Co. v. Asher and Hensley, 143 Ky.

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241 S.W. 820, 195 Ky. 119, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-river-coal-corp-v-sumner-kyctapp-1922.