Kentucky Union Co. v. Cornett

58 S.W.2d 655, 248 Ky. 360, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 655 (Kentucky Union Co. v. Cornett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Union Co. v. Cornett, 58 S.W.2d 655, 248 Ky. 360, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 254 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

*361 Opinion op the Court by

Creal, Commissioner

Reversing.

The Kentucky Union Company, a corporation, is appealing from a judgment of the Perry circuit court wherein it was decreed that Marion C. Cornett and other heirs and vendees of Archibald Cornett are the owners of a tract of something over 200 acres of land on Graves branch of Big Leatherwood creek in Perry county.

This action was instituted by appellant on February 27, 1917, and while it was brought in equity it is really an action in ejectment. In its petition appellant alleges that it is the owner and entitled to the possession of a large tract of land, the boundary of which is set out in the petition and includes the land in controversy.

In their original answer appellees controverted the allegations of the petition, and in a second paragraph alleged that they are the owners and were in actual possession of a tract therein described containing 234.52' acres, and that they and those under whom they claim had been in the adverse possession of the entire tract continuously for more than 15 years next before the-institution of the action.

By reply filed on February 4, 1918, appellant traversed the affirmative allegations of the answer, and the-case was permitted to lie dormant until April 21, 1927, when Jessie L. Horn and Mack Horn, infant children and only heirs at law of Frank Horn, deceased, who joined as party defendant in the original answer, by their mother and next friend, Lizzie Horn, and Lizzie Horn, administratrix of the estate of Frank Horn, filed their petition to be made parties. In their petition it was alleged that on March 17, 1914, Arch Cornett by a written contract sold to Frank Horn an undivided one-half-interest in the boundary of land set out and described in the original answer; that, after the death of Arch Cornett, Frank Horn instituted an action against his heirs asking for a specific performance of the contract, and was adjudged entitled to the relief sought; that, by reason of these things, they were the owners and entitled to one-half interest in the lands, and they asked for relief accordingly.

On October 18, 1929, defendants filed an amended- *362 answer by which they set np claim by adverse'possession to another tract of land containing 20 acres, the boundary of which conflicts with the boundary claimed by appellant and described in its petition; however, It was adjudged that appellant was the owner of this tract, and, since there has been no cross-appeal prosecuted and no question seems to have been raised as to the correctness of the judgment in this respect, it wiU be unnecessary to give further attention to this branch of the case.

In an amended reply appellant alleged that the .greater part of the tract of land described in the second paragraph of the original answer is claimed by defendants under patent No. 43089 for 150 acres issued to Hiram Cornett upon a survey made February 23, 1869, which survey and patent are junior and inferior to the survey and patent of Isam Stamper, No. 10899, under which appellant claims title, and is also inferior and .junior to patent No. 24955 for 200 acres issued to one Andrew Wilson upon a survey made December 14, 1850; and that appellant is the owner of the laud claimed by defendants under both the Stamper and Wilson patents; that any possession defendants or their ancestor, Arch Cornett, and those under whom they claim inside of the boundary .described in the original answer was wholly confined to land within junior patent 43089 and to land within a certain junior patent for 50 acres issued to James Cornett upon a survey of March 28, 1873, which lies partly inside of patent 43089 and to lands inside of junior patent 43292 for 100 acres issued in the name of Arch Cornett, Jr., on survey of February 23, 1869; that the James Cornett and Arch Cornett, Jr., patents lie almost wholly within the patent No. 22170 for 100 acres issued in the name of Arch Cornett upon a survey of March 11, 1836, which is senior to the Isam Stamper patent No. 10899, and to the extent of its conflict with the Stamper patent it is not claimed by appellants; that part of the land claimed by defendants lies inside of a junior patent No. 56567 for 200 acres issued to Basil Cornett upon a survey of February 17, 1882, which overlaps and conflicts with the H. Cornett patent No. 43089; that defendants have no title to the Basil Cornett patent, and have never had any possession thereof; that the patents under which appellees claim title are all junior and inferior to the Isam Stamper patent, and the possession, if any, of *363 appellees and those under whom they claim inside of the junior surveys or patents was taken at a time when the Isam Stamper survey and patent was in the possession of appellant and those under whom it claims; therefore any possession of appellees should be confined to the actual inclosure made by them or their ancestor, Arch Cornett. The reply also pleaded that, by reason of judgments in certain actions involving the title to the lands in controversy to which Arch Cornett and those under whom he and appellees claim title, they are estopped to claim title to the lands, and their right of recovery is thereby barred.

The pleadings, orders, and judgment in some of' these actions are set out at length in the reply as. amended, and will presently be further discussed.

A large volume of proof was taken, including records, title papers, etc., and on final hearing it was adjudged that of the lands in controversy appellant is the-owner of four small tracts described in the judgment, and that appellees are the owners of the remainder, composed of two boundaries -also fully described therein ; that appellees and those under whom they claim had been in the continuous adverse possession of the two tracts which they were adjudged to own to well-marked and well-defined boundaries claiming to the full extent thereof for more than 15 years and more than 30 years next before the day on which appellant’s petition was filed. It was further adjudged that certain deeds in appellant’s chain of title are champertous and void, in so far as they embrace these two tracts of land, because at the time they were made appellees and those under whom they claim were in adverse possession of both tracts in their entirety.

The Isam Stamper patent under which appellant claims title was issued on February 5, 1848, pursuant, to a survey made for him on July 24, 1846, and the boundary contains about 12,000 acres, approximately 9,500 acres of which is within the present county of' Perry, and the remainder being in the county of Letch-er, since created. In its petition, appellant claims title to all the land in the patent boundary which lies withi?a Perry county, except something over twenty exclusions where the Stamper patent conflicts with senior patents, which are set out in the petition, and to which appellant *364 •makes no claim. The only exclusions in any way affecting the boundary in- dispute are lands included in ■patent No. 22170 for 100 acres issued to Archibald •Cornett on a survey made in 1836, and lands included in patent No. 6356 for 300 acres issued to Archibald and ■John Cornett on a survey made in 1844. The Hiram Cornett patent No.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 655, 248 Ky. 360, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-union-co-v-cornett-kyctapphigh-1933.