Kentucky Union Co. v. Shepherd

234 S.W. 10, 192 Ky. 447, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 17, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 10 (Kentucky Union Co. v. Shepherd) 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 Union Co. v. Shepherd, 234 S.W. 10, 192 Ky. 447, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 107 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing.

Tlie appellant, Kentucky Union Company, a corporation, was the plaintiff below, and the appellees, L. Shepherd and Swift Coal and Timber Company, a corporation, were the defendants below. The action was originally filed by plaintiff against defendant, Shepherd, to enjoin him from committing continuous trespasses upon the described tract of land in Perry county, Kentucky, containing 337 acres, 3 rods and 36 poles, which plaintiff claimed to own at the time of the filing of the petition and had owned since 1882. Afterwards by an amended petition the Swift Coal and Timber Company was made a defendant and the same relief was prayed as against it. The answers of each defendant denied plaintiff’s title to about 161 acres of land described in the petition, and in a second paragraph alleged that the defendant, Swift Coal and [449]*449Timber Company, owned that 161 acres and that defendant, Shepherd, was its tenant, and that the trespasses complained of in the petition Iwere committed on that tract; and it made its answer a counterclaim and asked that it be adjudged the owner of the 161 acres. The reply denied that the corporate defendant owned any part of the 161 acres claimed by it, ánd upon submission after preparation the court dismissed the petition as well as the counterclaim of the corporate defendant, which in effect adjudg’ed that none of the litigants owned the 161 acres of land described in the answers; and the judgment left the corporate defendant in possession -of that tract through its codefendant, Shepherd, as its tenant. Complaining of that judgment plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The determination -of the whole case rests upon the true location of patent No. 24,130, issued by the Commonwealth to Jonathan Smith in 1845 as assignee of Elijah Combs, who had previously procured land warrant No. 360, and the survey and patent to Smith included a part of the land covered by that warrant. The patent issued to Smith calls for one hundred acres, while the survey made in his behalf as assignee of Combs calls for 150 acres; but in both the patent and the survey the calls and distances, are the same, and in neither of them are there any natural objects called for, except at the beginning corner, which is “a white oak and chestnut oak in the dividing’ ridge between the Line Fork and Leatherwood Creek near the chestnut flat which is the waters of the North Fork of the Kentucky river.” From the beginning corner the calls in the survey are: “Thence (1) N. 50 E. 80 po. to a stake; (2) N. 120 po. to a stake; (3) N. 72 W. 60 po. to a stake; (4) N. 66 W. 100 po. to a stake; (5) N. 20 W. 54 po. to a stake; (6) N. 80 W. 250 po. to a stake; (7') S. 67 W. 60po. to a stake; (8) S. 76 E. 286 po. to a stake; (9) S. 52 W. 203 po. to a stake; (10) S. 116 po. to a stake; (11) E. 90 po. to the 'beginning. ’ ’ The courses and distances in the patent are the same as those shown in the survey, except in the patent the distance of the ninth call is 213 poles, instead or 203 poles as stated in the survey. The court found that there was an error in both the survey and the patent, and that to locate the patent so as to make its boundaries and contour conform to the figure of the plat filed by the surveyor in the land office, the first and the ninth calls should each be reversed, so that the one iwould read “N 50 W. 80 poles” instead of [450]*450“N. 50 E. 80 poles” (as stated in the survey and patent) and that the other one read “S. 52 E. 213 poles” instead of “S. 52 W. 213 poles.” By thus reversing those two calls the court adopted a figure, or plat, shaped somewhat like the one made by the surveyor in his certificate, issued to obtain the patent, and which was filed in the land office at Frankfort. ¿But the court’s location of the patent made it include entirely different ground from that covered by the surveyor’s plat; there being not an inch of ground covered by the same plats, and they had nothing in common 'with each other except the same beginning point. In fact the land included in the surveyor’s plat lies east of that included in the plat adopted by the court in its judgment, a distance of from a quarter of a mile (after the first call),.to at least two miles at the end of the seventh call. The plat made by the surveyor, as a part of his certificate, very much resembles in shape an ordinary shot gun standing upright with the hammer and the sights to the east and the butt of the stock altered by making its west line parallel with the gun barrel and the gun itself resting upon an acute angle. The figure adopted by the court is somewhat the same shape, but to make it conform to the surveyor’s plat the court in its judgment turned it to the left (west) 90 degrees, and made some changes in the courses of some of the lines.

The location of the patent, according to the courses and distances contained in its calls, as well as- those in the survey, makes a figure corresponding in shape to an ordinary stew pot with the handle attached to the top of the lid and running to the left (west) at an angle of a little less than 45 degrees. We have adopted these homely illustrations in lieu of inserting figures of the three plats, because we think our illustrations can be equally as well understood and we save space, expense and time in doing so.

The court seems to have proceeded upon the theory, not only that the plat of the surveyor when there was a conflict between it and the calls in the patent, was infallible, but that it was its duty under the adjudications of this court, and the rules governing the location of patents, to make the boundaries of the patent conform to the shape of the surveyor’s plat; though to do so would necessitate the reversing of calls, and the inclusion of land within the located patent, though miles away from that included in the surveyor’s plat. To do this it 'was not [451]*451only necessary for the court to adjudge that the surveyor made a mistake in some of his calls but, further, that he in making the plat was also mistaken in the cardinal points and should have placed his meridian line at exactly right angles to the way it ¡was found on the plat, so as to make its top point east on the plat instead of north. However, with the respective plats before us it can be easily seen that 'when the meridian line is thus changed the surveyor’s plat, and the one adopted by the court, would each include some of the same land, while other land would be included in each of them, not found in the other one.

The supreme task of the court in locating a patent is to ascertain the intention of the parties at the time of making the survey and to adopt the location which the parties intended to make upon the ground at the time. For the performance of this task numerous rules have been adopted largely, if not entirely, analogous to the rules for the construction of other contracts and writings. None of them is inexorable nor should any of them be given indubitable weight. Everything else being equal, courses and distances surrender to natural objects, and when there are no natural objects called for considerable weight should be given to courses and distances, but in running a line along a given course to a designated point that point should be reached at the expense of the given distance. Under the same circumstances, if there is uncertainty and ambiguity in the' description contained in the patent, making the construction from the papers in the case only and excluding extraneous facts and circumstances, the plat is both admissible and potent evidence and is given considerable weight.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 10, 192 Ky. 447, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-union-co-v-shepherd-kyctapp-1921.