Kercheval v. Ambler

34 Ky. 166, 4 Dana 166, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 9, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 34 Ky. 166 (Kercheval v. Ambler) 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
Kercheval v. Ambler, 34 Ky. 166, 4 Dana 166, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 45 (Ky. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Judge Marshall did not sit in this case.

At the same term of the same court, Forman obtained a judgment of eviction against John Kercheval and his

two sons (Lewis C. Kercheval and Franklin Kercheval;) and Ambler, in a separate action of ejectment, obtained a similar judgment against John Kercheval alone, for a part of the same tract of land.

Forman’s judgment was enforced by a habere facias; and he, thereupon, instantly, by written contract, leased the land to the three persons whom he had thus evicted.

Afterwards, the sheriff returned a habere facias, which had been issued on Ambler’s judgment, executed by delivering the possession, of so much of the land as he had recovered from John Kercheval, to William R. Beatty, as the attorney of Ambler. Beatty, having immediately left the land, with the avowed intention of putting a tenant on it, and believing afterwards, that John and Franklin Kercheval had tortiously entered upon it in his absence, brought a warrant against them, in the name of Ambler, for a forcible entry, and obtained a judgment, which this Court reversed, on the ground that, as Franklin Kercheval was not a party to Ambler’s ejectment, he could not have been lawfully evicted by the execution which had beep issued upon it, and, that, therefore, he was not guilty of the alleged forcible entry on Ambler’s possession. After the return of the cause to the Circuit Court, the suit having been abated as' to Franklin Kercheval, in consequence of his death, Ambler obtained another judgment for restitution against John Kercheval: to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.

In revising the judgment, we shall not notice in detail fill the poipts presented in the record and relied on by [167]*167the appellant, but shall consider only such questions as will, when settled, dispose of the whole case in all the various aspects it exhibits.

Where a sheriff executes aha. fa and delivers the land to the plaintiff’s agent, the possession is the plt’f’s, Sr the fact that he prosecutes a writ of forcible entry, for a subsequent intrusion on the land, is sufficient evidence of the agent’s authority The return upon a ha. fa. is conclusive between the parties, as to the land held by the def’t when thenoticein eject ment was served. The agent of the plt’f in a ha. fa. having received the possession, retire's and leaves the land; Whether he thus abandons the possession, or not, depends npon the quo animo; and his declarations, at the time, being part of the res gesta, are evidence of his intentions in that respect — If he did not intend to abandon—which a jury may infer from the evidence—the party for whom the possession was received, may, upon his constructive possession, maintain a writ of forcible entry.

First. If the possession was, in fact, delivered by the sheriff to the agent of Ambler, it was Ambler’s, and not bis agent’s, possession, and the warrant was properly sued out in the name and for the benefit of Ambler; because the possession was for his use alone, and was therefore his inlaw and in fact; and the fact that Ambler ratified the agency, by bringing this suit, is sufficient evidence of Beatty’s authority to take and hold the possession for him, in all respects, just as if he had himself been present and acted without the intervention of a representative. Speed vs. Ripperdan, 1 Litt. Rep. 189— 2 Starkie on Ev. 510.

Second. Nor can there be any doubt, on the score of authority, that, to the extent of John Kercheval’s possession when the notice in ejectment yvas served on him, the official return on the habere facias is conclusive between the same parties, as to the facts which it certifies; and the fact that Beatty did not continue on the land, is not, per se, proof of an abandonment of the actual possession; hut the possession in fact having been once rightfully vested, remained, in judgment of law, in Am-bier until a voluntary dereliction ora wrongful eviction. Whether there had been such voluntary abandonment, depends on the quo animo with which Beatty left the land; and his declarations at that time, being a part of the res gestee, were admissible as competent evidence. And if, as the jury had a right to infer, there had been no intentional dereliction, such a constructive possession in fact, as that continuing after the delivery by the sheriff, was sufficient for maintaining a warrant for forcible entry in consequence of any subsequent entry without the consent of Ambler or his agent. Speed vs. Ripperdan supra, and the Kentucky Reports on Forcible Entries and Detainers, passim.

Third. The judgment in ejectment was conclusive as to the fact that John Kercheval had been in possession; and, whatever may be the preponderance of probability, the jury had a- right, in the opinion of this Court, to de[168]*168cicle that he had tortiously entered on the actual possession of Ambler, after the execution of the habere facias-, and, of course, whether he entered for his own or another’s use, and whether he or another was on the land when the warrant in this case was issued, he is liable to this summary proceeding for restitution so far as he has acted and may, in that respect, be concerned. Such is the practical operation of the statuté, and any other construction of it would render it) in many instances, ineffectual and nugatory.

Ajudg’t in ejectment, is conclusive evidence, that the dePt had been in possession; and if he is amoved by ha. fas and is again found onthe land — whether his last entry was in his own right, or that Of another*, a jury may infer that it was tortious, iand, if so, he is liable to a writ of forcible entry. A deposition taken in one cause may be read cronf/ms-between the same parties, ned condemn the decision of a lower court upon thesufficiency of the grounds for admitting a deposition (in ness) °un!ee;sV1a paipableabuseof cretio'rf appears! A cause will not be reversed for mission of adecontains”nothing that could prejucomplabiing.ait^

The foregoing considerations, when rightly applied, virtually dispose of the instructions given and refused, taken altogether, with the modifications made by the Circuit Judge, and sustain all the opinions which hé gave on every material point which occurred in the progress of the trial-, ’with the exception only of two remaining questions, which we will now proceed’ more specifically to consider.

First. The appellant insists that, the Circuit Court errecj jn pefmitting the appellee to read a deposition of 1 , . . , . . , _ . , Joel Berry, which had been taken and read m the action 0f ejectment between the same parties. As that deposition had been read on a former trial between the same parties, and tended to prove an important fact in this 1 . , . 1 ,, . case—to-wit: that the appellant was m the possession, notice in ejectment was served on him, of the J . land which was delivered to the appellee’s agent m vn* tue the habere facias,

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ky. 166, 4 Dana 166, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kercheval-v-ambler-kyctapp-1836.