Lawrence v. Wheeler

147 S.W.2d 698, 285 Ky. 288, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 372
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 28, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 698 (Lawrence v. Wheeler) 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
Lawrence v. Wheeler, 147 S.W.2d 698, 285 Ky. 288, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 372 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion of the Count by

Judge Ratliff

Affirming.

_ The appellant, who was plaintiff below, brought this action against appellee to recover a certain small parcel of land located in Graves County, Kentucky. The determinative question involved is an alleged agreed line established by A. D. Wheeler and B. C. Henley at the time they purchased of M. J. Andrus a certain parcel of land in 1910. Appellant is a remote vendee of B. C. Henley, and the question presented is whether the location of a stake placed by A. D. Wheeler and B. C. Henley, or the quarter section (township) line designated in the Andrus deed is the correct line between the lands of appellant and appellee.

There were several conveyances made between the time A. D. Wheeler and B. C. Henley purchased the land of Andrus and the purchase by appellant of the ^parcel of land in question, whose source of title goes back to the Andrus deed and, as indicated above, the corner established at the time appellant’s predecessor in title, B. C. Henley, purchased the land of Andrus, is the key point throughout the chain of title here involved. The background facts and history of the various conveyances bearing upon the location of the corner line in question, are these:

*289 In November, 1910, and prior thereto, M. J. Andrns owned a large tract of land in Graves County, Kentucky, which was bounded on the west by the land of A. D. Wheeler, father of appellee, Jap Wheeler. The line between the Andrus and Wheeler land ran directly north and south. The Mayfield-Paris highway, running a southeasterly and northwesterly direction, cut across the northeast corner of the Wheeler land and crossed the line between the Andrus and Wheeler land, entering the Andrus land and extending on in a southeasterly direction, thereby cutting off a triangular section of about five acres of the Andrus land, mostly in the southwest corner.

On November 23, 1910, M. J. Andrus sold the triangular tract of land lying between the Mayfield-Paris highway and the Wheeler land to A. D. Wheeler and B. C. Henley for an agreed consideration, and made them separate deeds conveying to Wheeler 1% acres on the northern end of the triangle, and to Henley the remaining 3% acres, the line separating the two parcels running directly east and west.

The 3% acres conveyed by Andrus to B. C. Henley is thus described:

“Beginning at a stake about 38 rods on the Qr. Sec. line between the S. E. and S. W. Qrs. of Sec. 34, T. 2, R. 2, E. Being a stake established by the said Henley and A. D. Wheeler of the lands this day bought of said Andrus by said above named parties; thence south about 40 rods to a stake on Qr. Sec. line; thence in a north easterly direction about 19% rods to the Paris and Mayfield road; thence with road north to a stake this day established by the said Henley and A. D. Wheeler; thence west about 8% rods to the beginning, containing about 3% acres, more or less.”

The location of the southwest corner point of the 1% acre Wheeler tract, and the northwest corner of the 3% acre Henley tract, is the decisive point in this case. It is the contention of appellee that the stake mentioned in the beginning of the description was or should have been on the quarter section line, as indicated in the description; it is the contention of appellant that the stake was placed a few feet west of the quarter section line at a wire fence extending north and south and parallel *290 to the quarter section line, leaving a strip of land a few feet wide between the wire fence and the quarter section line, which constitutes the land here in dispute; or, stated differently, the question is whether the quarter section line constitutes the western boundary line of the land of appellant, or whether it extends a few feet west of the quarter section line to the wire fence.

In 1916 B. C. Henley sold one acre off the northern end of the 3% acre tract described above, to L. H. Henley, but 'this deed does not mention the stake above referred to. The description begins at a stake near the Mayfield-Paris road on the southeast corner of the one acre tract and “thence west 20 rods, more or less; thence north about 6 roads; thence east 20 rods, more or less; thence south to'the beginning. Being a part of the same land deeded to B. C. Henley by M. J. Andrus, deed dated Nov. 23, 1910, # •

After B. C. Henley sold to Lester Henley the one acre off the 3% acres there was left 2% acres of the original 3% acres deeded by Andrus to B. C. Henley. B. C. Henley died and his son, L. H. Henley, inherited the 2% acre tract. In July, 1921, L. H. Henley sold these 2% acres to J. H. Wheeler, a son of A. D. Wheeler, and the description contained in this deed, so far as is pertinent, reads:

“Beginning at a stake about 38 rods on Qr. Sec. line between the S. E. and S. W. Qrs. of Sec. 34, T. 2, R. 2 E. being a stake established between Henley and A. B. "Wheeler, * * *”.

In July, 1925, J. H. Wheeler reconveyed the above mentioned 2% acres to Lester or L. H. Henley, and the description in this deed, so far as is pertinent, reads:

“Beginning at a stake about 38 rods on quarter section line between the S. E. and S. W. corners, Sec. 34, T. 2, R. 2 E. being a stake established between Henley and Wheeler; * * *”.

It appears that the beginning corner in this deed is the original corner or “stake” referred to in the 1910 deed from Andrus to A. D, Wheeler.

In November, 1927, L. H. Henley sold the 2% acres of land to Harry Burton and in the description in this deed the stake in question is referred to as being “on *291 the quarter section line” and also “established between Henley and A. D. Wheeler,” apparently the same beginning point established by the Andrus deed in 1910.

On June 11, 1929, Harry Burton sold to the appellant, H. C. Lawrence, one acre off of the north end of the 2% acre tract and in that deed the stake in question is not specifically mentioned, but reference is made to the description in the deed from Henley to Burton which calls for a stake on the quarter section line.

The action was brought in ejectment but by agreement of the parties it was transferred to equity and the evidence heard in open court. The stake in question has long since been removed, but it is claimed that there is a hole in the ground at the wire fence a few feet west of the quarter section line, where a post had been set at the point where the stake was set at the time Andrus deeded the land to A. D. Wheeler and B. C. Henley. Appellant testified that when he bought the land of Burton he talked to Burton and several others and they showed him a hole and said that was the corner and it was “right up against that wire fence in the edge of the woods in the northwest corner.” Burton’s evidence is in substance the same as that of the appellant in regard to the location of the hole. Also, the evidence of Harvey Wheeler, a son of A. D.

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Related

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163 S.W.2d 33 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 698, 285 Ky. 288, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-wheeler-kyctapphigh-1941.