Leslie County v. Pace

122 S.W.2d 984, 275 Ky. 844, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 13, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 984 (Leslie County v. Pace) 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
Leslie County v. Pace, 122 S.W.2d 984, 275 Ky. 844, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 511 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This appeal seeks our review and reversal of a judgment (entered upon tke jury’s verdict) of the Leslie circuit court, awarding the appellee, Manerva Pace, the sum of $1,000 as the value of a strip of her land alleged wrongfully taken by the appellant for highway purposes and for consequential damages to her adjacent property.

*845 The factual situation out of which this suit arose is as follows:

In the year 1932, Manerva Pace was the owner of a certain hotel property abutting on the south side of Main St., running in an eastwardly and westwardly course, in Hyden, Ky.

The State Highway Commission in 1931 made a. survey of a right-of-way required over and along this street for constructing highway No. 80 or more particularly the Hyden-Manchester link thereof.

The map made of this survey, locating the course, distance, and width, over the appellee’s lot, of this right-of-way required for constructing this new highway, showed, according to its calls, that it took a strip of land from off and across the north end of plaintiff’s lot, which extended southwardly from the center line of the right-of-way for a distance or width of 35 feet and across its frontage, east and west, 160 feet.

Deeds were prepared by the Highway Commission, among which was one calling for the conveyance to it of this particular strip of land called for by the survey, which was with the others sent by the commission to the Leslie county court, together with a blue print map of the survey, showing the owners of and the several parcels of land embraced in the right-of-way, which the court was asked to acquire by obtaining execution of the aforesaid deeds. Condemnation suits were filed accordingly.

Commissioners were appointed by the county judge to appraise the parcels of land to be taken, including that of plaintiff as described in the deed and called for by the survey.

Appraisement was made by the appointed commissioners of this strip of land at $500, which was awarded and paid to plaintiff therefor, upon her executing the aforesaid deed thereto on April 6, 1932.

It is contended by plaintiff and her witnesses that the commission’s engineers, in making this 1931 survey of the right-of-way, therein located and described the several abutting properties called for by the boundary lines given of the proposed road and according to which stakes were placed along the center and outside lines thereof. She states that the deed sent to and executed by her was by her understood as intended to convey only *846 that strip of her land which was located by and came within the boundary lines indicated by these stakes.

It appears also that plaintiff is,a widow, some sixty-five years of age, who can neither read nor write and that, when she was asked to convey this 35 by 160 foot strip of her land, as same was described in the deed,, prepared according to the calls and description given and shown by the map of the survey, she asked the commissioners, becatise of being unable to read the calls of the deed, to point out to her the boundaries of the strip of land she was asked to convey by the deed and was told by the county officials then asking her execution of the deed that the strip of land she was conveying by the deed extended from the center line of the highway, as-staked, to the outside south boundary, as same was also-indicated by stakes, which she then saw standing and extending along the fence in front of her house; that she thereupon, intending to convey only the strip of her land extending to such stake-marked outside^ boundary line along her fence, executed the deed, believing she was- conveying only such strip rather than that by the deed described as a strip of land “running thence (from John Asher’s property line) in a westerly direction 221 feet in and through the property of the party of the first-part and including all lands on the right side and within 35 feet of the center line of said survey,” it being understood that “the said strip of land is not to* be in excess of 35 feet in width,” etc.

Also it is testified by plaintiff that a later or second survey was made, locating this right-of-way along her property, by which its outside boundary line, as first staked across her land, was changed and moved further south, taking a wider strip of it than had been previous-lv conveyed or intended to be conveyed by her deed, so that the right-of-way not only came up to her hotel, but intersected and passed through the northwest corner of it, materially damaging it by cutting off some seven feet of it.

She states that this new highway was later constructed according to such changed course as was made by this alleged second survey in 1933 and that, by reason of the change made thereby, there was taken a strip across her lot 14 feet in width, which had not been conveyed the Highway Commission by her deed executed it in April, 1932; that this additional 14 feet taken laid. *847 outside of and was not included within the boundaries of the 35-foot strip which she had by her deed conveyed it, and that she had never been paid any compensation whatever for this additional land so taken from her or the consequential damages to her adjacent property caused by its taking.

Her claim in this having been presented and refused, she filed this suit against appellants, alleging in substance the facts as set out and asking recovery of $1,500, as the value of this alleged extra 14-foot strip of land taken from her, and $1,000 consequential damages to her adjacent land and hotel building.

To plaintiff’s petition, presenting such claims, the appellants filed answer denying its material allegations and by a separate paragraph affirmatively pleaded that the strip of plaintiff’s land taken by the county, as part of the right-of-way required for construction of said highway, had been deeded to the Highway Commission by appellee on April 6, 1932.

< By reply to the answer, plaintiff admitted the execution of the deed, but sought to avoid the pleaded effect of the deed, as a bar to her right to recover, by further alleging, as stated supra, that after the deed was executed by her in April, 1932, the appellants went outside the deeded boundary and took an extra 14-foot strip of land, for which no compensation had been paid her, and that she was entitled to recover the value of the strip wrongfully taken, together with the consequential damages caused her thereby, as sued for.

Defendant’s demurrer to this pleading was overruled and its affirmative allegations by agreement were controverted of record.

A_ jury trial had upon these issues joined resulted in plaintiff’s recovery of a verdict and judgment thereon for the sum of $1,000.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sutton v. Cotton
159 S.W.2d 997 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W.2d 984, 275 Ky. 844, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leslie-county-v-pace-kyctapphigh-1938.