Liberty Coal Company v. Baker

22 S.W.2d 252, 231 Ky. 761, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 19, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 252 (Liberty Coal Company v. Baker) 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
Liberty Coal Company v. Baker, 22 S.W.2d 252, 231 Ky. 761, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 362 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson—

Reversing.

In the year 1887, T. P. Trigg, as trustee, took deeds for the minerals in a large body of land in Perry county. This title as to the land in controversy passed by proper conveyances to the Virginia Iron Coal & Coke Company, and it on June 25, 1917, leased to the Liberty Coal Company 1,500 acres of the land lying between First and Second creek and including a tract conveyed by Andrew Milam and wife to Trigg, trustee, on July 20, 1887. The Liberty Coal Company entered on the property; spent $150,000 in putting up tipples, tracks, houses, etc., and opened a mine and began getting out coal in 1923. On January 14, 1926, Ira Baker and wife brought this action against it, alleging that they owned two separate tracts of 6 acres each and that the coal company had taken out the coal undbr their land of value $50,000. They prayed that their title be quieted and judgment for the value of the coal taken. The issues were made up; a large mass of proof was taken; on final hearing, the court adjudged Baker and wife to be the owners of the land claimed by them and gave them judgment against the coal company for $25,000 for the coal taken. The coal company appeals.

Andrew Milam bought the land he held from William Eversole about the year 3885; for the proof shows that he lived there five years and left there in 1890, when he sold this tract and moved to another. He held under a title bond, but had paid the purchase money. Appellees also claim under William Eversole by reason of a deed made by him later to Absolam Eversole under which they claim. So the first question to be decided is what land was included in the deed from Milam and wife to Trigg, trustee, by these words: “Our farm containing eighty-one acres, situated on the waters of Second Creek north *763 Fork of Kentucky River in the Comity of Perry, State of Kentucky, being my land and adjoining the lands of Irvine Eversole and others.”

The evidence is undisputed that, when this deed was made, Milam was living in the house at the mouth of Sugar Camp branch with his family and claiming the land there as his own. As to what he bought and held, the widow7 of William Eversole testifies as follows:

“Q. What is your .best recollection as to whether you and your husband did sign any writings, and was it a deed or band, or what? A. I believe we signed something, I won’t be sure about it’s been so long.
“Q. Do you remember the boundary of land that your husband sold Andrew Milam? A. Yes, sir, just the Sugar Camp Branch.”
William Fugate, a neighbor, testifies as follows:
“Q. I believe you have already said that Andrew Milam at one time lived there at the mouth of this Sugar Camp Branch? A. He lived there close on the branch.
“Q. Do you know whether or not Andrew Milam claimed to own some land there where he lived about the mouth of this Sugar Camp Branch? A. Yes, sir, he claimed to own the Sugar Camp Branch.
“Q. Do you know who he claimed to have got the land from on Sugar Camp Branch? A. He claimed that he got it from Billy Eversole and Irvin Eversole I think.
“Q. Do you know whether Andrew Milam had any writings from Billy Eversole? A. Why he claimed he had a writing from Billy Eversole and Bill Stacy.”

William Eversole owned a tract of 600 acres lying on Second- creek, beginning on (he creek and running to the top of the ridge between Second and First creek, “thence up the ridge to a point on upper side of Sugar Camp Branch, thence down the point to the mouth of Sugar Camp Branch, thence with the creek,” etc. This line was well marked, and the marks were old. This tract therefore clearly included Sugar Camp branch. The house in which William Eversole lived was on Second creek below Sugar Camp branch.

*764 On July 28, 1890, Wm.'Ever sole conveyed to E. H. Patterson, trustee, “in fulfillment of Andrew Milam’s bond for title,” reciting that the purchase money was all paid, a certain tract of land containing 55% acres “embraced in patents No. 14755 and a 1500 acre survey of date of patent January 25, 1848.”

The lines of this deed follow the lines of the 1,500-acre patent, and do not include two little tracts of 6 acres lying within the ridge on either side of Sugar Camp branch and outside of the lines of the patent. These two tracts are the land on which are the minerals here in controversy. The situation is roughly illustrated in the following map, on which line 1, 2, 3, represents Second creek; 4, 5, 6, the ridge between it and First creek; 2, 7, Sugar Camp branch; 8, 5, 10, 9, the 1,500-acre patent; 11,14, and 12,13, the ridges on either side of Sugar Camp and A and B the land in controversy:

William Eversole’s house was near 3. He held under his deed to the top of the ridge on the upper side of Sugar Camp. He apparently sold to Milam the upper end of his farm. So far as appears, nothing was then known as to the location of the patent line. His deed called for the top of the ridge, and the line was well marked. It cannot be presumed that he, in selling to Milam, intended to keep 6 acres of land separated from him by the land he was selling to Milam. In the parlance - of Eastern Kentucky forty years ago, to buy a branch meant to buy the land up to the top of the ridge *765 on either side of the branch. The ridges there are high and steep. The top is narrow and clearly shown. There is no level land on top of the ridge. In crossing a ridge, when you get to the top, if you go ahead, you go right down on the other side. The top of the ridge is a well-defined natural boundary.

In the deed to Patterson where it leaves the Williams survey, the call is for a beech, “a line tree of the conditional line between Andrew Milam and Ab Ever-sole;” William Eversole having before 1890 sold to Ab Eversole the land lying below that sold Milam, and this conditional line follows the ridge. In 1902 the Virginia Iron Coal & Coke Company had its several tracts surveyed. The surveyor’s report shows that he ran off the Milam tract by running the top of the ridge between Second and First creek and then ran down the ridges on either side of Sugar Camp branch, making the whole area 64.9 acres. This report shows that Ab Eversole pointed out the lines to the surveyor, and there was never any trouble with him or his immediate vendees. Patterson and his vendees also admitted the title to the mineral to be in the Virginia Coal & Iron Company within the lines shown by its survey along the top of the ridges.

Patterson took all his deeds calling for the patent lines and this rule of his naturally led to his deed, not including the two 6-acre tracts in question. There is no showing that Milam did not claim to William Eversole’s marked line on top of the ridges to which he and those under whom he held had claimed for thirty years.

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Related

Michelle D. Simien v. Unifund CCR Partners
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2010
Crawford v. Baker
143 S.W.2d 512 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.2d 252, 231 Ky. 761, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-coal-company-v-baker-kyctapphigh-1929.