Martin v. Hall

153 S.W. 997, 152 Ky. 677, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 720
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 7, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 153 S.W. 997 (Martin v. Hall) 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
Martin v. Hall, 153 S.W. 997, 152 Ky. 677, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 720 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Miller

Affirming.

This action was' brouglit by tTie beirs of' Simpson Martin against John Hall and E. S. Erasure and wife, to quiet the title to certain lands lying on tbe waters of the Bolen Branch of the Left Fork of Beaver Creek, in Floyd County. These lands have been so long in litigation that a brief history of that litigation is necessary'to an understanding of this appeal.

Bolen Branch and Frasure’s Creek run into Left Beaver Creek with a dividing ridge between them. In 1848 William H. McNew entered and surveyed 1,280 acres on Bolen Branch, excluding “a number of aeres” for prior claims. The exclusion aggregated' about' 210 acres. This survey was supposed to lie wholly on Bolen Branch, but when actually located it extended across the ridge which lies between Bolen Branch and Frasure’s Creek and covered part of the land known as the “Justice Surveys, ’ ’ under which appellees claim. .Prior to 1873,' Simpson Martin, appellants’ ancestor, had .long livéd upon and was the owner of several surveys lying on the waters of Bolen Branch. He claimed ali the lands [679]*679lying upon that Branch, one of his surveys covering the whole of it.

At that time John Hall, one of the appellees, owned several, surveys lying on the waters of Store House Branch of Frasure’s Creek, while Wilson Hall was the owner of other lands lying on the Middle Branch of Frasure’s Creek. Martin and the Halls, and those under whom, they held, respectively, have lived upon and possessed their respective farms for perhaps half a century. The MeNew survey, when fully run out, embraced most, if not all, of the Martin, Hall and Justice surveys. McNew made this survey without regard to the claims of any of those persons. McNew did not live upon his survey, but resided in a remote part of Floyd County, many miles from this land, and in what is now Magoffin County. MeNew obtained a patent for his survey in 1850, and died intestate in 1857, a resident of Floyd County. Shortly after McNew’s death a suit was instituted in Floyd County to settle his estate. In 1860, Magoffin County was created out of parts of Floyd and other counties; and as the former home of McNew, as well as the home of his heirs and his administrator, and the site of some of his lands, were included in the new county of Magoffin, the ease was transferred to that county .for trial The lands on Beaver Creek remained, however^ in Floyd County. Pursuant to a judgment in that action, MeNew’s 1,280 acre survey was sold, on March 10, 1873, at public outcry, and Simpson Martin became the purchaser. It appears that Martin purchased this survey for the. purpose of protecting his title to his home farm.

It further appears from the testimony of the appellant, James Martin, a son of Simpson Martin, that his father did not know the McNew survey extended over the ridge to the waters of Frasure’s Creek until after his purchase, and upon his discovering that fact, he sold to Wilson Hall, who then lived on Middle Branch of Frasure’s Creek, all that part of the patent lying on that branch, but failed to make him a deed. This was in about 1875. In 1879, Simpson Martin sued the appellee John Hall in ejectment,;in the Floyd Circuit Court, seeking to recover possession-of the land described in the McNew survey and lying oh the witters of Frasure’s Creek. Hall answered, claiming title under several surveys, including a survey appearing in the name of John Preston; two surveys in the name of John Gearhart, all of which were senior to the McNew survey; also one survey in the name [680]*680of James Justice, made in 1851, and one to himself for 156 acres covering all of the land on the Store House Branch of Frasure’s Creek, and made in 1871. That ease was transferred to the equity docket, over Hall’s objection. In 1885, the circuit court gave judgment against Hall and in favor of Martin, for the land in question, with the exception of Hall’s enclosures. In 1886, John Hall bought the land on Middle Branch from Wilson Hall. On appeal to this court, however, the judgment in the case between Martin and Hall, above referred to, was reversed in 1889, for error in transferring the case to the equity docket, and it was remanded for a new trial. See Hall v. Martin, 89 Ky., 9. At the time of the rendition of the judgment of the circuit court and of the Court of Appeals in the foregoing case, the appellee E. S. Frasure was in possession of the Store House Branch boundary, which he had bought from John Hall in 1882. He had been put into possession of the land in that year, although he did not get a deed from Hall until 1893.

In 1888, while Hall’s appeal was pending in the Court of Appeals, McNew’s heirs filed a suit in the Floyd Circuit Court against Simpson Martin, James Martin and the appellee John Hall, seeking to recover the McNew survey upon the theory that the judgment of sale rendered in the suit to settle McNew’s estate, and under which Simpson Martin bought in 1873, was void because the pleadings therein had failed to describe the land. The McNew case was continued on the docket of the circuit court until áfter the trial of the appeal between Hall and Martin in the Court of Appeals, above referred to. In 1890, after the return of the case of Martin v. Hall to the circuit court, it was consolidated with the McNew case on the motion of Simpson Martin, and was ordered to be, and was thereafter,, known on the docket as “James McNew and Others v. Simpson Martin and Others.” In April, 1899, the consolidated case was submitted and judgment rendered dismissing the McNew petition, and filing away the case, but without a trial of any issues between Hall and Martin. Upon an appeal by the McNew heirs from the judgment in favor of Martin, that judgment was affirmed in January, 1901, in the case of McNew’s Heirs v. Martin’s Heirs, reported in 22 Ky. L. R., 1275, and in 60 S. W., 412.

Simpson Martin died on May 10, 1901, and his heirs, perceiving that the suit of Simpson Martin v. John Hall [681]*681had gone off the docket, and apparently had been abandoned by him .without a trial, served notice upon John Hall that they would enter a motion at the January term, 1903, to re-docket- the case for the purpose of trying the issues between John Hall and Simpson Martin. On January 13, 1903, an order was entered re-docketing the case. After several unsuccessful efforts by Simpson Martin’s heirs to revive the case, the circuit court,- on April 9, 1904, overruled the motion to. revive, and dismissed the action without prejudice, to which order the heirs of Simpson Martin excepted. Thus was ended,, without a trial of any issue, the ejectment suit that had been filed in 1879 by Simpson Martin against John Hall. No-further step was taken in that action.

However, in March, 1906, the present action was filed by appellants, as heirs of Simpson Martin, against John Hall and Frasure, to quiet their title to all the land in the McNew survey. At the time the suit was brought, John Hall claimed to be the owner and in possession of all of the lands on the Middle Branch, and which he had bought from his brother, Wilson Hall, in 1886; while Frasure claimed he owned and was in the possession of the lands on the Store House Branch and around the mouth thereof, which he had bought from John Hall in 1882. They set out those boundaries in their answer, and it is such parts of these tracts as are within the Mc-Nfew survey, and lying on Middle Branch and Store House Branch of Frasure’s Creek, that constitute the disputed property in this action. Appellees claim no land on -Bolen Branch.

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W. 997, 152 Ky. 677, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-hall-kyctapp-1913.