May v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

212 S.W. 131, 184 Ky. 493, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 29, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 131 (May v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.) 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
May v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 212 S.W. 131, 184 Ky. 493, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 86 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming

This action in ejectment was instituted by D. A. May and several other persons, heirs of Ann Eliza May, in the Pike circuit court in August, 1913, to recover of the C. & O. Railway Company, Greenough Coal & Coke Company, Big Sandy Railway Company, Joel Ratliff and Harriett Ratliff, eleven-twelfths of a tract of 50 acres of land, lying on Marrowbone creek, in Pike county. The C. & O. Railway Company built its track across the land for a distance of one-half mile or more, and the Greenough Coal & Coke Company had constructed its mining camp, consisting of a tippie, or tipples, trams, incline, switches, tracts, commissary and many houses used for residences upon a part of the land; and Joel Ratliff and wife were in possession of the balance of the tract, holding and claiming it as their own at the time of the insti'uition of the action. The lands in controversy were [495]*495patented to David Branham June 21, 1827, and Branham took actual possession in the same year. ,0n March lr 1836, Branham sold and conveyed the land to Isaac. Moore by deed of that date; Moore sold it to William Batliff, Sr., and conveyed it by deed of date March 4r 1839. Batliff on March 13,1846, by deed conveyed a life-estate in the lands to his daughter, Mrs. Ann Eliza May,, with remainder to her children, and this is the beginning of the controversy. Ann Eliza was the wife of James May, and they immediately took actual possession of the land and lived on it until 1853. In the meantimé Polly May, a daughter of Ann Eliza and James May,, died intestate, and James and Ann Eliza May, as the-heirs of their daughter, inherited her share of the land in fee. On February 1, 1853, James and Ann Eliza May undertook to convey the fee simple title to the entire-tract by deed to Beuben Bowe. In May, 1856, Bowe conveyed it, by deed of special warranty, to Silas Batliff,. Shortly thereafter Silas Batliff died leaving a will, which was probated in 1858, devising this tract of land to Ms-daughter, Bebecca Batliff, who afterwards married Lovett Childers, and Mrs. Childers and her husband, on. June 30, 1882, deeded the land to William Batliff and appellee, Joel Batliff, with covenants of general warranty. By deed of date April 16, 1887, William Batliff and wife conveyed their one-half undivided interest to appellee, Joel Batliff, by deed of general warranty, thus apparently investing him with title to the whole tract. Joel Batliff took and held said land from 1887 until a short time before the institution of this action, when he sold and conveyed by deed of date August 29, 1905, a part of it to his co-appellee, Greenough Coal Company,, and about the same time sold a right of way to the C.- & O. Bailway Company. The balance he holds and claims; as his own.

This litigation, commenced by the children and heirs of Ann Eliza May, is based upon a claim of ownersMp of the tract of land to which reference is made under the deed above mentioned, from William Batliff, Sr., in ISIS',.. to his daughter, Ann Eliza May, in which he attempted: to convey to her a life estate with remainder to her children. Said deed is as follows:

“This indenture made and entered into, this 13th day of March, A. D. 1846, by and between Wm. Batliff, Sr, of the one part, of the eounty of Pike and state of Ken[496]*496tucky, and Ann Eliza May of the other part of the same county and state; The said ¥m. Ratliff, for and in consideration of natural affection for the said Ann Eliza’ (being his daughter) hath this day bargained and sold unto the said Ann Eliza a certain tract or parcel of land' lying and being in the county of Pike and state of Kentucky, on the waters of the Long Pork of Marrowbone ‘ creek, containing 50 acres by survey, bounded as followeth; to-wit: Beginning on a beech on the south side of the creek, thence running up the creek 8. 44 E. 60 poles to a beech; S. 69 E. 40 poles to a hickory; S. 74 E. 40 poles to a beech; S. 20 W. 12 poles to a beech; N. 78 W. 90 poles to lynn; S. 30 W. 28 poles to a small lynn on the bank of the creek; S. 8 W. 39 poles to a beech; S. 13 E. 44 poles' to a sugar tree; S. 10 W. 82 poles to a large beech; S. 59 W. 20 poles to a beech and maple, same course 100' poles to a stake; N. 40 W. 80 poles; thence running back by parallel lines, N. 59 E 99 poles; N. 10 E. 28 poles; N. 13 W. 44 poles; N. 8 E. 39 poles; N. 30 E. 28 poles; N. 20. W. 90 poles; S. 77 E. 86 poles to the beginning, with its appurtenances, to have and to hold forever free from me, my heirs and assigns unto the said Ann Eliza May, her heirs and assigns. That is to say unto Ann Eliza her lifetime, then to her children, and will forever warrant and defend from all claim or claims claiming in, thru, or by me. In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal, this day and date above written.
“¥m. Ratliff (Seal).
“Attest:
“G-. W. Brown,
“Colbert Cecil,
“Nath Robbett.”

Appellants (plaintiffs below) assert that the language of the habendum clause of said deed vested Ann Eliza May with a life estate only, with remainder to her children, and that her deed made in 1853, which purported to convey the fee simple title to the entire tract, did in fact convey only her life estate therein, with a one-twelfth interest in fee, which she and James May inherited from one of their twelve children, who died before they , executed the deed to Reuben Rowe. Ann Eliza May died in January, 1897, and this action was commenced on August 16, 1913, more than sixteen years after the death of the life tenant.

[497]*497Each of the appellees (defendants below) filed a separate answer in which the material allegations of the petition and its several amendments were controverted. In another paragraph the answers interposed the fifteen year statute of limitation; in another paragraph the thirty year statute of limitations Avas pleaded, and one defendant in yet another paragraph alleged facts Avhich entitled it to relief under the seven year statute of limitation. Each defendant, by Avay of counterclaim against the plaintiffs, averred that since it has been in the possession of said lands, it had erected permanent, valuable and lasting improvements thereon; that at the time-it did so, it in good faith believed it Avas the OAvner of' the land and built said improvements in good faith, and each defendant asks that in case the plaintiffs, appellants here, recoArer said land, defendants be adjudged a lien thereon for the value of said improvements. Issue Avas joined, and after the taking of much evidence on both sides in depositions, the case having been transferred by agreement to equity, Avas submitted for judgment, Avhereupon the court dismissed the petition of plaintiffs, and they prosecute this appeal.

Appellants asserting the folloAving propositions, urge a reversal of the judgment:

(1) The deed from Win.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 131, 184 Ky. 493, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-kyctapp-1919.