Ogden v. Walker's Heirs

36 Ky. 420, 6 Dana 420, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 4, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 Ky. 420 (Ogden v. Walker's Heirs) 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
Ogden v. Walker's Heirs, 36 Ky. 420, 6 Dana 420, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 78 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Masterson O&den prosecutes this appeal from a judgment for eviction, obtained against him on the demise of Walker’s heirs, in an action of ejectment, instituted in the year 1834, for land held and occupied by Walker, at his death, under an executory contract of purchase from Alexander Montgomery, a patentee thereof, and which the executors of the decedent, in virtue of a power vested in them by his will, sold, in the year 1800, to Ogden, who, in the same year, entered under his contract, and has continued to occupy the land ever since.

By his contract, Ogden was to pay one hundred and seven pounds to the executors — which he did after-wards pay, and was, also, to pay seventy three pounds to Montgomery, which still remained due from the testator, for the same land, and which Ogden was to pay whenever Montgomery should make a title; and it was agreed, also, that, until the executors should make to him a conveyance of the legal title, he should retain the possession and use of the land, “ by paying the use of the whole money that said Walker paid to the said Montgomery.”

In the year 1809, Ogden not having paid any part of the seventy three pounds, Montgomery filed a bill in chancery against Walker’s executors, for a decree therefor, in consequence of an accidental loss of Walker’s bond. But the decree sought by the bill having been resisted by the ■ executors, on the twofold ground that, they doubted Montgomery’s title,, and moreover, were not bound by the terms of the contract'to pay the seventy three pounds until after one year from the time of his making a sufficient conveyance with general war-, ranty — which had never been done — the Circuit Court dismissed the bill absolutely, in the year 1811.

Instruction — upon which the questions for decision arise. Tho’ the vendor equitable'title, the purchaser who entered under hitn, looking to him to procure and convey the legal title, is estopped from denying that his vendor was, or that his heirs are, entitled to tho possession whenever he renounces his tenure under them —unless they consented to the renunciation; or unless he, with tjieir consent, has acquired a superior title; or unless, having, with their knowledge, abandoned his allegiance to them, he'has hej| adversely for 20 years. But—

Afterwards, Ogden having been told by the executors, in the year 1813, in answer to a demand then made for a title, that they were “ unable to make a deed” — brought an action for damages on their covenant, in 1821, and in the year 1826, obtained-a judgment for upwards of eight hpndred dollars.

On th*e trial of this ejectment — after the foregoing facts hqd been proved, and other facts also had been proved, conducing to show that an elder patent of one Sprigg included a part of the land sold by Walker’s executors to Ogden, and that Ogden had disclaimed holding under his contract about five years before the commencement of the suit — the Circuit Court refused to admit documents offered by him, for the purpose of showing that he had purchased Sprigg’s title; and thereupon, instructed the jury that, they should find a verdict against him, if they should believe that he had entered under his contract with Walker’s executors, and had retained the possession of the land ever since, and that Walker was in possession at the time of his death, under his contract with Montgomery.

As the rejected documents were not sufficient to pass Sprigg’s title, and were, moreover, not sufficiently proved, this Court will consider only one question, in revising the judgment of the Circuit Court; and that is, whe-. ther there was any error in the instruction just noticed.

The .only objections to the instruction are, first — that it excluded from the jury all consideration of the question whether Ogden had, in fact, held adversely to the lessors of the plaintiff, for twenty years next preceding the institution of this suit; and, secondly — that, if he did not, or could not, so hold, he was entitled to notice to quit, which the instruction necessarily denied.

But neither of these objections can, in our opinion, be considered availing.

I. It is evident that, though Walker’s title was only equitable, Ogden obtained the possession of the land [422]*422from his executors, entered under his title, knowing its character, and looked, when he entered, to his executors,- and to them alone, for a procurement and conveyance to himself of the legal title of Montgomery. And upon these facts, there can be no doubt that he is estopped, by his entry and continued occupancy ever since, from denying, either that Walker had, and was entitled to have, the possession of the land, or that Walker’s heirs were entitled to a restitution of that possession, whenever he renounced his tenure under them — unless they had consented to that renunciation, or unless he had, with their consent, acquired a right superior to theirs, or had, with their knowledge, abandoned his allegiance to them, and held adversely to them, at least twenty years before they commenced this ejectment.

Where a quasi tenant, who has notified his landlord that he has renounced the contract, & will hold, not under, but against him, has so held for 20 years after the notice, the statute of limitations will protect him. Vide page 225. But— In the absence of proof to the contrary ^beholding of a quasi tenant, or trustee, will always be presumed to he as it was when he entered — under, not adverse to, his landlord.

Although it is a sound and well settled rule of law, that a quasi tenant shall not dispute the title of his landlord, as long as the contract subsists and is recognized between them, nevertheless, if the landlord shall have been notified by such a tenant, that he has renounced the contract, and will not continue to hold under him longer, but will hold against him, and - the tenant shall, after such a virtual eviction, continue an adverse possession in fact for twenty years, he may be protected in that possession by the statute of limitations. The doctrine to that effect in the case of Willison vs. Watkins, (3 Peters’ Rep.) is, in our judgment, perfectly consistent with the true principles and analogies of the law. In the absence of proof to the contrary, the possession of one who entered as Ogden did, will always be presumed to be as it was at first — under, and not against, the right of him under whom he entered. So will the continued possession of one entering as trustee be presumed to be that of trustee only, and not therefore hostile to the right of the beneficiary. But, upon satisfactory proof of a tortious and actually adverse possession, in his own personal and exclusive right, for more than twenty years, he may rely availably on the statute of limitations. And, a fortiori, a quasi tenant, under the like circumstances, may avail himself of the same protective defence.

A bill was filed to recover a balance due for land, which had not been conveyed; deft's resisted on the grounds, of defects in complainant’s title, and that they were not bound to pay till one year after the deed should be made; and the bill was dismissed absolutely: held that this was no evidence of a rescission of that contract, nor of one by which the def’ts had sold the land to another.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ky. 420, 6 Dana 420, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-walkers-heirs-kyctapp-1838.