Parmers v. Respass

21 Ky. 562, 5 T.B. Mon. 562, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 209
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 11, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ky. 562 (Parmers v. Respass) 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
Parmers v. Respass, 21 Ky. 562, 5 T.B. Mon. 562, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 209 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinions

Judge Mills

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

John, George, William and Thomas Parmer filed their bill in equity against Augustine C. Respass, alleging that a patent lor 1000 acres of [563]*563land had issued toTohn Melton, to the one half of which Haggin was entitled for location; that Elijah Melton and Benjamin Berry, as attornies in fact for John Melton, had conveyed the said tract entirely to said. John Haggin, who conveyed 500 acres thereof to Elijah Melton, and the remaining 500 acres to the-complainants. That Elijah Melton conveyed the 500 acres so conveyed to him- by Haggin, to Thomas Respass, who’ conveyed the same to the defendant, á. C. Respass, except a small portion previously conveyed by him to Isham Talbott. That in making the division line between the shares of Elijah Melton and the complainants, no line was actually made, or corners marked, but that line was ideal and done by protraction only, each deed designing to convey 500 acres, or-rather a full moiety of the tract, and calling for each others corners, and for such distances along the original line of the survey, as was supposed sufficient to give the half to each, before the division corner was called for; but that by running these distances of each deed, it was afterwards ascertained that they would not'meet in a-common division line, but left a surplus of about 20 poles in breadth between them, of which they, the complainants, claim their proportionate share, and which the defendant, A. C. Respass, would not allow them to occupy, but bad enclosed by fencing on their side, more than his share, and that, the division line is never yet settled, which they pray may he done by the decree of the chancellor, and that their proportion of the surplus, according to the. length of their side lines, may be assigned to them,

Advtrsary claims purchased and prayer for them to be partitioned according to agreements.

They further allege, that finding that-an-elder ■> a-tent for about 50Ü acres or. less, covered a portion of the said 1000 acre tract, in the name of. Melton, and was nearly all within it, and that, said smaller patent in the name of Gatliff covered a part of each division of the tract of 1000 acres; they, the complainants, together with said Thomas Respass, purchased the patent of Gatliff, and received a joint conveyance therefor, and that said Thomas Respass had conveyed his undivided moiety thereof to the defendant, A. C. Respass. That each intended to divide and hold the said patent of Gatliff, by the-. [564]*564division line of the 1000 acre tract, so far as they interfered with each other, and that the part of Gatliff which lay without Melton, had never yet been divided in any manner, nor had there been mutual releases in severalty, of that part which did interfere, and that the defendant refused to divide. They pray a surrender of the title acquired from Gatliff, to be fixed by the true division line of the 1000 acres, so far as the interference extended, and that tiie part which did not interfere, might be divided.

PomuiTor to till sustained j and bill <lisjinissed. Grounds of the docislon a«-íúnst the Hull. Will equity ontertnin jurisdiction for Ibo solo purpose of iixing tbo true position of a disputed division lino |jr pthor bofindnry. feqmty has concurrent juiisdiclion '\ilh tbo courts of law to compel partition.

[564]*564The defendant demurred to this bill, and the court sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the bill with costs, and to reverse that decree this appeal is prosecuted.

It is evident, from the foregoing statement, that the complainants have right, and .that for a violation thereof, of which they complain, they are entitled to some relief in a court of justice. The only ground, therefore, on which the court below could have dismissed the bill, must have been the supposition that the complainants had a full and adequate remedy at law, and consequently ought not to have sued in a court of equity.

If, as the complainants seem to suppose, the com veyance of Melton’s grant has regularly passed the title from the patentee to them and the defendant, and their conveyances, by a fair construction, intend to unite in a common division line, and to leave no space between the two, it is conceded that the construction of them would be the same at law as in equity, and that of course legal remedies might lie used for a disturbance of the dividing line, so far as tbe patent of Melton is concerned, and that controversy would narrow itself down to the question where the line of partition actually existed, and whether chancery would entertain jurisdiction for the solo purpose of fixing the true position of a disputed boundary, we need not now determine.

For the interposition of Gatliff’s patent, acquired by the litigants’jointly, and not yet divided, render the application to a court of equity indubitably proper. As to that claim, it being the elder grant, the [565]*565controversy becomes a question of partition; and although partition can be enforced at law, yet a court of equity has entertained a concurrent jurisdiction, to compel partition to be made.

Held on the case apparent by the exhibits made in the bill, that tho complainants came properly into equity to complete their legal title to part, and forpaiff tion.

How the part of Gatliff’s patent, which lies without the grant of Melton is to be divided, and where the division line or lines are to be fixed, is entirely open to the jurisdiction of the chancellor, and is a proper subject for his investigation. So also is the part of G-atliff within Melton’s grant; and as the bill alleges that the interference was, by the understanding of the parties, to be divided by the division line of Melton’s grant, where that division line is, becomes a proper subject of inquiry, and it was, therefore, properly brought into question.

Thus far we have treated the title derived from 'Melton as completely legal, as the bill has treated it. But the deeds are made part of the bill, and are on file, and on inspection we conceive that the legal estate has not passed from John Melton, and as the parties hold at best, but an equity under him, and there is a considerable portion of the land not covered by Gatliff’s patent, a partition of which is claimed, it was proper to go into equity to settle the whole question, to complete the legal estate, and. divide the territory. To do this, John Melton, Elijah Melton and Haggin become necessary parties, as from and through them the legal estate is to pass, and they must be necessary and proper parties, therefore, to settle the question, whether a common division line is to be made, leaving no land between, or whether there is a strip still unsold to the present litigants; a question which we suppose it premature to decide, oii a demurrer alone, without the proper parties being before the court. If, therefore, there had been no question made in the bill, relative to Gatliff’s patent, and the court below had sustained the demurrer for the want of proper parties merely, we might not he disposed to disturb the decree. But as the bill properly presents the division of Gatliff’s patent, without further parties, and the dis-mission is absolute, the decree must be reversed, and the complainants be allowed, if <hey see proper. [566]*566to bring the proper parties before the court to litigate the question as to Melton’s grant.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ky. 562, 5 T.B. Mon. 562, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parmers-v-respass-kyctapp-1827.