Patrick v. Commonwealth

280 S.W. 453, 213 Ky. 37, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 12, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 453 (Patrick v. Commonwealth) 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
Patrick v. Commonwealth, 280 S.W. 453, 213 Ky. 37, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 444 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

*38 Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

The Commonwealth, through the attorney of the Commonwealth, in the district of which Knott county is a part, in December, 1917, instituted this proceeding in the circuit court of that county against appellant and a number of other defendants, some of whom were the unknown owners or claimants to one or more of a large number of patents issued by this Commonwealth to Kiar Webb in August, 1866, all of them lying, as alleged, in Knott county.

The proceeding is under the provisions- of the act of 1906, the same being now section 4076b-4076k, inclusive, of the Ky. Stats, of 1922, and its purpose was to forfeit to the Commonwealth, under the provisions of that act, the title or claim of all the defendants to any of the lands described in the several Kentucky patents enumerated because of the failure of the defendants and each of them to list for taxation the named tracts of land, or either or any part of them for taxation from and including the year 1910 up to and including the year 1917.

Appellant was the only defendant who appeared in the action, and he by'his answer expressly disclaims any title or claim to any of the patents described in the petition except eight two hundred acre patents described therein. He then alleges affirmatively in a separate paragraph that he became the owner by purchase in September, 1912, of the land embraced in those eight patents, and that he is now the owner of same by a paper title deducible from the Commonwealth, ‘ ‘ and that he is chargeable with and should, and is willing to pay the legal tax on the said lands described in said patents for the years 1913, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, and no more.”

He then alleges that one of the two hundred acre patents lies wholly in Breathitt county, Kentucky, and in not assessable for taxation in Knott county, and that because of the overlapping in three of the -other patents, the three fall three hundred acres short, in the aggregate, of having two hundred acres each, and that deducting the two hundred acres wholly in Breathitt and the three hundred acre -shortage because -of the overlapping, there were 1,100 acres assessable in Knott county in the eight patents claimed by him. He then says he is willing to pay the tax in Knott county on the same for the five • *39 . years from 1913 to 1917, inclusive, as well as the penalty and interest thereon, and a reasonable attorney’s fee to . the attorney for the Commonwealth, the rate of assessment to be for those years the same as similar lands lying-adjacent thereto or. in the neighborhood thereof being .of. similar quality and value, and held under similar title, which he .says for the years mentioned was from one to two dollars per acre, and tendered into court an amount .sufficient to cover the taxes, interest, penalties and a reasonable attorney’s fee upon this basis, which sum the attorney for the 'Commonwealth declined to accept. He then in a separate paragraph of the original answer, and “in an amended answer thereafter filed, relies upon the .five years statute of limitation as a bar, apparently upon ’ the theory that the allegations of the petition show that, .the Commonwealth’s right of action accrued in 1910 and was barred because not asserted until 1917.

A demurrer to the petition was overruled, and at .first a demurrer to the answer was likewise overruled. Then a reply was filed putting in issue certain affirmative allegations of the answer. But upon a final hearing- the demurrer to the answer was sustained, and the court entered a judgment forfeiting- to the Commonwealth the title and claims of each and all of the defendants, including appellant, to certain tracts of land described in the petition, except as to the two hundred acre patent No. 37,991 alleged by appellant to be wholly in Breathitt county, and as to that patent it adjudged:

“■and if said patent lies partly in Knott county and partly in Breathitt, the entire patent is hereby forfeited, and if no part lies in Knott and all of it in Breathitt then no part of the same is forfeited bw this proceeding.”

On this appeal the grounds for reversal are:

1. That the demurrer to the petition should have been sustained because the act of 1906 has application only to old Virginia land grants, and not to patents issued by the Commonwealth of Kentucky. .

2. That as the law does not favor forfeitures, in an action to forfeit because of failure to list the property for taxes and pay same a tender of the taxes and cost of suit extinguishes the demands of the state; and the refusal of the Commonwealth to accept the tender bars its right to insist upon the forfeiture.

*40 3. That a suit or proceeding instituted in the name of the Commonwealth must be brought on relation of some person authorized to act for it, and that therefore the special'demurrer filed should have been sustained.

4. Limitation.

5. That the answer presented a good defense as to the patent alleged to be wholly in Breathitt county; and the circuit court of Knott county had no jurisdiction to forfeit the title to a patent lying exclusively in another county.

The argument that the act of 1906 in its.letter and spirit has application only to Virginia patents issued before the creation of this state, is not'based upon the language of the act itself, and could not well be. It is rather based upon the theory that for more than one hundred years prior to 1906 these old dormant Virginia patents had been a source of great aggravation and uncertainty in the settlement of land titles in some sections of this state, and that because of that situation which previous efforts upon the part of this state had been unable to allay, the very stringent act of 1906' became necessary for the purpose of settling titles complicated and covered by these old Virginia patents. There would be more force to the argument if in truth that was the only evil intended to be corrected by that act; not only were these old dormant Virginia patents, many of them for unlimited numbers of acres, presenting a barrier to the development of certain sections of the state because of the unsettled land titles therein, but to a great extent the same section was covered and re-covered by overlap- . ping patents issued in the early days of this state’s existence as well.

So that the problem with which the G-eneral Assembly was dealing in the enactment was larger and greater and more comprehensive than a mere purpose by forfeiture provided for in a revenue statute to get rid of the old Virginia claims, and outlaw those patents. It was necessary not only to do that, but equally important that it should also provide a plan for the forfeiture of dormant claims to lands embraced in patents issued by this state. Por obviously it would not fully accomplish the purpose aimed at—to' settle land' titles embraced in these old patents whether issued by the one state or the other—if it only applied to a part of those old patents and not to all of them. That such is the meaning of the act is plain from its very broad and comprehensive terms; *41

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 453, 213 Ky. 37, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1926.