Patrick's Heirs v. Chenault

45 Ky. 315, 6 B. Mon. 315, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 10, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 Ky. 315 (Patrick's Heirs v. Chenault) 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
Patrick's Heirs v. Chenault, 45 Ky. 315, 6 B. Mon. 315, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 3 (Ky. Ct. App. 1846).

Opinion

Chief Justice Ewing

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1780, Richard Calioway, Sr. entered 400 acres of land, by virtue of a certificate of settlement, lying on the waters of Otter creek, near the present town of Richmond. In the same year he entered a pre-emption warrant of 1,000 acres, to lie on the south side of his settlement. Calloway having been killed by the Indians, surveys were executed on these entries in the bahalf. of the heirs of Calloway, without naming them, in 1783. On the 7th of June, 1791, patents issued on these surveys “to John Patrick and Elizabeth his wife, the said Elizabeth heir at law to George Calloway, who was heir at law to Richard Colloway, deceased-.” John Patrick and wife took possession of the land under these patents prior to 1798. In 1797, Patrick and wife sold and com veyed 200 acres of the land to Richard Calloway, Jr. which was afterwards sold and parceled out to sub-purchasers. Afterwards, at different times, Patrick and wife sold and conveyed other parcels of the land, in all amounting to upwards of 300 acres, to others. Patrick [316]*316and wife joined in the deeds, and she attempted to pari with her interest, but there are obvious defects in the certificates of acknowledgment, in several of the deeds. In 1819 Mrs. Patrick died, her husband surviving, who died in 1824. In December, 1842, the heirs of Elizabeth filed their bill against the holders of the parcels sold, charging fraud or mistake in the emanation of the grants to Patrick and wife, and notice in the purchasers and sub-purchasers of the equity of Mrs. Patrick and her heirs to the whole land.

Ansvveia of defendants. Decree of the Circuit Couit. A patent issued to husband and wife, who united in conveyances to purchasers, the husband survived the wife— Held that the title enured to him and vested in the purchasers and sub-purchasers, who had purchased for valuable consideration, without no tice of any fraud upon the rights of the wife on the emanation of the patent.

The defendants all answer, substantially denying every material allegation, and insisting upon being innocent purchasers for a valuable consideration, without notice, and on lapse of time and uninterrupted possession in themselves and those under whom they claim, for near fifty years, 'as a bar to the claim set up.

The Circuit Court delivered a very' interesting written opinion dismissing the bill. We entirely concur in the conclusion of that opinion, and with most of the reasoning, and direct its publication, appendant to the very few remarks which we deem necessary to make in addition.

The grants having issued to Patrick and wife jointly, the entire legal right devolved, upon him as the survivor, and inured to bis vendees and ■ sub-vendees, the defendants, and if they were purchasers or sub-purchasers for a valuable consideration, without notice of the complainant’s equity or of the mistake or fraud charged, having law and equity upon their side, their legal title cannot be wrested from them, though no time had run in their favor.. That tbéy paid a valuable consideration, must be presumed from the receipt acknowledged on the face of their deeds, and the lapse of time that has run from their date, especially in'the absence of- a single countervailing fact.

There is no notice proven other than that which may be implied from the face of the patents. The- patents being links in the chain of the defendant’s derivation of legal title, it is presumed th.at they saw and ■ inspected them, and if there be any thing on their face evidencing the mistake or fraud charged, or any thing which would [317]*317necessarily lead to enquiry on the subject, the defendants could not be regarded as purchasers without notice.

A patent issued to husband and wife, reciting upon its face, “the said Elizabeth being heir at law to George Calloway, who was heir at law to Richard Calloway, dec’d.” —Held that there is nothing on the face of the patent to require farther investigation by a purchaser of the right of patentees, or indicate that the husband had not a joint right' with the wife.

It is certainly to be greatly questioned whether there is enough found on the face of the patents, to notify the purchasers of fraud or mistake in their emanation, or to lead to enquiry as to the existence of- either. ■

The patents are solemn record evidence of title, issued under the great seal of State, by high accredited’officers of the government, the Register and Governor,’and must be presumed to have been properly issued, in the absence of proof to the contrary. Indulging the purchaser in this presumption, the question arises, would he perceive any thing' on the face of the patents to repel this presumption, or that would impel him to further enquiry on the subject?

The recital in the patent, that Elizabeth, one of the grantee's, “was heir at law to George Calloway, who was heir at law to Richard Calloway, deceased,” though it shows the origin of her title, does not indicate that John Patrick had not a joint right with her to the land, properly and legally derived, by contract or equitable arrangement extraneous the patents, which justified the grants to them jointly. It could scarcely be presumed or even suspected, that the grant could have been issued by those high functionaries without some legal authority, and the grants did not show that’ they had so issued. Nor was there any thing in the conduct of Mrs. Patrick that was calculated to arouse suspicions in the purchasers, that there was fraud or mistake in the emanation of the patents, but so-far from it; she encouraged the purchasers and joined with her husband in selling, and no doubt lived upon and enjoyed, in conjunction with him, the proceeds of the sales. Instead of apprising the purcha. sers that there was an outstanding latent equity 'in her, which she or her heirs would' assert, she concealed from them the existence of such claim, and not only permitted and encouraged the purchases, and the expenditure of the substance of the. purchasers in making them, but also in the erection of valuable improvements upon the lands purchased. If any suspicion .of mistake or fraud-could have been aroused by an inspection .of the grants, that [318]*318suspicion would have been immediately allayed by her acts. And had she been asked if any such outstanding equity or objection to the title existed, it cannot be doubled that she would have denied it. Her conduct,, which speaks louder than words, did deny it. Shall she or those claiming under'her, be permitted to recussitate and assert this concealed equity, which has been permitted to lie dormant for more than half a century, as complainants in a Court of equity, against those holding the legal title acquired through her instrumentality? It is insisted that she was a feme covert and could do no act which could divest her of her title. This is true as to the transmission of her legal right in a Court of law, but she was a moral agent, and we are not prepared to concede that she will, as complainant, in a Court of Equity, be allowed to take advantage of her own wrong to inflict injury on others.

Tho’ a feme covert convey by an insufficient deed, yet if her heirs ^acquiesce for 22 years without evidence of their disability to sue, the purchaser ■will not be disturbed in his purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ky. 315, 6 B. Mon. 315, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricks-heirs-v-chenault-kyctapp-1846.