Pope v. Lemaster

15 Ky. 76, 5 Litt. 76, 1824 Ky. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 13, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 15 Ky. 76 (Pope v. Lemaster) 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
Pope v. Lemaster, 15 Ky. 76, 5 Litt. 76, 1824 Ky. LEXIS 36 (Ky. Ct. App. 1824).

Opinion

[76]*76Opinion op the Court,

by Judge Mills.

IN the year 1780, John Philips furnished Peter Sturgis with two hundred and twenty pounds, Virginia [77]*77currency, for the purpose of procuring for said Philips, a land warrant. This money, which was equal to the price of 600 acres, at the land-office of Virginia, was appropriated by Sturgus to'the payment of so much of the price of his own pre-emption warrant of 1000 acres. For the purpose of settling between them this misappropriation of the money of Philips, the parties entered into the following agreement, which was and delivered by Sturgus: '

cllaacel‘ then to rencter such de^®®a^shou!d r™dere<Hn the first in- and "o' change the prepay and Possossion- The chancel-tract but°n' in his sound disoretl°n, Ihe^parties^ have ma’deif. tfOrat cannot turned round erre dress. An agreecoveyance of land, containing ambigúsion^con-" strne’d.

[77]*77“Article ol agreement made and confirmed this 17th July, 1780, between Peter Sturgus of the one part, and John Philips of the other part, both of the county Kentucky, witnesseth : That the above named Peter Sturgus, for and in consideration of the sum of two dred and twenty pounds, current money of Virginia, to me in hand paid, by John Philips, the receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge myself fully satisfied, for one land warrant containing 600 acres of land, which above named John Philips is lawfully entitled to, by sending two hundred and twenty pounds, money aforesaid, to the land-office, and the said money was laid out for to pay a part towards the above named Sturgus’ preemption warrant; for which money, I do, by these presents, bind myself, my heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, to makegood unto the above named John Philips, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, the just and full quantity of three hundred acres of land, a part of my pre-emption, and three hundred acres of treasury rant, except the above said Sturgus can lay the land warrant on land of the equal quality to his pre-emption, then the said Philips is to take the land wheresoever the said Sturgiis lays the warrant, witliin the same distance that this land lays from the falls of OhioP

Sturgus was slain by the Indians in the fall of the year 1781, leaving no child alive; but his wife, then enceint, was delivered of a daughter about three or four months after his death, named Margaret. During the minority of this child, Philips filed his bill on this writing, claiming 300 acres to be conveyed to him out of Sturgus’ pre-emption, and asserting no further claim for any land on treasury warrant, or for compensation for the 300 acres, part of the pre-emption. Pie ed a decree for a conveyance, and here the cause ended. It does not appear that Sturgus had any lands besides his pre-emption, located in his own name, at his [78]*78death; but he claimed 600 acres of a larger tract, entered on treasury warrant, in the name of Peachy Purdy, as locator, not quite as distant from the falls of the Ohio, as Sturgus’ pre-emption. For this 500 acres, a was fi]ecj an(j a decree for a conveyance obtained hi favor of his infant daughter, in the late quarter session court of Jefferson county; but no conveyance was executed in pursuance of the decree. The daughter Sturgus intermarried with John Lemaster, and died at the close of the year 1798, before she was twenty-one years old, at the birth of her first child, James Lemaswj10 wag jeft as f.jie granc|son ancl sole heir of Peter Sturgus. On the 20th of December, 1799, John Phil-assigned to Worden Pope, without recouse to him, ap the claim which he held by the aforesaid writing, against the heir of Sturgus, for 300 acres of land on treasury warrant. In the year 1800, Pope filed this bill jn the Shelby quarter session court, against the infant grandson of Sturgus, James Lemaster, claiming of him 300 acres more of land on treasury warrant, alleging none but the three hundred acres had been conveyed out of the pre-emption, and that Sturgus left no satisfy the 300 acres of treasury warrant, which he claimed, except the 500 acres for location, which had been decreed to his daughter out of Purdy’s survey, alleged was as near the falls of Ohio as the pre-emption of Sturgus, and answered for the purpose of the contract. He alleged that this 500 acres not (jeen conveyed pursuant to the decree in favor the mother of James Lemaster; and he made Philips and Peachy Purdy, then a widow by the name of Peachy YFilis, defendants, and prayed that she might be comPeHed to convey to him 300 acres out of the 500 acres, instead of Jamés Lemaster, and that the other defend-an(;S should be barred of any claim thereto. Philips answered, admitting his assignment. Peachy Wills answered, admitting the right of Sturgus’ heirs to the 500' acres, and professing a willingness to convey it, to any to w*10tn the court should decree it. James Le-master answered, by his fisher, as guardian, placing the burden of proof on Pope. A few depositions were ta-j-en |-,y- p0pe, which proved that the land contained in Sturgus’ pre-emption, as well as the 500 acres, part of Purdy’s survey on treasury warrant, were both second rate land. In the year 1807, before the termination of [79]*79this suit, John Lemaster, the father and special guardian of James, died, and his death was suggested on record, and another guardian appointed. In the year 1815, the cause was heard, and Pope obtained a decree that Peachy Wills should convey to him 300 acres out of the 500, taken from the northern part thereof, and that James Lemaster and Philips should be barred of their equity thereto, reserving to James Lemaster twelve months after he thould arrive at full age, to show cause, if any he could, against this decree. A anee by commissioners, in discharge of this decree, accordingiy executed.

Proof of thTwriting was not ten ns intend-with the staleness of the claim, cientto duce the chancellor refuse com-perform the contract. Purchasers 0f land with notice of a troversy ceiving a veyance nnder a decree neous, arenot such bona fide occupants as them within the occupying claimant must ded according to the principles of eqai of entitled to an account for rents> P™' mago^nd in-done the by Ttion or «£ and the occupant to an alanci valuable improvements Jav^made Up0n the land, to be asse.ssecl ac‘ thei^fondition at the ofassessa^thattime they are deteriorated,their ^sc*°r¿e ingiy. But the estimate of ia?" to°be?nowed only so far as wiB extincharges for rents, waste, ^0, If the rent3 waste, &c. exceed Ihe value of owner to íta^the^bal66 anee- but they fall short the occupant alloweda cree for the

[79]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Ky. 76, 5 Litt. 76, 1824 Ky. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pope-v-lemaster-kyctapp-1824.