Ramsey's Devisees v. Trent

49 Ky. 336, 10 B. Mon. 336, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 3, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 Ky. 336 (Ramsey's Devisees v. Trent) 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
Ramsey's Devisees v. Trent, 49 Ky. 336, 10 B. Mon. 336, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 106 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivexed the opinion of the Court, which was suspended by petition for re-hearing unlilthe 27th July, when the petition v>as overruled.

In bar of this action of ejectment, which was brought upon the joint and several demise of nine lessors, the defendants, under the 3d section of the champerty act of 1824, (Statute law, 286,) pleaded that on the 9th day of August, 1845, (which was some days before the commencement of the action,) the defendants severally held possession of the land sued for adverse to the ■right and title of the plaintiff’s lessors, and that on that day, certain of the lessors named, (and four in number,) entered into a contract with Harlan & Craddock, attorneys at law, for the institution of the present suit, and for the recovery of the land in controversy by them as their attorneys, and in consideration of their obtaining judgment and possession of the land for them, agreed that said Harlan & Craddock should 'have part and profit of the same, to-wit: one-fourth ■of the proceeds of the sale of said land when sold by them, out of which fourth the costs and expenses ■of the suit were to be deducted; and the plea proceeds to set out the contract as being in these words: “The subscribers, as devisees of John Ramsey, deceased, as the owners of ten thousand acres of land, lying in the ■counties of Washington and Anderson, in the State of Kentucky, and several parcels thereof being in the possession of one James Trent andothers,wehaveemployed Harlan & Craddock to remove the intruders and obtain full possession of our entire tract of land. Now if the said Harlan & Craddock shall succeed in recovering judgment and of obtaining of said parcels of land [337]*337for us, then we oblige ourselves to pay them one-fourth of the value of each parcel of land so recovered, and in the same proportion for whatever maybe recovered, payable when we make sale of the same — all expenses and costs are to be deducted from said one fourth of the value of said parcels, and the remainder or balance to be paid to said Harlan & Craddock.” ,

Judgment of the General Court.

A demurrer to this plea was overruled, and thereupon the plaintiff for replication to the plea, averred that the persons therein named (and who were parties to the agreement) were not the only heirs and devisees of John Ramsey and claimants of the land sued for and only lessors of the plaintiff, but that five other's named in the replication are also heirs and devisees of said John Ramsey and claimants of said land and joint and several lessors of plaintiff; that the said defendants were not in the adverse possession of the land in contest under conflicting title to that of the lessors of the plaintiff, but that said defendants, or those under whom they claim, before the commencement of this action, viz, on the day of , at the State aforesaid, severally took from one Isaac B. Cox, a lease for the lands in contest for the use and benefit of said plaintiff, and became and were the tenants of said lessors of plaintiff on said land, recognising and acknowledging the title of said plaintiff, and that said defendants so continued to hold under and recognize said plaintiff’s title, until within less than twenty years previous to the .commencement of this action, wherefore, &c. A demurrer to this replication was sustained, and judgment having been rendered thereon in bar of the action, the case comes to this Court upon these pleadings alone.

The first part of the replication was intended, as we suppose, to raise the question whether the agreement of a part of the lessors even if champertous could bar the entire action brought upon the joint and several demise of five other lessors with them. The same question, howavm, arises on the demurrer to the pira, and this part of the replication does not introduce any material fact in addition to those appearing in the declara[338]*338{¡on an¿ p]ea„ We remark upon this part of the case, that in the contract set out in the plea, the four persons therein named as the employers of Harlan & Craddock are represented as owners of the land. And although the replication states that the five other persons are also heirs and devisees of John Ramsey and claimants of the land, it does not state them to be part owners, and upon these pleadings the implication is that the suit was instituted by and for the benefit of the four lessors who were parties to the contract, though in the name of other lessors with them. If, therefore, the contract be champertous, we are inclined to the opinion that, although made by four only of the lessors, it is a bar to the whole action. What would be its effect, if it appeared that all of the lessors wei’e really interested in the claim and in the action, we need not decide. The statement that they were devisees and claimants of the land and joint and several lessors of the plaintiff, is not deemed sufficient to counteract the recital in the contract under which the suit was instituted and carried on.

The last part of the replication is intended as a special traverse or qualified denial of the adverse possession alleged in the plea and which w:as essential to make the contract therein set out champertous within the act of 1824. It does not deny the averment of the plea that the defendants held the possession adverse to the right and title of the lessors at the date of the contract, but denies that they were in possession under conflicting title to that of the lessors. The first section of the statute makes void a sale or conveyance of land of which any other than the vendor or vendee shall at the time have possession adverse to the right or title so sold or purchased. The second section denounces a contract or undertaking to recover or carry on a suit for recovery of any such pretended title to land of which adverse possession is held under conflicting title as aforesaid, for or in consideration to have part or profit thereof. It then goes on to deny the right of action upon such contract to either party, and [339]*339declares that such title or claim shall vest in the commonwealth, and enure to the benefit of-the person in possession without office found. The third section authorises the person, so in possession, his heirs or assigns to plead such contract in bar of any action or suit brought upon the title to which it relates. Going back to the possession which is to vitiate the contract, it seems to us that the same possession which under the first section would make the sale or conveyance void, would under the second make the contract for recovering the land also void, with all the consequences mentioned in the second and third sections. The second section, it is true, speaks of adverse possession under conflicting title, whereas, if there were nothing more, it might be inferred that the adverse possession must be under a title derived from the commonwealth, or at least under paper title. ' But the section says “under conflicting title as aforesaid,'’'' evidently referring to the first section and to the adverse possession therein described, which is a possession adverse to the right or title so sold, and requires no other title in the person in possession than such as is sufficient to make his possession adverse. Possession under claim of ownership is itself a grade of title, and will suffice to constitute the conflicting title referred to in the third section, which being necessarily adverse to the right and title sold or conveyed by another, it also suffices under the first section to make void the sale and conveyance.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ky. 336, 10 B. Mon. 336, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramseys-devisees-v-trent-kyctapp-1850.