Rankin v. Maxwell's Heirs

9 Ky. 488, 2 A.K. Marsh. 488, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 5, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 Ky. 488 (Rankin v. Maxwell's Heirs) 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
Rankin v. Maxwell's Heirs, 9 Ky. 488, 2 A.K. Marsh. 488, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 126 (Ky. Ct. App. 1820).

Opinion

Judge Mills

delivered the opinion of the court.

Adam Rankin filed his bill in chancery in the court below, alledging, that about the year 1784, he purchased of John Maxwell a tract of two hundred acres of land, and had received possession from him, and a bond for the conveyance thereof That afterwards, in a suit brought by Maxwell against him, he furnished his counsel, Joseph H. Davies, with the bond, and had never seen it since:—That after the death of his counsel, his papers had fallen into the hands of others, and after the most strict scrutiny, he could not find it. That the bond was for land out of a preemption patented in the name of Maxwell, assignee of Patterson. He does not then produce a copy or state its contents from recollection—but proceeds to state that he had likewise, about the same time, purchased a tract of one hundred and sixty acres, or thereabout, from M’Connell, who held a pre-emption also interfering a number of acres with Maxwell’s pre-emption; and that having completed his purchase from M’Connell, he resided on the land, and the said Maxwell had filed his bill against him, setting up his, Maxwell’s, entry on said pre-emption against M’Connell’s claim, held by Rankin; and in that suit he was successful: but that during its pendency, said Maxwell had filed an amended bill, in which he had acknowledged the existence of the sale and bond, and had stated therein that the land was to be laid off by the bond adjoining the lands of Alexander M’Connell and John Campbell; and this is all the account he has tendered in his bill of the contents of the bond, or the shape the land is to assume. In an amended bill he states, that the land was to lie on the south east side of the Hickman road. He then proceeds to state that Maxwell had sold and conveyed parts of the same land [489]*489to Charles Humphreys and Hallet M. Winslow, and charges that they had notice of his prior purchase from Maxwell He then prays a conveyance of the land.

Humphreys and Winslow admit that they had knowledge of the purchase of Ranking but deny that it covers or interferes with them. Maxwell, as well as the other defendants, deny that the purchase or bond of Rankin is as stated in the bill. They admit a purchase and bond for the quantity charged in Rankins’ bill out of the same tract, and admit the existence of Maxwell’s amended bill in his former suit against Rankin, as set out and sworn by him; but they deny the force of it as evidence against them, because it was not sworn to by Maxwell, and was barely the suggestions of his counsel in that suit; in his absence, and is the absence of the bond itself; and they also confront that amended bill by Rankins’ own plea in the same suit, written by his counsel, in which he seems to suggest that his purchase of Maxwell covers the land on which he resides. They also set forth a copy of the bond, which Humphreys, the defendant, declares in his answer he drew from the original, having borrowed it of Rankin and, returned it to him: and Maxwell swears also in his answer, that it is a correct copy of the original bond; and denies, as well as the other defendants, any other contract. Maxwell does not contest, the payment of the purchase money, but alleges it was small; and relies on the antiquity and staleness of the transaction, so far as it respects any Other land, but admits his willingness to convey according to the Bond. The copy of the bond thus exhibited, in its condition describes the land thus:—“Two hundred acres of John Maxwell’s preemption, and part of the land on which the said John now dwells, being part of the lands the said John Maxwell got of col. Robert Patterson, being the most westernmost part of the said John Maxwell's land." And in that part of the bond which stipulates a conveyance, he binds himself “to make over and convey by deed of general warranty, the aforesaid two hundred acres, lying on the most westernmost part of the said John Maxwell's land." This is all the description of the land given by the copy exhibited, and it seems perfectly clear that the boundary has never been demarked.

The parties then went into the production of a quantity of proof, the defendants endeavoring to shew that the purchase covered Rankins’ purchase from M’Connell, where [490]*490he resides; and the complainant to disprove that fact. On a hearing in the court below, it was decreed that Maxwell should convey the land, as nearly in a square as practicable, to include the spring in the most westwardly part of the tract, embraced in the patent. From this decree each party appealed.

A contract that should be decreed specifically, must be certain in all its parts. A bill in chancery should so certainly set forth the compl't's case as to enable the chancellor at once to determine on the appropriate remedy; but where relief is sought on a lost paper, a party may be permitted to mistake his case, and derive any aid he can from the answer.

It is a well settled principle, that a contract, which will be enforced in equity, must be certain in all its parts. Applying this rule to the bill of the complainant, in the court below, it may well be doubted whether from its vagueness and uncertainty it ought not to be dismissed, even if it was taken as confessed, and every word to be assumed as true. He has given us no other account of the ground that the bond was to occupy, than what he has taken from Maxwell’s bill, made part of his bill, and that is, it was to adjoin the lines of M’Connell and John Campbell. He has, not told us which line of M’Connell, when there are two in the interference with Maxwell; nor has he set forth in his bill, or made appear in proof any thing about the position of John Campbell’s line, or indeed shewn that such a line in fact existed; when these lines were both necessary to give figure to the land demanded, if it was to lie as he contends for it.

But as every person who attempts to support a bill on a lost writing, cannot have it in his power to set forth the contract, as he who has not lost his evidence; and the loss of writings must form a good exception to the rule, which requires every bill to be sufficient on its face to enable the chancellor to pronounce a decree thereon, it would be rather rigid to dismiss the complainants’ bill because it is vague and indefinite in the claim set up, without looking into the answers, and seeing whether any aid can be derived from them. An answer may sometimes aid a defective bill. And if this is permitted in any case, it ought to be in one, where the complainant has lost the writing on which his claim is based. He may then be permitted to mistake his case materially, and if the disclosure made, by the answer, should rectify the mistake, but still show that he was entitled to another claim differing in position and extent, from that stated in the bill, we see no solid objection against the complaint’s having relief granted him for that, although he cannot get that which he required in his bill.—Applying this rule to the case before us, the answers afford a valid description for two hundred acres of land out of the [491]*491same tract stated in the bill; but totally denies the position of that two hundred acres claimed in the bill, but gives its true position as they alledge by the copy of the bond which they have exhibited. The complainant below has not proved his own position to

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ky. 488, 2 A.K. Marsh. 488, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rankin-v-maxwells-heirs-kyctapp-1820.