Rice v. Jackson

28 Ky. 344, 5 J.J. Marsh. 344, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 6, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ky. 344 (Rice v. Jackson) 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
Rice v. Jackson, 28 Ky. 344, 5 J.J. Marsh. 344, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 35 (Ky. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Judge Buckner

d-livered the nninion of the Court.

In 18U3, Thomas Dean sold to James Rice, four hundred acres of land, in the county of Knox, and executed to him a bond for the conveyance of it. It was a part of a larger survey, in the name of Talbot, to wnich Dean sat up a claim. Sometime after •the contract was made, Rice became dissatisfied with 'the boundaries of the land as described in the bond, and applied to Dean on the subject, who agreed to have it laid off in-a different shape, and Pitman, a deputy surveyor in that county, was called upon by the parties in 1811 or 1812, and made a survey of it in accordance. [345]*345*mth the second agreement. In March, 1813, Hice entered into a contract with John Jackson, for a sale the ¡and, which he had. purchased of Deanj and ted to him a bond for a conveyance. '

The price agreed upon, was the sum of $1800, for which,'different notes were executed. Rice bound himself to convey, by deed with general warranty, up•on payment of the note, which became dueon the 25th of December, 1817.

The following, is an extract from the bond, “know all men, &c. that I, James Rice, have sold unto. John Jackson, sen. all that tract or parcél of land, whereon, I now live, containing, by survey, four hundred acres; it being a part of John Talbot’s survey of two thousand five hundred acres, and the same being sold by Thomas Dean of Washington county, Kentucky, to sue, and surveyed by Lot Pitman,” .

Dean having failed to make a Conveyance to Rice, the latter instituted against him, a suit in chancery, in the Washington circuit court, and at the November term of that court, in the year 1813, a decree was rendered in favor of Rice, that Dean should convey four hundred acres, part of John Talbot’s-survey of two thousand five hundred acres, &c.

Dean havingfailedto comply with' the decree, it appears, that it was executed by a commissioner, appointed by the decree, for that purpose.

Lot Pitman, who made the survey alluded to in the bond, from Rice to Jackson, made also the survey, under thef decree of the Washington circuit court, in virtue of which, the commissioner executed the aforesaid conveyance.

From his deposition, it appears, that sixty nine and a half acres of the four hundred acres surveyed by him for Rice and Dean, in 1811 or 1812, were not embraced by the decree of the Washington circuit court; and-consequently, not by the deed of the commissioner made under that decree. But the survey under the decree, contained the full quantity of four hundred acres; three hundred and thirty and a half being included within the lines of the survey made by him in 1811 or 1812, and the other sixty nine and a half boons a part of Talbot’s survey as claimed by Dean.

[346]*346In 1822, Jackson filed his bill in chancery against Rice, to be relieved against certain judgments recovered against ¡¿tirri by Rice, on some of the notes executed as the price of the land, and to obtain from him a conveyance of so much of the four hundred acres, included in the survey made by Pitman, as he might be able to convey. He prays for an injunction against those judgments for such an amount, as might be equal to the value of the land, which Rice should prove unable to convey. The bond from Rice to him, Rice’s name having been torn off, is made an exhibí t. He alleges, that Rice came to his house, whilst he was absent, and informed his son Jarvis Jackson, that he had prepared a deed for the four hundred acres sold to him, in accordance with his bond, and wished to inspect the bond which was handed to him; aná that Rice, when his son’s attention was drawn to some other matter, tore off his signature; that the deed was delivered to his son, who refused to accept it, on account of the variance between it and the bond; and that he, complainant, directed him not to receiv e it. He exhibits the deed referred to, and insists, that it embraces between sixty and seventy acres of land, which Dean had sold to him. before Rice made his purchase from the same individual.

The deed thus exhibited, was executed by Rice and wife, (with, a relinquishment of her dower,) to Jackson, the complainant, for the land embraced by the decree above referred to, witli a clause of general warranty, and is witnessed by several persons.

Rice answered the bill, giving an account, of the transaction, very different from that given by Jackson.

He says, that he prepared a deed embracing the land conveyed to him by the commissioner, and which he considers, as strictly according with the bond which he had executed for a conveyance; that he carried it fo the house of the complainant, where he found both him and his son Jarvis, and presented it, informing the complainant, that he had come to deliver it, in compliance with his contract; and read it distinctly, to both, the complainant and his son. He says, that the complainant expressed himself, as entirely satisfied, and after he and his son had stepped out of the room and remained some time, they returned, and the complainant [347]*347asked him if he did not wish to take in his bond, directing Jarvis Jackson to hand it to him, Rice, which was accordingly done; and he then, in their presence, tore off his signature and threw it on the floor, and never again heard of it, until the institution of this suit. He further states, that the complainant was so entirely satisfied with the deed, that he directed his son to give to him, Rice, three dollars, to purchase a dress for his wife, in consideration of her prompt relinquishment of her dower, which he did, in pursuance of the directions; and that the complainant then agreed to ad* vanee to him §'100 of the purchase money, which was-not, at that time, due.

The circuit court entered an interlocutory decree, declaring it to be the opinion of the court, that the complainant was entitled to relief, to an extent, equal to the difference, in the value of the land, according to the boundaries described in the bond from Rice to the complainant, and those given in the deed made by the commissioner, under the decree of the Washington circuit court. The court also decided, that as thirty of the sixty nine and a half acres, embraced by the deed from Rice to Jackson, were not included by the survey made by Pitman, in 1812 or 1813, Jackson, to that extent, had, under his alleged purchase from Dean, an equity, prior and superior to the claim of Rice derived under the decree in his favor; so that, in reality, Jackson is entitled, acccording to the principles of this interlocutory decree, to damages against Rice, for the difference between the thirty nine and a half, and sixty nine and half acres of land. ■ To ascertain this difference, a jury was empannelled and sworn. The verdict returned, is in the following words:-. £kWe, of the jury find, that the complainant, John Jackson, is entitled to a deduction from the-purchase money, agreed to be given for the tract of land in the decree mentioned, of §115, for the difference in the boundaries of the- land as sold, and as conveyed to the complainant, under the deed tendered by the defendant Rice, made under the decree of the Washington circuit court; and for the loss of the thirty acres of land-in the interlocutory decree mentioned, being the difference between the sixty nine and a half acres of [348]*348land, and the thirty nine and a half acres, as specified in the said decree.”

This verdict was- set aside, the court declaring it to be improper and erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ky. 344, 5 J.J. Marsh. 344, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-jackson-kyctapp-1831.