Rock Creek Property Co. v. Hill

172 S.W. 671, 162 Ky. 324, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 26, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 671 (Rock Creek Property Co. v. Hill) 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
Rock Creek Property Co. v. Hill, 172 S.W. 671, 162 Ky. 324, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 71 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Nunn

Affirming.

The appellant was the plaintiff below, and brought a suit in ejectment against the appellee, "William Hill, to recover possession of land in what is now McCreary county. The suit was brought in Wayne county, and one trial was had there. It was transferred to McCreary, when that county was created. The case was submitted to a jury and Hill won.

In May, 1866, ten separate patents were issued to Fox, Hardin and Burke, partners. The surveys adjoin and are said to contain 200 acres each. Appellant claims under these patents. The land in controversy is within the boundary of three of these Fox patents. One of the Fox patents contains at least 300 acres and shows an unlocated exclusion of 75 acres in general terms, and. conflicts with a senior patent taken out by Andrew Lew-ellen. But the conflict with that survey does not involve [325]*325more than 15 or 20 acres, and is not in issue. The defendant, William Hill, is the owner of the Lewellen survey and resides on it. There is no contest about his right to hold all of the Lewellen land; the controversy is as to his claim of title to about 100 acres south of the Lewellen line, and within the boundary of the Pox- patent. He claims this boundary under a senior patent issued in 1859 to Harrison Bell and Coleman B'ell, brothers.

The beginning corner of the survey of the Bell brothers is established beyond dispute, and is a maple, a corner to another patent issued to Harrison Bell in 1849. This maple is situated more than a mile from, and south of, the Lewellen land. Prom the maple a boundary with 13 calls is undisputed, and this is the southern boundary of the Bell brothers survey. • The 13th call on the southern line stops on the south line of another Harrison Bell survey made in 1858. All the ■trouble comes from the effort to locate the remaining calls of the Bell brothers survey. These other calls begin at a stake on the Harrison Bell line, thence N. 47 W. 40 poles to a stake; 8. 40 W. 199 poles to á stake on Andrew Lewall’s (Lewellen) line; thence binding on said line 8. 55 E. 100 poles to a stake; thence N. 80 W. 100k poles to a stake on Bell and Bolin’s line; thence^ binding on said line to the beginning. The Andrew Lewellen line and the Bell and Dolin lines are established, marked and recognized by both parties, but to follow the course and distance call of N. 47 W. 40 will not come anywhere near the Lewellen line. If the call from the Harrison Bell line be changed from “N. 47 W.” and run a course slightly west of north, or insert a due north call after the N. 47 W. call, and lengthen the line about 300 poles, instead of 40 poles, as called for in the patent, it will strike a corner of the Lewellen survey, and from which point a boundary line of that survey runs approximately the course next called for in the Bell brotherá survey. After that call is so located, it is easy enough to follow the lines of the other patents named, and reach the maple tree at the beginning corner. But to do this the survey will contain 500 or 600 acres instead of 150, as called for in the patent, and as included within its boundary if the patent courses and distances be strictly followed. The question is, therefore, whether the courses and distances shall control or whether they shall be so changed as to reach and follow the Lewellen and Bell and Dolin lines; [326]*326that is, whether courses and distances shall yield to a line so marked as to rank it with fixed objects and natural barriers.

Neither party has had actual possession of the land in question for a sufficient time to give title by prescription. Two or three years before the suit was filed Hill built a cabin within the disputed territory and made a small clearing. For more than 20 years Hill and those under and through whom he claims have cut timber off of the land, but until the cabin was built there was no continuous possession. If the boundary be established by using the lines of the Lewellen and Bell and Dolin surveys called for, then Hill’s claim must prevail, for the Bell brothers patent under which he claims is the oldest. The ease is really a question of law, as the facts are admitted. But the lower court submitted the case to the jury on two questions and told them to find for the defendant: (1) If the land was included within the boundary of the Bell brothers survey, and (2) if the plaintiffs purchased it while the defendant Hill was in the actual possession. The jury found for Hill under the first instruction. The second instruction should not have been given, because there were no facts proven to raise the question of champerty. Neither should the first have been given, because, as already stated, there is nothing in this case but a question of law, for the essential facts are uncontroverted.

If the courses and distances are strictly followed, then the tract will contain only 150 acres, and this is the amount that the warrant and patent call for, and if so run it will not include the disputed 100 acres next to the Lewellen land. But it is well settled that a recital of quantity is merely descriptive, and yields even to.courses and distances, unless the instrument makes it clear that it was the intention to convey only a definite quantity. Jennings v. Monk, 4 Met., 103; Young v. Craig, 2 Bibb., 270; Mercer v. Bates, 4 J. J. Mar., 344; Alexander v. Hill, 32 Ky. L. R., 1147.

Again, if courses and distances be strictly followed, then the calls for the Lewellen and Bell and Dolin patent lines must be ignored. The rule is well settled in this State that courses and distances must yield to calls for the lines of other patents which are of record, and susceptible of definite and certain location, as in this case. Beshears v. Joseph, 108 S. W., 307, lays down the rule as follows*

[327]*327“That in determining boundaries marked corners are tbe more satisfactory evidence, then natural objects, sncb as streams, ridge and cliff, then calls for tbe lines of other patents, which are of record and susceptible to definite and certain location, then course, and lastly distance.”

There was a somewhat similar state of facts in the case of Alexander v. Hill, supra, and the court said:

“This patent calls for a tract of land bounded by certain natural objects and artificial lines and established points, and provides that by following certain fixed courses and distances these natural objects and artificial lines and fixed points will be reached. But when it is shown by actual demonstration that when the lines are run according to the courses and distances called for the natural objects and artificial lines are not reached, what shall we do? * * *

“This court has many times passed upon this question, and the law is now well settled that where there is a conflict between the course and distance and recognized objects establishing the boundary lines of a survey, course and distance must yield to natural objects and established boundaries of other tracts called for, and designated known points therein must be accepted as the true boundary of the land in question.”

It may be conceded that the only lines actually surveyed when the warrant was laid were those shown by the first 13 calls in the patent, referred to above as constituting the southern boundary, and that to locate the Bell brothers patent by the surrounding lines as called for therein would differ materially from the plat of the original survey, which was filed with the land warrant and introduced as evidence on the trial. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 671, 162 Ky. 324, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-creek-property-co-v-hill-kyctapp-1915.