Shield's Heirs v. Batts

28 Ky. 12, 5 J.J. Marsh. 12, 1830 Ky. LEXIS 359
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 25, 1830
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ky. 12 (Shield's Heirs v. Batts) 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
Shield's Heirs v. Batts, 28 Ky. 12, 5 J.J. Marsh. 12, 1830 Ky. LEXIS 359 (Ky. Ct. App. 1830).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1785, Patrick Shields procured a patent for four hundred acres of land; and in 1786 he obtained another patent for two thoussand acres, adjoining the four hundred acres.

in the fall of the year 1786, P. Shields settled on bis four hundred, acres, claiming the possession of both tracts. In the spring of 1787, he removed from the land, but returned to it in 1795, when he settled on the two thousand acre tract, on which he lived until 1797, when he died; and on which his widow and children have ever., since resided. In 1796 he sold, by verbal contract, one hundred acres of'the large tract, without designation of boundary to Cloyd, who, in that year, settled upon the land, and who, or those holding under him, continued to occupy it, until Alexander Shields, [13]*13one of the sons of P. Shields, several years after his father’s death, took possession of it. Alexander Shields occupied the land without restriction as to quantity, and enjoyed the use of the whole two thousand acres, so far as he chose to use it as one of the. heirs of the patentee., until his death in 1814; and his widow has retained the possession and use, in the same way, ever since.

On the 14th of November, 1812, sundry writs of “venditioni exponas” were issued against the estate of the widow and heirs of P. Shields, for small sums, amounting in the aggregate to $167 83 cents, in virtue of which the sheriff^ to whom they were directed, sold, for the amount due upon them, to Allen Stewart and Morgan Jbryan, two of the execution creditors, one thousand acres of the two thousand acres; “five hundred acres to be taken off the most northwardly side of (the widow’s) dower-right, and live hundred acres to be taken off the most northwardly side or end of the said Alexander Shield’s part.”

In 1813, on the application of Stewart and Brayan, commissioners were appointed by the county court, to make partition of the land, and to assign the widow’s dower, she never having procured or applied for an assignment. The commissioners assigned the dower, and made the partition, so as to suit the sheriff’s sale; and thereupon, together with the sheriff, they made a deed to Stewart and Bryan, for five hundred acres of the part so assigned to the widow, and for four hundred and nenety-two acres of the. part allotted to Alexander Shields, the first parcel including the residence of the widow and the latter, that of Alexander!

Bryan and Stewart, thus armed, forthwith brought an ejectment against the widow and Alexander Shields, and _obtained a judgment of eviction against the former. The sheriff returned on the habere facias, which was issued on this judgment, that he had turned the widow out, and put Stewart and Bryan in.

But it appears from the proof in the record, that as soon as she was put out, the lessors departed, and she instantly resumed the possession, and has ever since retained it. Two of the heirs of P. Shields lived with their mother, and they were not parties to the ejectment. It does not appear whether they were minors or not, when the judgment was obtained,

[14]*14In 1802/ Stewart”seiiled on sixty-five acres" of land which he had purchased from Lynch, within the boundary of the, two thourand acres patented to P. Shields, and afterwards rold it to Batts, who continued to occupy it until since 1814. The patent of Lynch was posterior to that of Shields, and the sixty-five acres did not interfere with the enclosures of Alexander Shields, or the widow of P. Shields. After the execution of the habere facias, Stewart cut fome house logs, and tapped some sugar trees on the land which he purchased at the sheriff’s sale, but made no improvement or any other kind of entry upon it, so as to disturb the possession of Alexander Shields, or that of the widow of P. Shields.

In 1825, Hall settled asa tenant under the claim of Stewart, on the land allotted to the widow by the commissioners, and included in the deed by the Sheriff and the commissioners; the place where he settled, had never, before been in the possession of Stewart or any other person under his claim, except so far as the cutting of the house logs, and the tapping of the sugar trees, and the execution of the haba c facias, might be considered as constituting possession; and the only claim, which Stewart, or any person holding under him, ever had to the place settled on by Hall,- was derived from the sheriff’s sale, and the habere facias possessionem*

Alexander Shields having died intestate in 1814, this ejectment was brought in 1827, against Hall, on a demise by' the heirs of Patrick, and of Alexander Shields. On the trial, such instiuctions were given by the circuit court, as left the jury no alternative. In obedience to the instiuctions of the court, a verdict was returned for lía] 1 and Halts, who was also made a defendant; and, judgment was rendered accordingly.

The defendants, having shown that a patent to Sam», uel Oldham, of a prior date to that of P. Shields, cov' ered Shield’s two thousand acres, (but from which they had derived no claim whatever, hut the right to defend themselves under it as an outstandingtitle which might show, that the lessors had no right of entry) obtained from the court, an instruction to the jury which, in substance and effect, directed them that Oldham’s patent protected the defendants, and that therefore, they had U right to a verdict,

Execution against the es ate of the widow and heirs; the sheriff sells "500 acres of land to be taken off the most northwardly siae of the widow’s dower;” and 500 acres to be taken off of the most northwardly side of the part belonging to tbe heirs; tbe sales invalid. Before assignment of dower, tho1' widow be in possession of mansion house, it is only in quarantine, which does not extend to woodland except for estovers, she has no transferable legal interest; she cannot make a lease; nor maintain an ejectment; nor is dower transferable by sale under execution; an assignment of dower after sale under execution, cannot render sale valid Bower can only be assigned by the county court upon the application of the widow or heirs, or some one having a legal interest in the land.

[15]*15The court also overruled seyeral motions for instruction rancíe by tbs pioiiHifli, vrhlch ivill not be particularly noticed, as the. general view which, we shill take of the ca.-;e, will necessarily- include and dispose of them all.

The circuit court co:recLly rejected the sheriff’s deed; except so far as the execution of the hab-.rz facias may have broken the contenaity of possesion; the whole procedure by the sheriff was “res inter alios acteif for the following reasons:

1st. The judgments, on which the executions were issued, were not produced.

2d. It does not appear by any returns by the sheriff, that he had ever levied executions on the land; or that he had done so, if at all, during the life of the ex-cutions.

3d. The sale of “five hundred acres to be taken off the most northwardly side of the widow’s dower right” was insufficient. Tlie-e had been no assignment of dower; and her potential right to dower was not subject to execution. Cer only right in possession was that of quarantine, and this did not extend beyond the “plantation;” Carney vs. Bunlain, IV Bibb, 217.

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28 Ky. 12, 5 J.J. Marsh. 12, 1830 Ky. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-heirs-v-batts-kyctapp-1830.