South v. Deaton

113 Ky. 312
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 113 Ky. 312 (South v. Deaton) 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
South v. Deaton, 113 Ky. 312 (Ky. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

Opinion of ti-ie court by

JUDGE DURELLE

Affirming.

The appellants, as the heirs at' law of J. W. South, who died in 1880, brought suit in February, 1893, against the appellee, alleging that their ancestor, at his death', was the owner and in possession of a tract of land- on Wolf creek, on the south side of the North Fork of the Kentucky river, not defined by metes and bounds, but described by reference to the ridges which inclose the Wolf Creek basin, which appears to be about 3% miles long, and to contain about 3,000 acres of land. The petition avers that the land lies within a grant of 116,656 acres from the Commonwealth of Virginia to Thomas Franklin in 1784, but this averment is evidently made for the sole purpose of showing that the Commonwealth had parted with its title, in order to establish a title in appellants by adverse possession. It is alleged that J. W. South purchased the land from Joseph [316]*316Spencer in 1849, and since that date, and down to June, 1892, appellants and those under whom they claim have been in the peaceable, uninterrupted, continuous, adverse possession of all the land, holding, claiming, and controlling it “to the full extent of said boundary, which is a well-defined natural and artificial and marked boundary,” and that the title in fee simple is vested in appellants by lapse of time, but that in June, 1.892, appellee wrongfully entered upon,' and took possession of, a portion of the land, and built houses thereon, and has cut and is cutting timber thereon, and is cultivating and threatening to cultivate a part-of the land. The insolvency of appellee was averred, and an injunction prayed to prevent trespasses upon the land. The answer denied any ownership or possession by appellants or their ancestor of any of the land, and denied the adverse possession claimed by appellants to the full extent of the ■boundary described, or to any extent. The appellee set up title to three tracts described by metes and bounds,- — one of 200 acres, and two smaller tracts lying in the Wolf Creek ■valley,— and claimed title to such land in him by adverse possession for more than 15 years. So it appears that the appellants were endeavoring to establish a title to the lands held by appellee, Deaton, by adverse possession for 15 years, while appellee was claiming a similar title in himself to the land claimed by him, and relying also for his defense upon a denial of appellants’ title. An issue out of chancery to try the question of title was ordered. The jury found for ■appellee.

There were filed with the surveyor’s report, and used in evidence, a number of title papers. Though the claim on behalf of appellants is that the whole of the Wolf Creek valley was bought from Joseph Spencer in 1849, no deed to any part of it was made until 1868, when a deed was exe[317]*317cuted from the heirs of Joseph Spencer for a tract of land lying at the mouth of Wolf creek, described in the deed as containing 300 acres, but which really contains 378 acres, and which does not touch, and is in fact from two to three miles distant from, the tracts claimed by appellee. This deed refers to a former deed from Duff to Joseph Spencer, and conveys, “also all of the entries or surveys made by Joseph Spencer on Wolf creek, together with, all and singular, the improvements and appurtenances,” etc. There was an amended petition, claiming title to the whole valley by adverse possession under title derived from the Commonwealth of Virginia, and-this was denied by an answer; but no connection is shown with the Thomas Franklin grant. The record shows that the whole valley was included in the Franklin patent, with which appellants do not connect. A number of leases, dated at various times from 3882 to 1891, from Cardwell, as representative of the South heirs, to various parties living on small tracts of land in the valley, sip,lied by those parties, were1 exhibited, by which they acknowledged themselves tenants for short periods of time, and agreed to pay a certain amount of corn, or a certain portion of the crop raised, for the use of the land. The only leases which cover the land in controversy, as stated by the witness Cardwell, arc1 one to Benjamin Spicer, dated March, 1850, which is very insufficiently proven, and a lease; io George Deaton, dated February, 1881. Some of the I *ssees were permitted to state, against objection by appellants, that they claimed the land embraced in the leases as their own.

Four instructions were given, — the first and fourth upon motion of appellants, and the second and third on the motion of appellee. There is no objection to the first instruction, which properly states the law to be that if appellants [318]*318should show actual, continuous, notorious, and adverse possession for 15 years, the jury should find for them, and, unless they so believed, they, should find for appellee. By the fourth instruction, given on appellants’ motion, ihe jury were told, “where one enters as a tenant of another upon a tract of land, that he holds to the extent of the landlord’s-boundary lines, unless the lease or contract of renting' shows a different intention.” The second instruction is the one chiefly complained of by appellants: “The court instructs , the jury that possession by tenant within the boundary of land described in the deed from Spencer to South, read in evidence, did not give possession to any land outside of said deed; and unless the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiffs and those under whom they claim had the continuous, actual, uninterrupted, adverse possession outside1 of said Spencer deed foi1 more than fifteen years before the filing of this suit on the 16th day of February, 1893, claiming: the same as the land of J. W. South and his heirs, to a well-defined boundary, and that said possession covered the land claimed hv defendant, they will find for defendant.” The third instruction is: “If plaintiffs placed tenants upon any of the boundary of land claimed by them, and executed to-said tenants leases, the possession of said tenants extended only to the limits of the boundary described in said leases under which they entered and held, if any of them did so hold.” Now, it appeared that Spicer lived upon the tract described in the Spencer deed, as did, also, Mart South,, who is claimed to have taken charge of the property after Rpicer, and George Deaton, who held under the later lease. There can be no objection to the third instruction, ('specially when it is considered in connection with the fourth instruction, which was given on appellants’ motion.

The objection urged to the second instruction is that it is [319]*319given on the theory that appellants claimed title under ■the deed from Spencer, and that, as they claimed under that instrument, their claim to possession, when holding by themselves or a tenant within the boundary described! therein, should not be extended to take in other land outside of that boundary. But appellants claim that they had adverse possession of the whole Wolf Creek valley for more than 15 years before the deed was executed; that they did not claim under the deed at all, but under their -possessory title thus obtained, and therefore it was prejudicial error to limit their possession, as they insist this instruction does, to the boundary described in the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
113 Ky. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-v-deaton-kyctapp-1902.