Sowder v. McMillan's Heirs

34 Ky. 456, 4 Dana 456, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 34 Ky. 456 (Sowder v. McMillan'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
Sowder v. McMillan's Heirs, 34 Ky. 456, 4 Dana 456, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 95 (Ky. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by Sowder and Myers; from a judg* ment in ejectment obtained against them, on the joint and several demise of McMillan’s heirs &c. The suit was tried in the Scott Circuit Court,' to which it had been removed by change of venue; and various opinions of the Court, delivered in the progress of the trial, having been excepted to, the whole case comes up on á bill of exceptions to the refusal of the Court to grant a new trials 1

On the trial, the plaintiffs read in evidence a patent; dated in 1786, granting fourteen thousand acres of land to James Moody; and for the purpose of proving its boundaries, and that the tenement in possession of the defendants was within them, offered to read the plat and report of a survey, purporting to have been made by William C. Johnson, under an order of survey in this cause* This was objected to by the defendants, but admitted by the Court; and the propriety of its admission presents the first question to be considered.

It appears that, the declaration add notice—having been served on Sowder, the tenant in possession—were filed at the May term, 1830, of the Grant Circuit Court* At the same term, an order was made, in the usual form, directing William C. Johnson, to survey the land in controversy. In June following, before the common order was served, or any defendant made, and without notice to the tenant in possession, Johnson made the survey of the fourteen thousand acres, except the last line, which was afterwards run. It was proved, however, that on the night of the day on which the survey was commenced, Myers, who was afterwards made a defendant, was with the surveying party. But, admitti ng the presump[457]*457lion thá't he had been with them during the day, it does not appear that he acted, or was recognized as a party, ■or that he claimed, or was permitted, in any manner, to 'control or direct the survey. Nor does it appéar that, either then or before, he had any notice that it was intended to be used as evidence in 'this case, or that it was authorized by an order of Court; nor, indeed, that he had, at that time, any interest in the controversy. There was no real defendant to the suit when the order was made; and when the sUrve.y was executed, there was no party except the plaintiffs, who could, as provided for by the order, give directions to the surveyor. • His Casual presence,-under these circumstances, did not make the plat and report evidence, as against him, of the facts stated in them. And as Sowder, íhé teiiant in posses*sion, had no notice, and was not present, they- were clearly no evidence against him, unless made so by consent. (Ewing's Heirs vs. Savary, 3 Bibb, 236.)

Corisérit that a surveyor’s report muy be read in •One case, does not make it evidence ift another, especially, when it does not appear that thesa against whom it is offered, were parties to thecoa» sent-.

The consent order made in another case, and in an■Other Court, and, so far as appears, between different parties, in which it was agreed by the parties to that suit, that this report should be read as evidence in that suit, is •obviously insufficient to make it admissible as evidence in this suit. If the consent be considered as amounting to such a recognition of the report, as to make it evidence in another case between the same parties, these defendants do not appear to have been parties to the ■consent, and cannot be affected by it. We are, therefore, of the opinion, that the,Circuit Court erred in perWiitting the report to go to the jury as evidence. And, as the other testimony, conducing to prove that the-tenement in contest was included within the boundaries of Moody’s patent, was far from being conclusive, and might have been deemed by tiie jury insufficient to establish the fact, the erroneous admission of the report, was a substantial injury to the defendants. And having been excepted to at the time, as well as included in the grounds for a new trial, is a sufficient ground for reversing the judgment. Craddock vs. Craddock, 3 Litt. 78.

But, although for this error, the judgment must be reversed, it is necessary to decide several other questions [458]*458preseñted by the assignment of errors, and which wiii probably arise upon another trial.

of both parties to iroversy res^upon possession Imdbgññywrritten evidence of title. The extent of a tenant s possession depends upón the intentions with which he entered, and did other acts with a view or enlarging iiia boundamutters ^foi^the decision of a ju>y‘ Where a tract of land, extending over county lines, includes land in two or more counties, the possession acquired by an entry upon the tract, is limited to the county in which the entry is made: no possession in any other county is thereby acquired. The recovery in one county cannot e“end ¡nt0 other. There gentry anTa separateaetion in each county'

[458]*458The lessors of the plaintiff shows nó documentary evidence of title in themselves, as derived from Moody’s patent, or any other; but attempted to prove that, they had been in' possession of the land in contest before the defendants, or those under whom’ they claim, entered upon it; and, as the defendants showed no title on their part, a reco’very is claimed by the plaintiffs, on the sole ground of a prior possession short of twenty years.-

Moody’s patent was used for the purpose of showing , , . i i , , , the extent to which the lessors claimed to have been possessec¡. They proved that they claimed under that pa- . ,J * . . . , , , , , . 1 tent, all ol the land included m it. And they claim to pave been possessed to the extent of the patent boun1 ■ . • r dary, and therefore of the land in contest* by reason of entr7 and other acts of a certain Tyree Oldham, done upon the land, in 1820 and 1821, as their agent, and afterwards, as their lessee.

Whether those acts were sufficient to give them an exa tended possession, depends in a great measure, as has off ten been decided, upon the intent and purpose with wirich they were done; and we think the instructions given by the Court, are liable to the objection that they ascribe to these acts the effect of gaining a possession to the extent of the boundary claimed, without distinctly submitting to the jury, the question of intention, as one upon which the extent of possession depended: and in this we think the instructions were erroneous.

In ascribing to the acts of Oldham the effect of gaining a possession to the extent of Moody’s boundary, the Court also decided a question of law of great importance, arising on the following facts. The land included in the patent of Moody, is situated on the confines of the two counties of Pendleton and Grant, and extends into both. The entry and other acts of Oldham, as well as his pedis possessio, appear to have been confined to the county of ‘Pendleton; while the tenement occupied by the defendants, and for which the action was brought, is situated in the county of Grant. And unless, as a matter of law, the possession of that part of the land which lies in

[459]*459Grant county, could have been acquired by an entry upon that part which is in Pendleton, the Court erred in each of the instructions, which concluded by informing the jury, that the law was for the plaintiff, or that they should find for him.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ky. 456, 4 Dana 456, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sowder-v-mcmillans-heirs-kyctapp-1836.