Steele v. University of Kentucky

174 S.W.2d 129, 295 Ky. 187, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 25, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 129 (Steele v. University of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steele v. University of Kentucky, 174 S.W.2d 129, 295 Ky. 187, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 213 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Affirming.

Appellee filed its declaratory judgment suit against appellants Steele, Trustee of the Estate of Herbert Howe, deceased, the latter’s heirs, and the Bryant Stave Company, holding a contract with the trustee for cutting and removing timber from two small tracts of land, one situated wholly in Breathitt County, the other partly in that and Perry County. It alleged ownership, use and possession, and that Steele was claiming the disputed tracts as a part of the Howe estate; that the timper company under its contract was about to cut and remove timber. The relief sought was a quieting of its title, and injunctive order.

The tracts involved were included in a deed covering a large acreage made up of various tracts of mountain land, conveyed to the University by a deed of trust of the Bobinson Mountain Fund, on October 10, 1923. The conditions of the trust in part were that the Uni *188 versity should use the land for agricultural experiment work, reforestation, and teaching soil fertility. The trust, according to the proof and pleadings, is being-carried out. The issue here is raised by joint answer of trustee and the timber company, admitting that trustee is claiming title and has contracted with the stave company for removal of the timber from the two tracts, but denying appellee’s ownership.

In the petition it was alleged that defendants were claiming title to the land under a parol boundary agreement between Henry Hudson and William Combs, and under deeds and patents to Hudson, Steele’s predecessors in title. It was alleged that no such agreement existed. This was categorically denied, as was the allegation that the tracts in question were embraced in the ■conveyance to the University, or its predecessors in title. The answer does not undertake to set up defendants’ source of title, so the only issue is whether or not, by reason of the alleged agreement between Combs and Hudson, the title is in the Trustee. It was stipulated by parties that: (1) The two tracts of land described in petition were granted to Wm. M. Combs by two patents issued on November 12,, 1867, upon surveys of January 24, 1860. The stipulation is further to the effect that mesne conveyances purport to convey the two tracts along with a large acreage to University, which tracts are particularly described in a deed from Mowbray and Robinson to Robinson Foundation in 1922.

There were further stipulations to the effect: (1) Combs, on September 15, 1890, conveyed to Crate, Taylor and others a tract of land located on Laurel Fork of Buckhorn Creek, containing 1,583 acres; that “said boundary of land borders on the top of the ridge between Williams Fork of Long Fork and said Laurel Fork, and that the deed calls for the ridge as one of the boundary lines of said tract.” (2) Jones et al. by deed ■of December 5, 1898, conveyed their interests to F. W. Taylor and James Crate, and Crate and Trustees under the will of Taylor conveyed the tract with other lands to 'Taylor and Crate Corporation. (3) Taylor and Crate, ■on November 14, 1912, conveyed a large acreage, including the 1583 acres and with other lands the two tracts in •controversy to Mowbray and Robinson, who conveyed to Foundation Fund, and it to the University as above •stated.

*189 It was further stipulated that ¥m. Combs “owned and claimed said tract of 1583 acres, located on Laurel Fork for fifteen years before he conveyed to Taylor,” and that University “now holds and claims the described land by virtue of this and the above mentioned deeds. ’ ’

At this point it may be noted that there is no claim by pleading by either party of actual adverse possession, and proof in this respect falls short if it had been made. The University stands on its admitted record title. Appellants do not have complete record title, and stand on the proposition that a boundary agreement made long years ago, established their title, and as demonstrating its claim refer to certain deeds which it is claimed lead to the boundary line title. , .« ,■

The first is a deed executed October 14, 1903, by James Hargis and wife, G. T. Strong, J. M. Wooton, and Eliza Hudson, widow of Henry Hudson, to Herbert Howe, which conveyed 723 acres, situated on the Williams Fork of Long Fork of Bucldiorn. The tract was comprised of a Hargis tract of 411 acres; Wooton tract 31 acres; Hudson tract of 203 acres, and a Combs ’ tract of 78 acres. The source of title is not mentioned, nor are we able to learn from the long description by metes and bounds whether the two tracts in question are, though they may be, included.

It may be noted that while a Combs’ 78-acre tract is conveyed, Combs is not named as a party nor did he sign. In this deed Hargis did not warrant generally title to any part of the land, but specially as to all. Later in 1907, Hargis, Strong and T. H. Hudson conveyed to Howe the minerals underlying surface conveyed by the foregoing deed. Hargis again did not warrant title, his joining as in the former deed apparently having been for the purpose of quitclaiming.

The latter deed conveys 644% acres, a difference of 78 acres; this may account for the Combs’ tract mentioned in the first deed. For the first and only time there develops the claim upon which title of grantors appears, It is recited that the “mineral and property herein is the same land descended to T. H. Hudson and his brothers and sisters, from his father by reason of the laws of descent, and being the same property that was adjudged to him by the U. S. Dist. Court, in equity case No. 2419, styled Hudson v. Richards;” we do not find any such *190 case noted in the reports. This recital brings ns down to claim of title by virtue of conditional line agreement, said to have been made between Wm. Combs and Henry Hudson, under whose alleged ownership the grantors (except perhaps Hargis) undertook to convey to Howe.

It is insisted by appellants that this conditional agreement, under our decisions, throws the title to the Howe estate. Appellee does not dispute the principle of law to the effect that owners of adjacent lands may settle a bona fide dispute as to boundary, either in writing or by an oral agreement based on sufficient consideration, mutual concessions, followed by marking and agreeing to the line and taking possession. Hoskins v. Morgan, 197 Ky. 736, 248 S. W. 210; Moran v. Choate, 253 Ky. 470, 69 S. W. (2d) 994; Williams v. Waddle, 285.Ky. 416, 148 S. W. (2d) 298.

We gather the historical facts to be that one Jackie 'Campbell, who soldiered in the War of 1812, when mustered out came to Kentucky, and with his family settled near the mouth of Williams Fork on the Long Fork of Buckhorn Creek in Breathitt County. By reference to the map filed this was some distance north of Rattlesnake Fork, which is nearer the boundaries of the southerly tracts in dispute. Campbell had several daughters; one married Henry Hudson who established himself on Long-Fork some time in 1840. It is said that Campbell and Hudson acquired patents for large and substantial boundaries of wild lands up and down the water shed of Long Fork, most of which lay on that water shed, but some extending over surrounding ridges on other sheds. At this point it may be said that the ridge, which it is claimed was established as a line, is a ridge dividing two water sheds.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 129, 295 Ky. 187, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-v-university-of-kentucky-kyctapphigh-1943.