Tackitt v. Newsom

216 S.W. 376, 186 Ky. 188, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 5, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 376 (Tackitt v. Newsom) 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
Tackitt v. Newsom, 216 S.W. 376, 186 Ky. 188, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 189 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas —

Affirming first case and reversing the second case.

These two suits furnish a strong example of the perversity in human nature, and emphasize the influence of selfishness and greed as factors in controlling human conduct. These litigents not only display an utter disregard of the good fellowship which should exist between neighbors, but they likewise exhibit a contempt for the preservation of family ties, since the appellant Newsom, who was plaintiff below, is the son-in-law of the appellee Tackett, who was the defendant below. It is to be regretted that petty disputes like those here involved could not be settled amicably without consuming the time of courts and disturbing an entire neighborhood for a period of more than a year, and leaving scars which naught but death will efface. The transcripts in the two cases contain about 640 pages, while the matter involved is only a fraction of an acre of mountain agricultural land and alleged damages thereto, all of the total value of less than one-fourth of the cost of the transcripts alone.

The first suit involves a controversy over the division line between the plaintiff and defendant and damages to less than a fourth of an acre of plaintiff’s land because of an alleged wrongful diversion of a stream by defendant, causing the water to collect on that portion of plaintiff’s land.

[190]*190The answer contained a denial of the allegations of the petition and a paragraph relying on adverse posession which was denied by reply, and upon trial there was a verdict in favor of plaintiff for only a portion of the land sued for, and one also in his favor for the sum of $25.00 because of the matters complained of in the second paragraph of his petition. Defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, he prosecutes an appeal.

About four months after the rendition of the judgment in that case the second suit was filed to obtain a ‘mandatory injunction against defendant requiring him to remove the alleged obstruction which plaintiff claimed produced the damage for which he asked compensation in the second paragraph of the first suit. Defendant’s answer denied the allegations of the petition in that suit and after extensive and protracted preparation the court upon submission granted the prayer of the petition and ordered the obstructions complained of removed, and to review that judgment the defendant prosecutes the second appeal above. Upon motion made in this court the two appeals are heard together, though sustaining no relation the one to the other further than that they are between the same parties.

The two tracts of land owned respectively by plaintiff and defendant were once owned as one tract by William Tackitt, who sold the portion now owned by defendant to his remote vendor in 1886; while the remainder of the tract was sold to defendant’s remote vendor in 1893.

The grounds urged for a reversal of the judgment in the first appeal are that the court erred in the admission and rejection of evidence; in the giving’ and refusing of instructions, and that the verdict of the jury is not sustained by the evidence. The only complained of incompetent evidence to which our attention is called in brief of counsel is that given upon cross-examination of the county surveyor of Pike county, who was introduced as a witness in behalf of plaintiff. This witness had made a survey of the lines contended by each litigant as the true one, and had testified in substance in his examination in chief that the calls of defendant’s deed (which was the older one) located the true line at the point contended by plaintiff. One call in the deed reads, “running down said point to the butt or base [191]*191of the point.” On cross-examination the surveyor testified that he construed this to mean as running with the center of the point. His first answer, giving his construction of the call, was objected to, but the objection was not acted upon, and then defendant’s attorney asked him this question: “It means that whether it says it or not?” to which the witness answered “Yes, unless it calls for something down on the side of the point or certain degree off to a certain object.” Counsel then moved to exclude that answer, which was overruled. It will at once be seen that the first answer of the witness, of which complaint is made, can not be considered because the objection to it was waived by not requiring the court to rule upon it, ancl his second answer, which was asked to be excluded, was in direct response to a question propounded by defendant’s counsel, and we know of no rule of practice permitting a litigant to complain of testimony which his counsel voluntarily called for in his examination of the witness. We do not mean to hold that if the answer of a witness is not responsive to the question, and is not one which the question was designed to elicit, that the party would be barred from complaining of it if erroneous, but we have no such case before us. So, if the testimony of the surveyor was erroneous (which we do not determine), defendant under the condition of the record can not complain of it.

The wrongfully excluded evidence complained of is that offered by two of defendant’s witnesses to whom it is alleged William Tackitt, about the time or just aftei he sold the land now owned by defendant, pointed out a certain poplar tree as being the poplar tree mentioned in defendant’s deed, but this error, if one, was cured by the statements of witnesses who testifiedjor defendant later upon the trial, and who said that William Tackitt pointed out to them the line between plaintiff and defendant and that the line so pointed out ran by the poplar tree, where defendant claims the true line to be.

Defendant offered an instruction directing the jury to find for him if it believed that the land in controversy was included in the boundary given in defendant’s deed, which is the same boundary as that contained in the deed to the same tract which William Tackitt executed in 1886. This phase of the case, however, was submitted in an-' other instruction given by the court and which told the [192]*192jury to find, for the defendant if it believed the description in Ms deed covered the land to the green line on the map used on the trial, and the green line referred to in the instruction is shown not only by the defendant himself, but by all his witnesses, to be at the point where he claims the true line is and as contained in his deed.

Further complaint is made that the court refused to give an instruction on champerty offered by defendant, but the error, if any, in refusing this instruction is not prejudicial, since plaintiff by the verdict of the jury did not recover any of the land to which the instruction on champerty was intended to refer.

The last contention, that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, is without merit. We deem it unnecessary to relate even in substance the testimony offered by the respective parties, since it would serve no useful purpose, and would unnecessarily lengthen this opinion. While the testimony in its entirety is conflicting, still that given by plaintiff and his witnesses, including the county surveyor, is abundantly sufficient to sustain the verdict. We therefore conclude that none of the errors relied on are sufficient to authorize a reversal of the judgment in the first case appealed from.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 376, 186 Ky. 188, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tackitt-v-newsom-kyctapp-1919.