Taylor & Crate v. Breathitt Coal, Iron & Lumber Co.

185 F. 854, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5117
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 14, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 F. 854 (Taylor & Crate v. Breathitt Coal, Iron & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor & Crate v. Breathitt Coal, Iron & Lumber Co., 185 F. 854, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5117 (E.D. Ky. 1911).

Opinion

COCHRAN, District Judge.

This cause is under submission for final decree. I had intended to write a more elaborate opinion in this case than I now purpose to do, though it is apt to be quite elaborate as it is. The particulars, which I had intended to elaborate, but will not, concern the question of possession of the land in contest. This involved a visualization of the land itself, a presentation of the whole law of Kentucky as to possession, covering all the earlier decisions of the Kentucky Court of Appeals which gave it form, and a statement of the true history of what had been done in relation to that land and adjacent parcels from the time of Lewis Campbell down, covering all the details. I have found that it is' not essential that I do this in order to make clear the grounds upon which I purpose to decide the case, and I have already kept it so long and other work is so pressing that I would not be justified in taking the time to deal with these matters in as full a way as I wpuld like to do. I feel that I have gone to the bottom of the case and considered all suggestions that have been made in regard to it. I know that I now have a conviction as to how it should be decided, and I will say only so much as is necessary to indicate why I have felt driven to that conviction. In so doing I will lay down a series of propositions and endeavor to make each one good.

First, I think it must be accepted that the Reid patent covers all the land in contest, provided the Ross & Currie patent does not cover any portion of it. Of course, if the Ross & Currie patent covers any portion of it, the Reid patent does not cover such portion, because the Reid patent expressly excepted from it all land previously patented or otherwise appropriated, and the Ross & Currie patent is a much older patent than the Reid. It follows frcim this that the corporate defendant is entitled at least to as much of the land in contest as is not covered by the Ross & Currie patent, unless it has been shown that its title thereto has been divested by 15 years adverse possession on the part of the plaintiff and those under whom it claims. All I say under this head is on the basis that the Ross & Currie patent is out of the case. Plaintiff’s counsel argues earnestly and ably that it has not been shown by defendants that the Reid patent covers any portion of the land in contest, and as the position that it does hurts plaintiff, should I conclude that it has not established 15 years adverse possession, I cannot content myself with laying down this proposition, but must .make it good.

Counsel’s point here is this: The Reid patent grants a certain boundary of land containing 154,800 acres, but excepts therefrom as having been previously granted and otherwise appropriated 25,800 acres of land, leaving 129,000 acres conveyed. Piad the patent simply granted the iand within the exterior boundary without any exception, though it would not have been good as to the previously patented and otherwise appropriated land, the defendants would not have had to do more than show that the land in contest was within such exterior boundary in order to establish the corporate defendant’s right thereto, nothing else appearing. 'But, as the patent expressly excepts previously patented and otherwise appropriated land, they could not show that the land in contest was covered by the patent simply by showing that it [857]*857was within the exterior boundary thereof. They liad to go further, and show that it was not within the previously patented and otherwise appropriated land. In other words, to show that the land in contest was covered by the Reid patent, they had to show that it was within the exterior boundary thereof and without its exclusions. And the claim is that, though the defendants have proven that the land in contest is within the one, they have not proven that it is without the other. It is on this ground that it is argued that it has not been shown that the Reid patent covers the land in contest. But, though the burden was on the defendants to make out that the land in contest is without the exclusions of the Reid patent — i. e., land previously patented or otherwise appropriated — they w-ere not bound to prove this fact beyond a reasonable doubt. It is sufficient, at least, if they have made it out with reasonable certainty. Defendants’ case here mainly consists of the testimony of the corporate defendant’s surveyor, Gibson. He spent 12 days in the land office at Frankfort examining the records to find out what previous patents and surveys might possibly cover the laud in contest. He had also examined the surveyor’s records of Breathitt county, though not as thoroughly as he did those in the Frankfort office. Besides this, lip spent five years on the land ascertaining its character, and locating the corporate defendant’s patent. He had turned up between -100 and 500 patents covering land within the exterior boundary of that patent, many of which he had located and as to all of which he had a general idea as to their location. Of this 400 or 500 he located 24 adjacent to and binding on the land in contest, and he has filed a map showing the location of 20 of the 24. With this extensive knowledge on the subject, he has testified that no portion of the land in contest is covered by any previously patented or appropriated land. He is quite severely criticised, but I see no good reason for not accepting- that statement as sound. Tn this particular, at least, it has not been shown that his testimony is incorrect. No previous patent or survey has been introduced showing that it covers any part of the land in contest. The most that is claimed is that it is possible that there may be a previous patent or survey covering some portion or all of the land in contest which he has overlooked by not making his examination of the records in the land office at Frankfort and in the surveyors office of Breathitt county as thorough as it might have been and of his not having examined at all the records in the surveyor’s offices of the counties out of which Breathitt county and its predecessors have been carved. It should he conceded that there is a possibility of this being so. It is possible that there is one or more big patents calling for the waters of Ricking river and of Kentucky river which when run out may take in the land in contest. It is possible that one or more of the five Ross & Currie patents which plaintiff claims are located on Troublesome reach over to the land in contest, and so as to patents on Quicksand, Troublesome, and Buckhorn which Gibson has or may have overlooked. It is possible that there is some old survey over Í0 or perhaps 100 years old not yet carried into a patent which covers the land in contest. But it is not at all likely that either one of these things is so. As to such old surveys, it cannot be said that it is [858]*858more than a bare possibility that there is one which has been allowed to remain uncarried into a patent for so long a period of time. As to the patents on Quicksand, Troublesome, and Buckhorn which it is claimed Gibson overlooked, it is not claimed that either one of them covers any part of the land .in contest. Nor is it claimed that either of the five Ross & Currie patents referred to do so. Major Wright does not know where they are located other than that he thinks that they are located on Troublesome. Then as to big patents calling for Licking and Kentucky rivers which may take in the land in contest, it is not likely that Gibson could have been on the ground doing the amount of surveying and investigating he has been engaged in without hearing of it or in some way running across it.

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Bluebook (online)
185 F. 854, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-crate-v-breathitt-coal-iron-lumber-co-kyed-1911.