Taylor v. Bradshaw

22 Ky. 145, 6 T.B. Mon. 145, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 30, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ky. 145 (Taylor v. Bradshaw) 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
Taylor v. Bradshaw, 22 Ky. 145, 6 T.B. Mon. 145, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 253 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Judge Owsley

delivered tho Opinion of t'no Court.

The present appellants brought an action of ejectment against the appellee, and finally rucceeded in recovering a judgment for lands of which he was possessed.

The appellee, claiming to be paid for the improvement made by him on the land, applied to the court and obtained an order appointing com commissioners to value the improvements, under the act of 1812, concerning occupying claimants.

This order was made without opposition on the part of the appellants; but before the commsisioners acted upon the subject, an order was made reserving to the appellants the privilege, of contesting the right of the appellee to pay for his improvements, on the coming in of the corrmhoioncr’s report; and after the report was made to court, the [146]*146appellants appeared by their counsel, and urged their objections to the claim of the appellee for iow provements.

Objections to remS añd j ordinentoac" the'report Of the commissioners. Bill for re-thejuSdg1-'S valuefof the improve-merits. Demurrer to the bill. Upon a demurrer, the Sen asbe true? as Grounds of the bill, viz: evidence discovered since the trial, and fr.aud of Bradshaw in concealing the same. bhTtitle^" shown by Bradshaw to entitle him to pay for hisimprors-raen *'

[146]*146Their objections were, however, overruled, and judgment entered in favor of the appellee, accord-“g to the report of the commisioners,

Some time thereafter, the appellants filed their bill in equity with injunction, to be relieved against the judgment which was rendered pn the commissioner’s report.

The bill was demurred ta by the appellee, and the -demurrer sustained.

From the decision on that demurrer, this appeal was prayed; and the -only question now to be com sidered involves the correctness of that decision.

As the cause was decided upon demurrer, it proper that we should, in revising the decision of the circuit court, assume as true, all the allegations of the bill, and inquire whether or not, as such, any sufficient cause is shown for the interposition of a court of equity.

The grounds for relief, as contained in the bilí, are two fold.

1. The discovery by the appellants, since the judgment, of evidence going to show that when the appellee seated and improved the land, he had no title, cither legal or equitable, to entitle him to pay for his improvements, under the act .concerning occupants,

And 2dly. That the discovered evidence was known to the appellee at the time of his obtaining the order appointing the commissioners, and by him fraudulently concealed from the appellants until after the adjournment of the court at which the judgment was rendered upon the commissioner’s report.

Before Bradshaw settled upon the land, he had Stained from Wm. Meek, an assignment of a bond which had been previously given to him for a title, by James Wynn, in whose name a survey including [147]*147Bradshaw’s settlement was made, in 1795, for 24,324 acres, under an entry dated in 1783; and for the purpose of bringing his case within the provisions of the occupying claimant law, and to show his right to compensation for the improvements made by him on the land, Bradshaw produced to the court before whom the report of the commissioners was pending, the bond given by Wynn to Meek,, dated November, 1803, the assignment thereof to him by Meek, dated January, 1804, and a certified copy from the Register’s office, of the survey which was made the 17tih day of December, 1795, in the name of Wynn, for the 24,324 acres of laid, together with the following endorsement on the back of the copy of the survey, towit: “William Johnson, assignee of J. Wynn, 24,324 acres.” Upon this evidence, Bradshaw was adjudged to be entitled to the benefits of the occupying claimant law, and judgment entered in his favor, upon the report of the commissioners.

The evidence al,eSeíl to be eovóre^hy Taylor &c. Equity will pá’^from a judgment™ uPon of nevv- evidence after, the trial iaW)where that the par-, ty was not. virit.ni, in seaivliins Cor, and prucor-donothewhioh was within his reach be-(ore the {.nal.

[147]*147The evidence which is alleged by the appellants, to have been since discovered by them, and which they contend goes to show that, at the time of his settling upon, and improving the land, Bradshaw had no title, either legal or equitable, deducible of record, consists of an assignment by Wynn to Win. Johnson, of the plat and certificate of the 24,324 acres survey of Wynn, dated before the bond of Wynn to Meek, and that the patent which also issued from the commonwealth to Wan Johuson, as assignee of J. Wynn, before the date of Wynn’s bond to Meek, for the same 24,324 acres that was surveyed for Wynn.

The evidence which is thus alleged by the appellants, to have been discovered by them since the de-cisión of the court upon the report of the coinmis-sioners, would doubtless have had an important bearing upon the opinion, of the court, if it had been produced on the hearing of the objections. which were taken to the right of Bradshaw to he-paid for his impo vements under the occupying claimant law, when the commissioners report was under-consideration. But admitting the materiality of the-[148]*148discovered evidence, and conceding that if it had been before the court on the hearing of the objec-lions' to the report of the commissioners, the decis-inn should have been in favor of the appellants, and not, as it was, against them; still it will be found {,},^ the appellants have not made out such a case as will authorise a court of equity to lend its aid, and relieve theta against the judgment, upon the ground 0f discovered evidence. For the assignment of ^ jj(5 p]a£ arK] certificate of survey, by Wynn to Johnson, and the patent to Johnson, (both of which are alleged to have been discovered) were of record in the office of the Register, to which all may have access, and if net known to the appellants before the copy of the survey was produced by Bradshaw to the court, they nw -t, upon reading the endorsement upon that copy have perceived, that in all probability, such an assignment and patent did exist, and as vigilant suitors should have employed the appropriate means, by searching the oidee of the Register to find them, before the cr. ;e was decided by the court. Having, however, filed todo so', the appellants under their alleged discovery, do not p; e-sent themselves before the court free from fault, and it is an established rule with ccuvts of equity, never to relieve a party against theef bet of his own laches in a matter exclusively cognisable in the court by which it has been determined.

Á party iiti-bound to°dia-clore circam-átances which go to deleat or weaken bis claim.

Wii.li respect to the second ground relied on for relief, there is still less pretence for the interposition, of a court of equity.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ky. 145, 6 T.B. Mon. 145, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-bradshaw-kyctapp-1827.