Trimble v. Gordon

109 S.W.2d 1217, 270 Ky. 476, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 5, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 1217 (Trimble v. Gordon) 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
Trimble v. Gordon, 109 S.W.2d 1217, 270 Ky. 476, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 105 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing-

On April 26, 1934, this equity 'action was filed in the Logan circuit court by appellants and plaintiffs below, H. L. Trimble and C. H. Ryan, against appellee and defendant below, Jettie T. Gordon. The relief sought by plaintiffs against defendant was the location of a dividing line between plaintiffs and defendant as owners of adjoining tracts of land so as to have it adjudged that plaintiffs were the owners of 12 or 13 acres of land in contest and over which the respective litigants were in irreconcilable dispute. The background to the litigation — but which serves no purpose in the settlement of the controversy — is that in 1878, and prior to the transactions hereinafter related, Ben K. Tulley, was the owner of a large tract of land in Logan county. He became financially involved to a considerable extent, and he sold and conveyed all of his land except 160 acres— the proceeds of which sales went to the liquidation of his debts. His residence was located on the south end of the retained 160 acres which fronted on the Clarksville and Russellville pike, the southeast corner of the retained tract being at the junction of that road and the Cave Spring and Buena Yista road. The proceeds of the sales that he made were not enough to extinguish his debts, some if not all of which had been reduced to judgment. An execution was raised on the judgment or judgments for the unpaid balance, and the sheriff levied it on the 160 acres not sold by the debtor. In due time *478 lie made sale, under that levy, of enough of the 160 acres off its south end to satisfy the execution, and Mrs. Belle Tulley, wife of Ben K. Tulley, became the purchaser ¡thereof.

On May 28 of the same year the sheriff executed to Mrs. Tulley a deed in which .the portion of land she bought under the execution sale by metes and bounds (in each call of which distances, -corners and directions are stated) was similarly described, and it is recited that the quantity sold contains “about 60 acres more or less.” The price agreed to be paid seems to have been met by Mrs. Tulley, and she and her husband and their family, one of whom was the defendant, Jettie T. Cordon, continued thereafter to live upon, occupy, and cultivate the entire 160 acres until her death in 1921; but with her owning the title to the quantity she bought under the execution off the south end of the whole tract, and her husband owning the north end thereof. The husband died in 1885, leaving a will in which he devised his portion of the entire tract to his wife during her life, and at her death to their children. So that, after the death of the husband in 1885, his widow continued to occupy the entire tract without change in possession, management, or operation throughout the period of her life. It appears that Mrs. Tulley also executed a will in which she designated her daughter, the defendant below and appellee here, as executrix thereof. The mother died owing some debts and plaintiff as executrix of her mother’s will — as well as one of her heirs and devisees — filed an equity action in the Logan circuit court to not only sell the lands of her mother (being the parcel the latter bought at the sheriff’s sale in 1878¡), but also that of her deceased father lying north thereto, which latter tract was sold for division among the heirs as remaindermen under the will of the husband and father.

A sale was ordered by the court in that action of two bounded and described parcels of land going to make up the entire 160-acre tract, the northern one bounded and described as containing 100 acres and the southern one (likewise described) as containing 60 acres. After due advertisement, the master commissioner, who was ordered to make the directed sales, did so, and he reported that plaintiffs became the purchasers of the northern parcel of the 160 acres which he described by metes and bounds in accordance with the judgment of the court ordering the sale, and that defendant became *479 tbe purchaser of the remaining southern portion of the 160 acres, also described in both the judgment and the commissioner’s report. Later he executed deeds to the respective purchasers conforming to his reports of sale and in which the respective tracts of land sold and conveyed by him were each meticulously described by metes, and bounds. The old Tulley residence and outbuildings, were located on the portion purchased and conveyed to defendant, except a small shackling barn that had been removed from the place where it was originally constructed on that parcel to a point farther north,, and which latter location turned out to be within the boundary of land later conveyed to plaintiffs by the master commissioner.

Some years before the death- of Ben K. Tulley he planted a hedge fence across the 160-acre tract at a point along its north and south course, which divided his. -entire farm into two tracts. The one north of the hedge contained' 88 acres, and that lying south of it contained 72 acres. After the decretal sales in 1922, following the death of Mrs. Belle Tulley, plaintiffs sold 88 acres off the northern end of their purchase at the decretal sale— it being the north end of the Tulley 160-acre tract — to a couple of vendees named McCormick, and which extended the southern line of that conveyance to the hedge, but which still left plaintiffs owning 12 acres of the tract described in their master commissioner’s deed lying immediately south of the hedge. That 12 acres was not purchased by the McCormick’s because it became known that defendant, Mrs. Gordon, was claiming to own it under her master commissioner’s deed, upon the theory that the land that she bought off the south end of the 160-acre Tulley tract extended north to that hedge, and which, if true, as we have seen, would vest in her the title to 72 acres of the entire 160-acre tract instead of the 60 acres described by metes and bounds in the deed she obtained from the master commissioner. In the circumstances the McCormicks declined to purchase that contested strip and plaintiffs declined to sell or convey it, since their sale of it might later be held champertous, and their vendees declined to become involved in that controversy.

Plaintiffs by their petition herein sought to have it adjudged that they were the owners of the contested quantity of land, consisting of 12 acres more or less,, which they averred defendant asserted title to. The *480 ¡answer contained a denial and an averment that plaintiff -owned the small contested parcel because, as she contended, her north line extended to the hedge referred to. ¡She also interposed a plea of adverse possession of the ■contested strip by herself and her mother for a period of more than 15 years, which ripened the title of the contested land in her; notwithstanding the master commissioner’s deed executed to her did not embrace it. Following pleadings made the issues and after evidence taken the cause was submitted to the court for hearing, followed by a judgment dismissing plaintiffs’’ petition, and to reverse it they prosecute this appeal.

The learned trial judge did not file an opinion, and his judgment dismissed plaintiffs’ petition without reciting the grounds upon which the order was made. However, it is recited in briefs, which is not denied, that his reason for doing so was that he was of the opinion that defendant had sustained her plea of adverse possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 1217, 270 Ky. 476, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimble-v-gordon-kyctapphigh-1937.