Turner v. Bowens

203 S.W. 749, 180 Ky. 755, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 155
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 28, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 749 (Turner v. Bowens) 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
Turner v. Bowens, 203 S.W. 749, 180 Ky. 755, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 155 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

This controversy is about the ownership of a small tract of land claimed by the Nieces, who were vendors of Turner, the appellant, on the one side, and Bowens, the appellee, on the other.

In 1867 there was conveyed to Bowens a tract of land in Letcher county “beginning at the mouth of a small [756]*756drain, a short distance below the lower end of the Owing Colly field; thence running up the Camp Branch to the upper end of the Ewings field”; and thence with different general courses to the beginning, containing 200 acres more or less. In 1895 there was conveyed to the Nieces a tract of land and the description thereof called for Bowens ’ line, and ran a part of the way with this line on the call mentioned.

About 1902 the Nieces and Bowens got into a controversy as to the dividing line between their respective tracts of land at the point where the Niece deed called for the Bowens line, and, according to the contentions of the Nieces, this dispute was settled by the making of an agreed line between their lands along the points in dispute, which agreed line was thereupon marked and thereafter recognized by both of them. After this, the Nieces sold the land up to the agreed line to Turner, and Turner sold the mineral rights to the Hamilton Realty Company. After this sale of the mineral rights, which took place about 1912', a controversy came up as to the line between the lands of Bowens and the lands conveyed to the Nieces, Bowen insisting that the line should be located as designated in the deed.he got in 1867, while the Nieces, and those claiming under them, contended that the agreed line was the line between their lands. As a result of this controversy, the Nieces filed a suit against Bowens, in 1914, and in the petition, as amended, it was set up that more than twelve years before the institution of the suit, the Nieces and Bowens had a dispute as to the location of the line between their lands, and to settle this dispute they agreed on the establishment of a line, and the line so agreed upon had been marked, and recognized as the line by both of them for several years before this suit was brought, and each had been in the possession of the land on his side of this agreed line. They further averred that Bowens was setting up claim to the land on their side of the agreed line, and giving it out in speeches that he was the owner of the land, and they asked that their title be quieted. Por answer to this suit Bowens denied all of the material averments of the petition. Thereafter the case was prepared' for trial, and on a hearing the suit of the Nieces, to which Turner and the Hamilton Realty Company had become parties as the vendees of the Nieces, the petition was dismissed.

[757]*757As the deed of the Nieces was made after the deed to Bowens, and called for his line, the dispute originally arose as to the location of Bowens’ line, because wherever his line was, there also was the line of the Nieces. It appears that Bowens’ deed called for the mouth of a small drain, and the dispute as to the location of his line grew out of the fact that Bowens claimed that this small drain was at one place, while the Nieces claimed it was at another place, and the correct line depended upon which one of these drains was the one called for in the Bowens deed.

The weight of the evidence clearly shows, as we think, that this dispute was settled about 1902 by the location of an agreed and marked line.at the point now claimed by the Nieces as their line. In fact, all of the evidence in the case shows that there was a dispute and that this dispute was settled by the making of an agreed line, and it further appears that after this agreed line was established Bowens erected a fence on the line, thus showing that he recognized the agreed line as the correct line, and it further appears that after this, both parties claimed to this line. It further appears that Bowens did not question the correctness of this agreed line until several years after it had been located, and not until the Nieces or Turner, or perhaps both of them, sold the mineral in the land to the Hamilton Realty Company.

It is insisted by counsel for Bowens that the lower, court correctly dismissed the petition, because it was an action to quiet the title, and such an action, under section 11 of the Kentucky Statutes, cannot be maintained unless the party bringing the suit has “both the legal title and possession” of the land to which he seeks to quiet the title. This argument is put up on the ground that it does not appear that the Nieces or Turner have the legal title to this land in dispute, or that they had ever been in the actual possession of it. It is true that in an action under this statute to quiet title the plaintiff must have both title and possession, but this does not mean that he must have a paper title to the land, it only means that he must be claiming the land under such a title as would give him the right to the possession of it, and this character of title may rest on adverse possession, or on a sufficient parol agreement by which the party claiming the land has the right to its possession. For example, under the facts in this case, the establishment of this agreed line to settle [758]*758the dispute between them as to the correct location of the line had the effect of investing the Nieces with such title to the land up to this line as would enable them to bring a suit to quiet the title to the same extent as if they had a paper title to it. Lemoyne v. Hays, 145 Ky. 415; Rice. Blair, 161 Ky. 280.

Nor does the statute mean that the party who brings a suit to quiet his title must be in actual physical possession of the particular piece of land to which he wants his title quieted. It is true that he must be in the actual possession of the land, but if he — as were the Nieces — is in actual physical possession of another body of land, of which the land, to which he wishes to have the title quieted is a part, then he will be in possession of it within the meaning of the statute. To illustrate in this case, when this agreed line was establised it.took the place of the original line between the lines of - the Nieces and Bowens, and placed the Nieces in the possession' of the land as fixed by the agreed line as effectively as they were in possession up to the original line before the agreed line was located, and the land that the Nieces got when the agreed line was established became, and continued to be, a part of the tract of which they had always been in actual physical possession. It is well settled that when a party is in the actual physical possession of any part of a body of land to which he has good title, whether it be acquired by regular conveyance or by adverse possession, or by the location of agreed line, he is in the possession of the. whole of it, and may bring a suit to quiet the title to any part of it.

The other argument is that where the junior title calls for, and runs with the lines of the senior title, any agreement by which the party claiming under the senior title gives up a part of his land is without consideration- and void. Stated in these terms, the argument is sound, but there is a well-recognized principle that where there is a bona fide dispute between two adjoining landowners as to the location of the line between their lands, although one of them may have the senior and the other the junior title, and although the lines of the junior title may call for the lines of the senior title, and this dispute is settled by the establishment, in parol, of an agreed line between.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 S.W. 749, 180 Ky. 755, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-bowens-kyctapp-1918.