West v. Price's Heirs

25 Ky. 380, 2 J.J. Marsh. 380, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 17, 1829
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Ky. 380 (West v. Price's Heirs) 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
West v. Price's Heirs, 25 Ky. 380, 2 J.J. Marsh. 380, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 107 (Ky. Ct. App. 1829).

Opinion

Judge Underwood

delivered the opinion of the Court.

C. Greenup held 145 acres of land, granted to him by the commonwealth of Virginia in May, 1786. In 1815, he conveyed this tract to West, the lessor of the plaintiff. A tract of 546 acres, was patented to Robert Todd, in 1786, calling for, and binding on two lines of Greenup’s survey.

In 1798, Todd conveyed his tract of 546 acres, to Samuel Price, ancestor of the defendants. According to the patents and deeds, there is no confliction between the two claim?. As early as 1803, Greenup was possessed of his tract, and he, and those, claiming under him, have bebn possessed ever since, except so far as they may have been disseised by Samuel Price;, or those dairying under hirp.

[381]*381In February or March, 1804, Samuel price rented his tract, or part of it, to dames Haydon, who enter** ed upon the land, claiming under Price. The stated, that about the time Haydon entered, he told the witness that he was to clear ten acres of land for rent, according to the contract with Price; and some time afterwards Haydon showed the witness, demark-ed by blazes on the trees, the ten acres, which he represented he was to "tear. The ten acres, thus de-marked and pointed o'„., ran across the line, separating the lands patented as aforesaid; and included land embraced by Greenup’s patent, and not embraced by Todd’s. Haydon cleared a turnip patch within the ten acres, the season after his contract with Price, and got fire wood within the bounds of the ten acres, immediately after he removed to the land. The turnip patch was cleared, sowed in turnips, and enclosed in 1804; but the precise time, the .witness could not state. The usual season for sowing turnips, according to the witness, was from the 15th. July, to the 1st. of August.

The declaration in ejectment, was served 14th-June, 1824. A part of the turnip patch which was cleared, and enclosed, extended across the line, common to the patents, into Greenup’s survey; and in the winter following of 1804-5, an additional clearing was made, and annexed, to the turnip patch, making in all, about two acres of cleared land, in and upon Greenup’s survey, which has been held and possessed by Price, and those claiming under him, by actual enclosure, by fencing, according to our understanding of the evidence, uninterruptedly, to the present time. How much more, the demarkation of the ten acres, by blazing the trees, includes, we know not. West, Greenup’s vendee, as lessor, instituted his action of ejectment, to recover the land held by the tenant of Price’s heirs, lying on West’s side of the patent line. They defended, relying on the statute of limitations, and succeeded. West brings the case to this court for revision.

The first error relied on, is, that there was no plea, and the jury were erroneously sworn to try the issue. This assignment is not warranted by the facts exhib[382]*382ited of record. Price’s heirs were admitted defendants, on the 21st. October, 1824; made confession of the lease, entry, and ouster, in the declaration supposed, and plead not guilty. On the 25th. October, 1824,on the motion of the plaintiff, the order, admitting Price’s heirs as defendants, was set aside and judgment rendered against the causal ejector, because Martin Sheets, the tenant in possession, upon whom the declaration and common order were served, failed to enter himself defendant. A writ of habere facias possessionem, was also awarded upon the judgment. Then the heirs of Price were admitted defendants; and the execution of the writ of possession stayed until the determination of the cause. It is true, that it does not appear that they plead^a.fter this; but as the plea was already in, and was not with, drawn at the time the order was rescinded, which first admitted them as defendants, we perceive no mischief likely to result from regarding the plea then put in, as that which formed the issue, to try which the jury were sworn. It may seem inconsistent to regard pleas put in before defendants are made; but to reverse on that ground, in this case, or in any case like it, would be a niceity, well calculated to frustrate the speedy administration of justice. If, therefore, the plaintiff in error, has no better grounds to stand on, he must abide the verdict and judgment against him.

After the evidence was concluded, which presented the facts already detailed, the plaintiff moved the court to instruct the jury, “that if they believed Greenup was possessed of the land, embraced in the grant to him, and his deed to the lessor of the plaintiff, in the years 1803 and 1804, and since, as stated by the witnesses, the statute of limitation did not protect the defendants, beyond the extent of the ground, actually enclosed in the turnip patch, twenty years prior to the commencement of this suit; and even if they believed the turnip patch was cleared that early, that the statute of limitation did not bar the plaintiff to the limits of -the ten acres, blazed around, as stated b)f the witness.” The court refused to give this instruction; and on the application of the defendants, gave the following, “that the defendants were pro [383]*383tected by the statute of limitations; and the plaintiff’s action whs barred to the full extent of the said ten acres, demarked to be cleared, by said Haydon, stated by the witness, if the jury believe the turnip patch was cleared twenty years before the commencement of this suit; and any part of it, however small, was within the plaintiff’s boundary; and that it was the intention of said Haydon, to take possession of the whole ten acres.”

Declarations °/ actor, at ¿*“‘4 plaining qua ammo, are evidence1*!!®1 part of res gestae, to o1fe¡^tnaturé Declarations of tenant, wbí,e iD P02' competent evideneo, as Part oires fhewiat re o/hTsTenan-oy; whether he claimed in or8inWthatht of another, as tenant for hokjrS&c/reC" If landlord authorize ten-no certwlf1 traot of land, and he enter 3uch entlaDlí’ does not to-vest landlord with posses-Centered on 6y tenant, without au-ihority.

[383]*383The plaintiff excepted to the opinion of the court, in giving the instruction asked for by the defendants, and in refusing to give the instruction asked for by him. The plaintiff objected on the trial, to the testimony of a witness, detailing the statements made by James Haydon, relative to the contract he had entered into with Samuel Price; and also detailing what said Haydon told the witness about the demarcation of the ten acres, by blazing the trees around it. The court overruled .the objections, and permited the witness to state what Haydon had said, relative to these points, to which the plaintiff excepted. Whether the court was right or wrong, in refusing and giving the instruction as aforesaid, and in admitting the testimony objected to, as evidence before the jury, constitute the important and remaining questions to be disposed of. As instructions are predicated upon the evidence, the admissibility of the testimony objected to, will be first considered.

To legitimate the Statements made by Haydon,- to the witness, and to rid them of the character of mere hearsay, they must be considered as part of the res ge$l&; and if they cannot be so considered, they ought to have been rejected. Conversations, or -dec-Jarations, made by the actor or party concerned, at the time an act is done, and which explain the quo animo

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ky. 380, 2 J.J. Marsh. 380, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-prices-heirs-kyctapp-1829.