Wheeler v. Collins

2 S.W.2d 646, 222 Ky. 801, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 31, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 646 (Wheeler v. Collins) 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
Wheeler v. Collins, 2 S.W.2d 646, 222 Ky. 801, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 251 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson

Reversing.

Pursuant to section 473 of the Civil Code of Practice, appellants filed, with the auditor, a caveat to prevent the issuing of a patent to W. M. Collins upon a survey which he had made. The Code -contains the following provision :

“If any person obtain a survey of land to which another claims a better right, such other may enter a caveat with the register to prevent the issuing of a grant until the right be determined. The caveat shall state the plaintiff’s claim and the reasons why the grant should not issue. . . .
“A copy of the -caveat, certified by the register, shall, within sixty days from the time it is entered, be lodged with the -clerk of the circuit -court of the county where the land or the greater part thereof lies. . . .
“If such copy be lodged within said period, it shall be treated as a petition, and the proceedings upon it shall be the same, including an appeal to the Court of Appeals.” Section 473.

The court sustained a general demurrer to the -caveat and dismissed the proceeding. These facts are alleged:

Appellants procured from the Breathitt county court on May 28, 1926, a land warrant for 30 acres of land in Breathitt county and paid then the legal -charge therefor, 5 cents an acre. At that time there was no qualified county surveyor in Breathitt county. The- plaintiffs went to William G. Smith, a citizen of the county, and to William Turner, the county judge, and procured an agreement that the judge would appoint William G. Smith county surveyor on May 28, 1926, and that Smith would *803 then and there accept the appointment as surveyor and qualify. After this agreement was made the plaintiffs placed in the hands of Smith the land warrant, which had been issued to them, also a description of the land, and Smith agreed that he would, immediately upon his qualification as surveyor, mate the entry of said land in the entry book in the office of the surveyor of Breathitt county, and would immediately proceed to make a survey of it for them and enter it upon the surveyor’s book and certify it to the auditor, together with a plot of the survey, and request that a patent issue thereon to the plaintiffs for the land, he agreeing that the plaintiffs might go home and that he would do the work and render them a bill for his fees at the price of $10 a day, and the plaintiffs were then to pay him. But notwithstanding this agreement Smith sought out Collins and informed him of the land warrant and the above agreement, and secretly and fraudulently connived with Collins not to do the work or any of it, and wrongfully, on June 2, entered into a fraudulent agreement with Collins to return the land warrant and description of the land to the plaintiffs with the information that he had investigated the land and had found out that the land lay within Collins’ boundary — all of which he fraudulently did, and agreed at the same time with Collins that he would qualify as surveyor and survey the land and make a plot and a certified certificate of survey in his name to the auditor, and for that purpose would qualify as surveyor of Breathitt county. In keeping with this fraudulent agreement entered into between Mm and the defendant, Collins, Smith did on the 9th day of June, 1925, after having returned plaintiffs’ papers, help Collins secure a land warrant on the land from the Breathitt county court, and, after making any entry in the surveyor’s book, proceeded fraudulently to survey the land for Collins, and in furtherance of his fraudulent scheme with Collins attempted to have himself appointed surveyor of Breathitt county, and secured an order from the judge of the Breathitt county court, which was entered on June 9, 1926, by which he qualified as surveyor, but he failed and refused to execute any bond as surveyor. And then, on the 12th day of June, 1926, he attempted to make a survey for Collins and certified the same to the auditor at Frankfort, all of which was in violation of his agreement with the plaintiffs and in pursuance of his fraudulent agreement with Collins *804 made for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiffs out of their rights. By reason of the fact that he had executed no bond as county surveyor he was not in truth the surveyor of Breathitt county at the time he did these things.

On or about August 30, 1926, the plaintiffs returned to Breathitt county, and, learning the facts, they procured the county judge to make an order appointing Fred K. Cope as surveyor of Breathitt county. The order was entered on August 30, 1926. Cope qualified and gave bond and has been at all times since then the regularly qualified and acting county surveyor of Breathitt county. Plaintiffs placed in his hands the land warrant issued to them requesting him to make an entry of same in the surveyor’s book of Breathitt county, which he did, and for which they paid him, the land being properly described in the entry, which was signed by him as surveyor of Breathitt county. They made an agreement with Cope to go on and make the survey of the land and file it with the auditor, but he, too, entered into a conspiracy with Collins and, pursuant to the conspiracy, failed to make the survey. After this and on September 3, 1926, Collins procured the Breathitt county court to make an order appointing W. G-. Smith as surveyor of Breathitt county. Smith qualified and then made a survey of the land in the name of Collins and filed it with the auditor. The plaintiffs prayed that the auditor be restrained from issuing a patent to Collins upon the survey so made by Smith.

Section 4703, Kentucky Statutes, provides:

“Any person who wishes to 'appropriate any vacant and unappropriated land, may on application to the county court of the county in which the same lies, and paying therefor such price as the court may allow, not less than five dollars ($5.00) per hundred acres, obtain an order of court authorizing him to enter and survey any number of acres of such land in the county, not more than two hundred.
‘ ‘ The party obtaining such order may, by an entry in the surveyor’s book of the county describing the same, appropriate the quantity of land it calls for in one or more parcels, as he may think proper; but no one person shall, under this chapter, enter, survey or cause to be patented, more than two hundred acres of land in any one county. ’ ’

*805 Section 4704 further provides:

“The surveyor shall survey the entries in the succession in point of time in which the same are made, bounding the same by plainly marked trees, stones or stakes, noting where it binds on a watercourse or the marked line of another survey, giving names.”

It will thus be seen that the party obtaining the land warrant may, by an entry in the surveyor’s book, describing the same, appropriate the quantity of land it calls for, and that the surveyor shall survey the entries in the succession in point of time in which the same are made. So the case before us turns on which of the parties got the first legal entry on the surveyor’s book. As Smith did not qualify until after the plaintiffs had left the county, they obtained no right in the land by reason of any promise made to them as to what he would do after they left.

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Related

Brown v. Rose
26 S.W.2d 503 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 646, 222 Ky. 801, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-collins-kyctapphigh-1928.