White v. Hardin

35 Ky. 141, 5 Dana 141, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 14, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 Ky. 141 (White v. Hardin) 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
White v. Hardin, 35 Ky. 141, 5 Dana 141, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 26 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In May, 1803, the County Court of Madison granted to James Hare, a certificate for four hundred acres of land, under the act of assembly for settling and improving the vacant lands of the Commonwealth, located to begin at a designated point on a certain fork of Goose creek, and “running down said fork on both sides for quantity, so as to be in a square, and to include the creek in the middle of the upper and lower lines.”

On the 9th of April, 1814, a survey was executed on this certificate, by which the four hundred acres was run off in a rectangular parallelogram, having its greatest length across the creek, and including only two hundred and twenty-six acres of the land described in the certificate.

On th 13th of May, 1814, a second survey was executed, on the same certificate, laying off the four hundred acres in a square, and conforming to the calls of the cer[142]*142tificate, except so far as a variation may have been produced by inaccuracy of measurement.

On the 19th day of December, 1821, a patent issued to Martin D. and Mark Hardin, for four hundred acres, according to the first of these surveys—the Hardins having become the purchasers of Hare’s claim, at the register’s sales thereof, for the non-payment of the state price; at the first of which, in 1813, Martin D. Hardin purchased the land, and at the second, in 1814, it was purchased by Mark Hardin, who afterwards admitted Martin D. to an interest of two thirds, in which proportion it was granted to them by the patent.

The two surveys were made under the immediate direction of John Bates, the agent of M. D. Hardin.

In December, 1820, Alexander White and John Wilkerson entered into a contract with the Hardins; in which, after a recital that the Hardins hold four hundred acres of land granted by the Madison County Court to James Hare, in 1803, and that White and Wilkerson wish to make an experiment thereon for salt water &c. the Hardins bind themselves to convey the land to them, on the receipt of two thousand five hundred dollars, in five annual instalments, with interest from the date of their erecting a furnace for making salt on the land. But a right is reserved to the said White &C. after making the experiment, to abandon the purchase, or to elect to pay the money and take the land; or, without paying any thing for the land, to admit the Hardins into partnership, and become joint owners of the land and salt works, and joint contributors to the future expenses of the business. The experiment to be made before the first day of January, 1826.

On the 25th day of May, 1824, White &c. by their attorney, notified the Hardins that they elected to take a conveyance of the land on the terms of the agreement of December, 1820: whereby they became bound to pay the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, in five equal annual instalments, with interest from that date.

After all of the instalments had become due, and there had been some fruitless negotiation between the parties, in regard to alleged difficulties in the title, judg[143]*143ment was obtained against White, for so much of the purchase money as remained unpaid, with interest thereon, amounting in all to upwards .of three thousand dollars. To enjoin which, the present bill was filed, in 1832, by White and Wilkerson, against Mark Hardin, the representatives of Martin D. Hardin, then deceased, and the heirs of James Hare, then also dead — alleging want of title in the vendors, as to the whole or a part of the land, and praying for a conveyance, so far as the vendors have right, and a rescission as to the residue.

Land held under a settlement and county court certificate; the state price not being paid, the register sells the land: query, as to the effect, if the party whose right was sold was dead. He being alive, the purchaser became owner of the certificate, and liable for the future instalments: his death afterwards and before the land was redeemed, could have no effect upon any future sale of the land: his heirs can support no claim to it. Allegation that the land was sold when there was nothing due the state for it—not supported by proof. An act passed dividing the amount due the state for land into instalments; a receipt for a ‘first instalment’ dated after the act passed, is no evidence of the payment of any instalment for which the land had been previously sold.

The ability of the Hardins to convey, according to their contract, is questioned on two grounds: the first o: which is, that notwithstanding their purchases at the sales for non-payment of the state price, and the grant of the land to them by patent, the heirs of James Hare, or others claiming under them, are entitled in equity to at least two thirds of the land; and those heirs set up claim accordingly, in their answer and cross bill. On this branch of the subject it is alleged.

First—that James Hare was dead before any of the sales for the state price, and therefore the sale of his right was void. But the fact alleged is denied; and it is not proved that Hare died before the first sale. To whatever effect his death before the first sale, might have been entitled — and this it is not necessary to decide— it seems to us that, as by that sale, supposing it to have been valid, the purchaser stood as the proprietor of the certificate, and liable for the state price, the death of the original proprietor occurring between that and any sub-sequent sale, while the land was unredeemed, could have no effect upon the subsequent sale.

Second. It is further alleged that, the second instalment for which the land was first sold, was not due; that the first instalment was paid by Hare himself, as evidenced by the register’s receipt for the first instalment, dated the 14th day of May, 1808; and that a sum more than equal to one instalment had been previously paid by Martin D. Hardin, for Hare, and had not been cred[144]*144ited; and the auditor’s receipt for ten dollars, paid in November, 1805, is referred to, as proving that, at least enough to cover two instalments had been paid before the sale in 1813. But admitting that the receipt of May, 1808, is genuine—which is denied by the answer—still the facts do not authorize the conclusion drawn from them. By the act of December, 1806, for regulating the payment of the debt due to the Commonwealth for lands, so much as was then due or to become due for any tract of land, was directed to be divided into twelve equal annual instalments, to be paid on the 1st day of December in each year, &c. Of course, what had been previously paid, was not to be included in any of these instalments; and the subsequent receipt of 1808, for seven dollars twenty-four cents, paid by Hare, as the first instalment, must be understood to be for the first of the twelve instalments authorized by the act just referred to (as is evident both from its date and amount,) and furnishes no presumption whatever, that the previous payment of ten dollars by Hardin, had not been credited, and deducted from the whole amount originally payable, before the division of the sum remaining due into instalments. Nor does the gross amount of payments, as exhibited in this record, furnish ground for any such presumption. This allegation is, therefore, wholly unsupported.

A, holding a grant of land, on which most of the state price remained due, sells ⅔ of it to B, who agrees to pay

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ky. 141, 5 Dana 141, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-hardin-kyctapp-1837.