Whiting's Heirs v. Taylor's Heirs

38 Ky. 403, 8 Dana 403, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 59
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 9, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 Ky. 403 (Whiting's Heirs v. Taylor'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
Whiting's Heirs v. Taylor's Heirs, 38 Ky. 403, 8 Dana 403, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 59 (Ky. Ct. App. 1839).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This bill was filed, in September, 1832, by the heirs of Thomas Whiting, against William Taylor and others claiming under him, to obtain a relinquishment of the possession and title of and in two tracts of land; the one of one thousand acres, granted to John Thruston, on the 10th of December, 1785, and the other of five hundred acres, granted to John Thruston, as trustee of Charles Minn Thruston, on the 4th of December, 1785.

The complainants allege and prove that, the title under these two patents having been vested by descent in John L. Thruston, he conveyed the same, in 1795, to their ancestor, Thomas Whiting, who in the same year departed this life, leaving some of them infants, and all of them then and still non-residents of the State of Kentucky. They further allege, in substance, that, within a few years thereafter, the defendant, William Taylor, residing near the said lands, assumed, either voluntarily or at the request of some of their friends or connections, the agency and control - thereof, for them; that, in the exercise of such agency, he placed tenants on the land, to open and improve and hold it for them; that he received, from such tenants, the rent of the land for many years, amounting to a large sum, and held it in possession for them, for many years, purchasing for their benefit, one or more interfering titles, until, at length, intending to defraud them of their land, he converted his friendly possession into a hostile one, fraudulently covered the land with Kentucky treasury warrants, which he caused to be patented to himself; claimed it as his own, and refused to deliver the possession to them. That, in consequence of this, they employed one George W. Kinney, as their agent, to commence and prosecute for them the necessary suit or suits for [404]*404the recovery of the land; that, in 1821, their agent commenced an action of ejectment, in their names, for the land embracedin the patent for 1000 acres, in which Taylor was a defendant, and that a judgment having been recovered by them, in said action, and the same having been reversed by the Court of Appeals, for some error, and remanded for a new trial, Taylor gave their agent, Kinney, a large sum of money, ($500,) not to proceed with said action, and to suffer a nonsuit, which he, for said sum, agreed to do, and actually did do; and that, knowing that the complainants were residents of the State of Virginia, and being largely their debtor, for rents received, as their agent, as aforesaid, Taylor caused the execution against them for the costs of the reversal 'in the Court of Appeals, amounting only to forty nine or fifty dollars, to bé levied on the said 1000 acres, which they allége to have been worth twenty thousand-dollars, and purchased the whole of it for the amount of the execution. They further allege that, they did not know that Taylor had bought up their agent, or their land, until the time for redeeming the land according to law had expired; but that John P. .Thatcher, a friend of theirs, tendered the money necessary for-a redemption of the land, immediately after the sale. *

Answer of Taylor, originally the principal defendant.

On the ground of the alleged ágency of Taylor in regard to the land, and. a trust arising therefrom, and also on the ground of fraud in his purchase of the tract of one thousand acres under the execution for costs, and in his buying up their agent Kinney, and thus procuring his abandonment of their ..suit- and their interest, of all which they charge the other defendants with notice before they acquired any interest under Taylor, they pray for a surrender of the possession, a relinquishment of all the claims which Taylor has acquired on the land, an account of rents &c., and for general relief.

Taylor denies, in his answer, that he ever acted, or was employed, or assumed to .act, as agent or trustee for the complainants, or any person under whom they claim, in regard to the said land. He denies that he ever took possession of it, or put others in possession of it for them, or that he ever leased it.out as their'land, or in [405]*405their names, or for them, or that he ever received the rents of any part of it for them. He alleges that he took possession of it in the year 1807, for the first time, and that he then took possession for himself, under a purchase of William May’s patent of 1000 acres, issued on the 2d day of December, 1785, which he purchased for himself; that he, also, purchased for himself, the interference of James Knox’s patent, dated in April, 1796, with the land now claimed by the complainants, and that, wdthout any view to defraud the complainants, but for the purpose of avoiding the expense and trouble of establishing the lines and corners of some of his own claims in the neighborhood, and of taking up some vacant land which was supposed to lie between them, he located two Kentucky Treasury warrants, and had them patented to himself, in 1816 and 1821; which, together with the other claims acquired as above, cover the whole of the land in controversy. He further alleges that, not knowing the exact position of the two tracts claimed by the complainants, and fearing that they might interfere with his claims aforesaid, he acquired from M. Hardin, the benefit of his purchase of both tracts for taxes, under the laws of the Congress of the United States, and obtained a deed therefor, from the Collector for the State of Kentucky; and for the same reasons, and also as the means of reimbursing his costs in reversing the judgment in ejectment, obtained against him, as above stated, he had caused the execution for said costs to be levied on the tract of 1000 acres, and, being the highest bidder, became the purchaser. He denies fraud in each and all of these transactions, and especially in the purchase under execution, which he alleges to have been fair and legal; and he denies that there was ever any tender of money for the redemption of said land by Thatcher or any one else. “He denies that there was any such corrupt agreement between him and G. W. Kinney, as is alleged in the bill.” But says that he had been much harrassed by Kinney, who represented himself as the agent of Whiting’s heirs in prosecuting the ejectment suit, and, to buy his peace, as well he might, he did give him some claims on other individuals, [406]*406amounting to between four and five hundred dollars; for which Kinney agreed never to intermeddle, as agent or otherwise, to stir up pretended claims with which to harrass the respondent, as he was threatening to do, and was getting other agencies, and harrassing the respondent with other pretended claims.

Answers of other defts. New parties admitted as co-complainants. — Taylor’s death, and revival of the suit against his representatives. Exhibits — including the record of an ejectment, in which the complainants got judg’t for 1000 aeres — the largest of the two tracts now in eontrover sy, against Taylor ;who reversed the judg’t & sold their title — at an enormous sacrifice — under his ex’on for the costs, and purchased ithimself —the eject, then stillpending: after which, it was abandoned by col lusion of the de- * Pltfs’-

[406]*406He exhibits the evidences of his various titles as claimed in his answer, and relies upon them all, as a complete protection against the claim of the complainants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Ky. 403, 8 Dana 403, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitings-heirs-v-taylors-heirs-kyctapp-1839.