Wickliffe v. Ensor

48 Ky. 253, 9 B. Mon. 253, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 29, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 Ky. 253 (Wickliffe v. Ensor) 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
Wickliffe v. Ensor, 48 Ky. 253, 9 B. Mon. 253, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 62 (Ky. Ct. App. 1848).

Opinion

Judge Bkeck

delivered the opinion of the Court. — Judge Simpson did not sit in this case.

This writ of error is prosecuted to reverse a judgment rendered in favor of Ensor, &c., defendants in an action of ejectment brought against them by WicklifFe and others.

The plaintiff deduced title under a patent to John Six and John Cockey Owings, and adduced testimony [254]*254conducing to prove that it embraced the land sought to be recovered. The patent bears date February, 1793,'

An agreement that notice serv. ed on one of the parties where no specific mode is pointed out, is sufficiently answered by service in the legal mode.

The land in contest was also covered in part, by a. grant to John Craig of Bottetourt county and John Craig of Fayette county, dated August, 1793-; and in part by a grant to Jacob Myers, dated in 1789. The- defendants claimed under these grants, and that their possession and that of those under whom they claimed, constituted a bar to the plaintiff’s- recovery, not only under the seven but the twenty years’ statute of limitations,

As to the fraction covered by the grant to Myers, there seems really to be no controversy, there being no proof of any possession or entry except under that grant. The contest, therefore, is limited to the land common to the two grants of Six and Owings and the Craigs, and so far as the merits of the case are concerned, turns upon the time when possession was taken under these grants respectively, its continuity, duration and locality. But before we advert further to the facts, we will dispose of objections made on the-part of the plaintiff, to portions of the testimony read and adduced upon the trial by the defendants.

1st. It is contended, that the Court erred in not excluding the depositions of Tobin, Sexton and Ingram.

The record in reference to the exceptions taken to the depositions, is very confused, and evidently imperfect, resulting probably from the fact, that the bill of exceptions was not made out till a subsequent term of the Court after the trial, and when the Judge who presided at the trial was not upon the bench.

The first notice which we find in the record, of these depositions, or any objection to them, was after the plaintiff had closed his testimony, and when they were about to be read by the defendants in evidence to the jury. It may be inferred from what the record states as occurring at that time, that objections had been previously made to them, but when, or upon what ground, does not satisfactorily appear. But even conceding that exceptions had been taken at the proper time, and upon the grounds now relied on, still we are of opinion they were properly overruled.

Exceptions to depositions should be specific, not general.

It is contended that the leaving a copy of the notice with the wife of the lessor, Suddeth, in his absence, and explaining it to her, was not sufficient service of the notice upon him under the agreement of the parties, that notice might be served upon him, and should be good as to all the lessors. The objection is clearly unavailable. The agreement does not require any particular mode of serving notice upon him. It only contemplated that the service should be legal, and as is well settled, the leaving a copy with the wife at the residence of the husband and in his absence, and explaining it to her, is a legal service of the notice upon him.

2d, It is objected that the defendants had not been summoned, and that it was not satisfactorily shown that they were unable to attend Court. This objection is deemed equally untenable. Their own testimony, if there had been no other, clearly proves that it would have been unreasonable, in view of their age, infirmities and distance from the place of trial, ■ to have required, or expected their personal appearance in Court.

But when the depositions were about to be read, the plaintiff again objected, and moved the Court to exclude them, upon the ground that they contained irrelevant and incompetent matter, and if the Court would not exclude them entirely, to purge them of all such incompetent and illegal testimony. As no exception was taken to any particular portion of these three long depositions, the motion might well, under the circumstances, have been overruled. But the Court excluded a portion of one of them, and overruled the motion as to the residue of that, and as to the other two.

It is now insisted that other parts of the depositions were illegal, and should have been also excluded. But in view of the time when this motion was made, and that this was the first evidence offered by the defendants, we think the Court was right in overruling it. At that stage of the proceedings, the Court could not determine what bearing seemingly objectionable portions of the depositions might have upon the case when taken in connection with other facts and circumstances [256]*256that might be proved. A motion at the proper time, to exclude or to instruct the jury to disregard portions of them, if in view of all the evidence deemed incompetent, would have been the proper mode of effecting the object.

The exception by the plaintiff to the interrogatory propounded by the defendáis to their witness, Chiles, we think, should have been sustained; but as the record does not show that- the interrogatory was answered by the witness, the plaintiff sustained no injury' by overruling his exception, -and the error is therefore unavailable.

The remaining questions arise upon the giving and refusing instructions to the jury. And in order to determine whether in that respect there was any error to the prejudice of the plaintiff, it will be necessary to advert -more particularly to the facts.

The testimony on the part af the plaintiff, in addition to the facts before stated, conduced to prove an entry and possession by one Mclntire under Six and Owings, as early as 1801, but outside the interference with •Craig’s claim. And that this possession was continued, with occasional intervals, till 1822. From that time till about 1835, no person resided upon the claim of Six and 'Owings, under them. The cabbins which had been built upon it, rotted down, and in the small improvement in the way of clearing, which had been made, grew up with brush and sapplings.

In 1835, the lessor, Wickliffe, claiming under Six and Owings, put a tenant upon the land, who made an improvement outside of Craig, and who -occasionally took wood and timber from the lap.

That at that time no one resided upon the interference under Craig, except a man by the name of Bashan, who claimed as a purchaser, one hundred acres, by a marked boundary, and who had extended his improvements, nnd enclosed about ten acres outside of his boundary. That some five or six years before the commencement of this suit, the defendant, Ensor, who resided under Banks, upon the adjoining claim of Myers, extended -his improvement within the interference.

[257]*257The 'testimony of the defendants conduced to -prove, 'that-in 1799 or 1800, there was a small cabin or shanty ¡upon the interference, ‘and that it was rented by a man by the name«df Findley, who resided upon the adjoining tract of Myers, and held under that claim, and also under Craig. That when-at this cabin or shanty, Findleyclaimed.it, and the possession .under Craig, of théirpatent boundary.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Ky. 253, 9 B. Mon. 253, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickliffe-v-ensor-kyctapp-1848.