Wigginton v. Holbrook

237 S.W. 1063, 193 Ky. 805, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 1063 (Wigginton v. Holbrook) 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
Wigginton v. Holbrook, 237 S.W. 1063, 193 Ky. 805, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 87 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion op the 'Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

About tbe year 1878 appellee, J. D. Holbrook, became the owner of a tract of ninety-two acres of land in Ohio county, on to which he moved and has since resided with his family, up to about the. time of the commencement of this action, when he sold what remained of the tract to appellant Wigginton for $3,100.00. Appellant Wigginton brought this suit against appellee Holbrook and wife to recover for a deficiency of acreage amounting- to more than $7’00.00 at the average price per acre. He basés his action upon the following facts:

In 1895, 'Holbrook sold one Hudson 13% acres from the most southernly part of his ninety-two acre tract, and Hudson took possession of said 13% acres and has since held and claimed the same. His deed was properly recorded in the office of the clerk of the Ohio county court soon after it was delivered to him by Holbrook. At a later period Holbrook sold to F. M. Hoover five acres from the southern end of his tract. At a later period Holbrook sold to said Hoover 5% acres from the southern part of the tract. At another time Holbrook sold to Eobert Holbrook nine acres from tbe southern part of the tract. At another time fourteen acres of the said tract were sold under judgment of the court, and this Is [807]*807now owned by Hoover. All these deeds from Holbrook were properly recorded in the office of the clerk of the Ohio county court before Holbrook sold to Wigginton. A half acre lot for school house purposes was taken from the extreme northern part of the tract. At the time Holbrook sold to Wigginton on September 14, 1918, he pointed out to Wigginton in a general way the outside boundaries of the tract, but in making the deed he neglected to except from the boundary all of the small tracts above mentioned which had been conveyed by Holbrook to other persons. The deed described the tract as conveyed to Holbrook in 1878 and then undertook to except from that boundary the tracts sold by Holbrook to ethers, and in doing so used the following language:

“There is excepted from the above boundary of land the following tracts, which have heretofore been sold and conveyed: A tract sold to F. M. Hoover and bounded as follows:
“Beginning at a stake being the corner of F. M. Hoover’s tract of land bought from the Farmers Tobacco Warehouse Company; thence with Wm. Boils’ line 14 poles to a, comer on Wm. Boils’ line; thence E. 68 poles and 10 links to a large oak stump on the road leading from Harmon’s Ferry road by R. O. Hudson’s; thence with said road S. 9 poles and 6 feet to a stake, being the corner of F. M. Hoover; thence with his line 68 poles and 10 links to the beginning, containing 5 acres.
“Also 5% acres of land sold to F. M. Hoover off the south end of said tract of land and adjoining the five acres above described.
“Also 9 acres sold off the west side of the north end of said tract heretofore sold to Robert Holbrook.
“Also 14 acres, now owned by F. M. Hoover, which were cut off the said tract of land by an order.of the Ohio circuit court, on the south end of said tract.
“Making in all 33% acres which have heretofore been conveyed, and leaving approximately 58% acres which is conveyed by this deed. ’ ’

It will be observed that the 13% acre tract conveyed to Hudson, and the half acre tract occupied by the school, are neither mentioned in the exceptions, and these two tracts are the one's that form the basis of appellant Wigginton’s complaint, for he .says that the tract conveyed to him by Holbrook contains only 43 acres instead of 58% acres as recited in the deed from Holbrook to Wigginton.

[808]*808The following map indicates in a general way the location of the original boundary owned by Holbrook; the dotted lines south of the New Bethel road include the five small parcels sold by Holbrook to Hudson, Hoover and Eobert Holbrook.

[809]*809At the time Holbrook sold to appellant Wigginton he owned and claimed only that part of the land lying north of the New Bethel road, a public highway, to the Hudson road, and with the Hudson road north to the Harmon Ferry road, and with that road to the corner of the lands of E. Wigginton, a brother of appellant; thence south with the Wigginton line to the lands of Boils; thence with the Boils line south to the New Bethel road. 'Appellant Wigginton admits that he was born and reared in the neighborhood of the Holbrook lands and knew the location of each of the roads, as well as the line between the Holbrook lands and that of E. Wigginton and W. L. Boils. He also knew that Hudson claimed and occupied the 13% acre tract sold to him in 1895 by Holbrook, and that Hoover and Robert Holbrook owned, claimed and occupied small portions of the Holbrook farm south of the New Bethel road. In fact appellant Wigginton lived only a short distance from Holbrook, and when Wigginton was a small boy he frequently visited at the Holbrook home and has been acquainted with its location and that of the neighboring farms at all times since. He does not claim that appellee Holbrook made any false or fraudulent representation for the purpose of deceiving or misleading him, and he admits that he understood that the land he was buying lay north of the New Bethel road, and was' bounded by that road on the south, and on the east by the Hudson road and the Harmons Ferry road, and on the north by the Harmons Ferry road, and on the east by the lands of E. Wigginton and W. L. Boils, but he vigorously insists that as appellee Holbrook told him that he had been listing the land as fifty acres, and that he believed it contained fifty acres more or less, and the deed to him recited 58% acres, he did not get all that, he purchased or as many acres as he contracted for, and is entitled to recover for all shortage in acreage at the average rate per acre figured on a basis of $3,100.00 for 58% acres. The lower court denied him this relief, but adjudged him entitled to a rescission of the contract and return of all the purchase money with interest paid by Wigginton to Holbrook if appellant Wigginton desired a rescission, but on Wigginton declining to demand or accept a rescission, the court entered an order dismissing his petition, and from that judgment he appeals to this court.

[810]*810Is appellant Wigginton entitled, as a purchaser, to recover of the vendor, Holbrook, upon the foregoing facts and circumstances, the alleged value of the shortage in acreage?

It is well settled that a vendee of land may have a recovery for a .shortage in acreage if it amount to ten per cent (10%) or more in quantity sold, and this is true whether the sale be in gross or by the acre. The words “more or less” in a deed relieve only from the necessity for exactness, and not from gross deficiency. Nor is this right confined to cases of fraud or mistake, but relief may be had in every case where there is a deficiency of 10’% or more, even though the deficiency result from mistake or ignorance of the parties. Harrison v. Talbott, 2 Dana 266; Smith v. Smith, 4 Bibb 81; Shelby v. Shelby’s Heirs, 2 A. K. Mar. 504; Hall v. Ely, 76 S. W. 48; Boggs v. Bush, 137 Ky. 95; Rust v. Carpenter, 158 Ky. 672, 166 S. W. 180; Gragg v. Levi, et al., 183 Ky. 182.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 1063, 193 Ky. 805, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wigginton-v-holbrook-kyctapp-1922.