Wilder v. Lee

200 S.W.2d 153, 304 Ky. 144, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 603
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 28, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 200 S.W.2d 153 (Wilder v. Lee) 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
Wilder v. Lee, 200 S.W.2d 153, 304 Ky. 144, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 603 (Ky. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sims

Reversing.

Appellee, John M. Lee, filed a petition in equity against appellant, Grant Wilder, in the Bell Circuit *145 Court in which he averred that he was the owner in fee and in the actual possession of a tract of land which his pleading described by metes and bounds but did not give the number of acres; that Wilder was claiming the land and Lee asked that his title be quieted against Wilder’s claim. The answer, after traversing the averments of the petition, described a boundary of 150 acres as belonging to Wilder and alleged that the land set out in the petition was included in this 150 acre tract and Wilder asserted paramount title to the tract described in the petition. After- considerable proof was taken by depositions, the chancellor adjudged the title of the land in dispute to be in Lee, and Wilder appeals.

The land in controversy is on Coal Stone Branch of Brownie Creek and Wilder deraigned his title through a patent of 400 acres which William Duff Miracle obtained from the Commonwealth. Before his death William divided his land among his four children, one of whom was Abraham J. Miracle, who received from his father the land now claimed by Wilder. Abraham lived on this tract until July 8, 1920, when he was accidentally killed by falling from a tree. He left no will and was survived by his widow, Emily, and six children.

J. Levitt acquired the interests of Abraham’s six children in his land, subject to the dower of the widow, Emily, and Sarah Turk obtained Levitt’s interest therein by a deed dated Jan. 15, 1923. The widow, Emily, died in August 1933, which gave Sarah Turk complete title to the land, and on Sept. 13, 1933, her Committee, pursuant to the approval of the Bell Circuit Court, conveyed it to Wilder.

Appellee, Lee, claims title through a tax deed executed to him on Oct. 6, 1919, by Bobert L. G-reen, Auditor of the Commonwealth. Also, Lee claims title by adverse possession. He and his brother, Levi, testified that Lee held this land through his tenants, Emily Miracle and her son Grillis, from January 1920 until shortly before beginning this action. It is further insisted by Lee that as he was in possession of the land by his tenant, Gillis Miracle, when Wilder obtained his deed in 1943, the latter took no title because his deed is void under the champerty statute, KBS 372.070.

Lee obtained no title to this land by virtue of the *146 tax deed he received from the Auditor, for the reason that the Auditor’s deed recited that the land it conveyed had been assessed in the name of J. M. Lee, which was an erroneous statement. Furthermore, this tax deed described the land as being in Magisterial District No. 5, when the uncontradicted proof is that it was in the Third Magisterial District. These two errors made the tax deed void and Lee took nothing by virtue of it. Hogue v. Gibson, 162 Ky. 813, 173 S. W. 138; Jones v. Johnson, 223 Ky. 478, 3 S. W. 2d 1064.

The contention of Lee that Wilder accepted a conveyance to this land while Lee was in adverse possession thereof through his tenants, therefore Wilder’s deed is void under the champerty statute, KKS 372.070, is without merit. It is the settled rule in this jurisdiction that the champerty statute does not apply to judicial sales. Noble v. Hubbard, 286 Ky. 100, 149 S. W. 2d 775, and authorities therein cited. But Lee insists that when Sarah Turk conveyed this land to appellant, through her Committee with the approval of the Bell Circuit Court, such was not a judicial sale which took the transaction out of the champerty statute. This question has been decided adversely to appellee’s contention in the recent case of Landers v. Scroggy, 294 Ky. 848, 172 S. W. 2d 557, where it was held that a sale under KS sec. •2150a, now subsection 8 of sec. 489 of the 1946 Pocket Supplement to the- Civil Code of Practice, is a judicial sale. This section is the one under which the sale of Sarah Turk’s land was made when appellant became the purchaser.

This brings us to the question of whether or not Lee has held this land by adverse possession for 15 consecutive years from the time he claims to have taken possession of it in January 1920, following his obtaining a tax deed to it on Oct. 6, 1919.

Appellee, John M. Lee, testified that on Jan. 12, 1920, he entered into a written contract with Gillis Miracle wherein he leased this land to Gillis for $12 a year and that Gillis occupied it as his tenant under this lease until December 1943. That this contract was prepared in John Lee’s home and the signature of Gillis (which was by mark) was witnessed by Lee’s wife. Subsequently, John Lee gave rather contradictory testimony *147 to the effect that he went np to Gillis’ place in January 1920 “and signed up with him.” Levi Lee, a brother of John, testified that the lease with Gillis was made at Gillis ’ home on the property and it was not in the winter time, as John testified, but in the late summer or early fall. Gillis denied that he entered into this lease contract with John.

Both John and Levi testified that Gillis occupied the place continuously and was never off of it after he rented it from John. However, Gillis’ testimony is that upon returning from the army in 1919, he lived with his brother-in-law, Josh Lee, for a year. Then he came back to the home place where he lived with his mother for one year, after which he moved to a house on the back of the ridge for a year where he became involved in a little liquor trouble and went to jail for six months. Upon being released from prison, he again went to live with Josh Lee. Gillis married on Feb. 11, 1932, and he and his wife lived with his mother a short while and then moved to Hillary Wilder’s place where they lived for two months; then they went to the Harrison Cupp’s place for something like nine months. When Gillis’ mother died in August 1933, he and his wife returned to the home place where they lived for about a year and then moved to the Vick Wilder place where he remained for some nine months. He then returned to the home place where he lived until appellant bought it. Various parts of Gillis’ testimony as to his moving from place to place and the time he remained at each are supported by the testimony of his wife; T. J. and Dan Cupp; Josh, Henry and W. G. Lee and Laura Wilder. While Dillard and Leonard Green, and John B. and Amanda Lee add practically no strength to the weak testimony of John M. Lee and his brother, Levi.

Evidently, appellee sensed the frailty of his contention that he held the land through Gillis as a tenant, because he next argues that Gillis ’ mother, Emily, occupied the land as his tenant continuously from 1920 until her death in August 1933, from which latter date Gillis took possession as his tenant. The weakness of this position is that Emily was occupying the land not as tenant of appellee but under her right of dower in the land of her deceased husband, Abraham. But admitting arguendo that she did occupy the land as tenant of Lee from Janu *148 ary 1920 until her death in August 1933, this was only 13 years. And the proof is that Grillis lived on the place only one year after his mother’s death before moving to the Vick Wilder place, where he lived for about nine months before returning to his mother’s home place.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 S.W.2d 153, 304 Ky. 144, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilder-v-lee-kyctapphigh-1947.