Withers v. Thompson

20 Ky. 323, 4 T.B. Mon. 323, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 9, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ky. 323 (Withers v. Thompson) 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
Withers v. Thompson, 20 Ky. 323, 4 T.B. Mon. 323, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 25 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Chief Justice Bibb

delivered the Opinion of tho Court.

William Mitchel, and his wife, Polly, sole child and heiress of Patrick Doran, deceased, and the heirs of Andrew Godshall and Anthony Thompson, exhibited their bill against Thomas Withers and others, the heirs of James Withers, and Jere. Buckley, to have a division and conveyance of one-third of two tracts of laud, the one for 600 acres, the, other for 200 acres, located by said Doran, the [324]*324ancestor of Polly, under an agreement between Doran, James Withers and George Withers.

Doran’s covenant to lonatic land for Withers. Allegations of the bill.

On the 24th April, 1780, that covenant was signed and sealed by the three parties — but it is in its provisions, a separate undertaking on the part of Doran to locate for James Withers 2,400 acres of land warrants, and a separate undertaking to locate warrants for 500 acres, for George Withers. The locations undertaken for James are involved in this controversy.

By the agreement, Doran was to have one-third of the land located — the owner of the warrants to take one-third, first choice, Doran to have one-third, second choice, the other third to remain for the owner of the warrants: each party to be "at the proportionable expense, agreeable to the land they hold.”

The bill charges, that two of the warrants put into Doran’s hands by James, issued to himself, the one for 200 acres, and the other for 600 acres, (which are now in controversy.) and that the other two warrants put into his hands by said James, issue.d to Thomas Withers, the father of said James, for 804 acres each; that all these warrants were located by Doran; and that he has complied with his part of the agreement. That the grants for the 200 acres, and the 600 acres issued to said James Withers; that one of the locations made of 804 acres, in the name of said Thomas, was withdrawn without the privity or consent of Doran, from the waters of Little Benson, where he had located it, and by the authority of said Withers, located on the waters of Green river; the other location of 804 acres, in the name of said Thomas Withers, has been carried into Grant and sold — and that Doran has never received any part of those two locations; that Doran, by an instrument of writing, now lost, assigned his interest to Andrew Gudshall, now deceased; that said Gudshall, on the 25th October, 1811, assigned bis interest to the co-complainant, Thompson; that the 200 acres located, surveyed and patented to Withers by the services of Doran, have been transferred to Buckley with full notice of the [325]*325claim of complainants; that the title to the 600 acres, located surveyed and patented to Withers, by the services of Doran, is in the heirs of Withers; that one of the heirs, Thomas Withers, has possession of the whole of that tract, by purchase from his co-heirs. The bill then refers to certain suits which had been long depending, and then depending; but by the decrees rendered in pursurance of the mandate of the Court of Appeals, one against Young, the other against Steele, the rights are settled, although the execution of those decrees remains to he done — -and by subsequent supplemental bills, the. final decisions of those suits are stated, and that the defendants, the heirs of Withers have succeeded — the pendency of these suits, and the repeated assurances of the defendant, Thomas Withers, that as soon as those suits were ended the complainant, Thompson, should have his part, are charged as the reasons for not having proceeded sooner in demanding their part — but that, since the succesful termination of the suits was ascertained, the defendants have refused to fulfil their agreement.

Prayer of the bill. Answer of Withers’ heirs.

The prayer is for a division and allotment of the locator’s part of each survey of 200 acres, and of 600 acres; but if, for any reason, the title of Buckley or any other under him, should obstruct such a decree, as to that tract, then that their claim be wholly satisfied out of the 600 acres.

The answer of the heirs of Withers, admits the contract for locating, and asserts that their ancestor paid Doran, on account of the expenses, one hundred dollars — they admit the location of the 200 and 600 acres, but deny he entered the remaining warrants “for the said James Withers” — “but as they believe, appropriated them to his own use.”— they admit the sale of their chance of the 200 acres for a trifle; they admit the suits referred to for the 600 acres, and a decree of the Court of Appeals against Young for a small part, and an interlocutory decree against Steele and others, for another part — they deny any written agreement between Doran and Gudshall for Doran’s interest, and call for the proof of it — they admit the sale of the other heirs [326]*326the defendant, Thomas Withers, of the 200 and 600 acres: and Thomas Withers says, that finding Andrew Godshall in possession of a part of the 600 tract, he by an agreement of the 11th September, 1809, purchased all his “interest in and to the said land, and possession,” and exhibits that agreement: he stales that the complainant, Thompson, purchased with a full knowledge of the agreement of 1809 — he denies premising Thompson any lands or any thing else, except as stipulated in the agreement of 1809, with Gudshall. which agreement he is ready and willing to perform, as soon as the conditions in said agreement have happened ; that be is prosecuting those suits in the agreement, alluded to with good faith to bring them to a close, and whenever that is done, he is willing to pay said Thompson whatever he maybe, entitled to under that agreement, as the assignee of Gudshall.

Supplemental bills. Decree of the circuit court.

The agreement of i 809, relied on by Thomas Withers, made with Gudshall, witnesseth:

“That the said Gudshall hath this day delivered to the said Withers full, quiet and peaceable possession of the farm whereon he now lives, together with the orchards, houses and the benefits thereof, for and in consideration of receiving fifty acres of land” — “if said Withers shall prove successful in James Withers’ claim” — if not successful, then one hundred dollars — the fifty acres to be taken “on one side or end, except the part now delivered to the said Withers.”

By supplemental hills, the final decision of the, suits of Withers with Steele and with Young, are charged, that they were in favor of the validity of the entry, and had a recovery of land under the entry of James Withers. To these supplemental bills and allegations, the defendants have made no answer.

Buckley, although served with process, has not answered.

Upon hearing, the. court decreed an account to be taken, by commissioners, of the expenses of the suits respecting the lands — the one third assessed [327]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mansell's administrator v. Israel
6 Ky. 510 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1814)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Ky. 323, 4 T.B. Mon. 323, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withers-v-thompson-kyctapp-1827.