177 Ky. 285 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion op the Court by
— Affirming.
The appellant, W. H. Albertson, instituted tliis action against tlie appellee, 'Chicago Veneer Company, claiming to be the owner of certain lands from wHeh. the appellee, as alleged, had cut and appropriated, to its own use, timber trees of the value of more than forty thousand dollars. The ownership of the land by appellant, from which the trees were cut, was denied by the appellee. Thereafter, the appellants, Davidson, Hicks & Green Company, claiming that they were joint owners of the land with the appellant, Albertson, intervened by a petition to he made parties, and they were ordered to he made parties 'plaintiff, and the action prosecuted by all 'the appellants as having a joint interest in the lands. The appellant, Albertson, claimed title under a survey made in the name of John T. Redman and Nathaniel Merideth for two hundred acres of land, survey having been made on January 17, 1857, and a grant thereafter made to John T. Redman for the land. The appellants, Davidson, Hicks & Green Company, claimed an interest in the land as vendees of Albertson. The appellee claimed title to the land under grants to P. W. Hardin between 187’0 and 1873, and bence, the only question to he
under which the .appellants claim title. It is, also, conceded, that the line from 1 to 2, 2 to 3, and 3 to 4, is the correct location of the first three lines of the survey. The controversy arises with regard to the proper length of the fourth line of the patent and the location of the fifth line of the patent. The appellants claim, that as they could not find any survey in the name of Emsley Bertram, at the end of 400 poles, running with the Up-church line from 4 to 6, that line should be extended to 7, a distance of 75 or 80 poles, further, and from figure 7, a new line, not called for in the patent, should be inserted, which is the line from 7 to d, and which is about one and one-quarter miles in length, in order to enable them to reach a tract of land, which was patented in
The cutting of the trees sued for, stood upon the land, which lies to the south of the line from 6 to b, an,d is included in the lands shown upon the diagram by the lines from 6 to 7, 7 to d, cl to e, e to f, f to bb, bb to b, respectively.
At the conclusion of all the evidence in the case the court directed a verdict for the appellee, and from this judgment the appellants have appealed.
Hence, the only question for determination is the correctness of the ruling of the trial judge in ordering a verdict for 'the appellee. The determination of the proper location of the fifth line of the patent was a determination of the entire controversy, and as there was no conflict in the evidence pertaining to the location of the patent, it was the province of the court to determine its location. Bryant v. Strunk, 151 Ky. 97; Ky. Coal & T. Dev. Co. v. Carroll H. W. Co., 154 Ky. 523; Preston Heirs v. Bomar, 2 Bibb 493, and no complaint is made of the court so doing, except the correctness of the ruling.
The fourth line of the patent is described as a line, which runs with Upchurch’s line “S. 8% W. 400 poles to a stake on Emsley Bertram’s line.” The only meaning to be attached to this call is, when taken literally, that running from figure 4, with the Upchurch line for the distance of 400 poles, at that point, the line would reach a line of some survey or tract of land owned or claimed by Emsley Bertram. Following Upchurch’s line, as indicated, however, it appears that the nearest
It is apparent that it is a physical impossibility to run the line called for in the patent and as.described as to course and distance, which could be done by reversing it and running from the letter, b, S. 56 E. 480 poles, to locate it at any point other than a straight line from 6 to b. Instead of this line, however, the appellants propose to extend the fourth line, from the termination of its distance at 6, to 7, a distance of 7'0 odd poles, which, as shown, is not justified, because by such extension the object called for in the patent is not and cannot be reached, and then the line from 7 to d, the exact course of which the evidence does not show, but which is radically different from the course of the fifth line called for in the patent, and is one and one-quarter-miles in length. This is done, it is said, for the purpose of reaching the nearest point to any line of Emsley Bertram, and while the calls in the patent indicate that the line to be run with Emsley Bertram’s line has a course of N. 56 and a length of 480 poles, and terminates at the point b, six lines are inserted into the survey to ■ take its place, the fifth one of which terminates at a distance of about one mile from the .point b, at which the fifth line in the patent shall terminate, and to close the survey it is then necessary to add a line of nearly a mile in length, which is the line from bb to b. This results in
“That in determining boundaries marked comers are the most satisfactory evidence; then natural objects, such as streams, ridges and cliffs; then calls for the lines of other patents, which are of record and susceptible of definite location; then courses, and lastly, distances.”
The foregoing rules, however, have for their prime purpose the ascertainment of the true boundaries of lands and are not designed to be used for the purpose of imposing boundaries, other than the real ones, and the rule that courses and distances must yield to natural objects and established boundary lines, in fixing the boundaries of lands, does not apply, when it is evident that the call for a natural object, or an established boundary line, was made, under the mistaken belief, that it existed at the point, where the surveyor reported it to be, when in fact the natural object and boundary line was not at that point. Bryant v. Strunk, 151 Ky. 97. This exception to the general rule has a peculiar potency, when, as was said in Ralston v. McClurg, 8 Dana 338, “where the purpose is not to ascertain the position of lines and corners once actually ran and established, but to construct a survey by making two ■ lines never run — these lines should be fixed where the surveyor would have made them, if he had run them out. ’ ’ Mercer v. Bates, 4 J. J. M. 334. The fact that there was evidence tending to show that Emsley Bertram, at one time, had a line in the neighborhood of the figure 6, and the line from 6 to b, and which evidence was uncontradicted, is not over
“The original plat is not only admissible as evidence, but it is intrinsically one of the most potent facts which can be adduced, and hence it has often been admitted by the court as always either preponderating or alone conclusive.”
This doctrine is sustained by the principles of the following cases: Patrick v. Spradling, 19 R. 1038; Bell County Land Co. v. Hendrickson, 24 R. 371; Hogg v. Lash, 120 Ky. 419; Daniels v. New Era Land Co., 137 Ky. 535; Bryant v. Strunk, 151 Ky. 97; New Era Land Co. v. Childs, 161 Ky. 588; Brashears v. Joseph, 32 R. 1137. The original plat is potent evidence of the real boundary where there is an absence of other facts in the way of marked lines, natural objects and established boundaries called for. In Baxter v. Evett’s Lessee, supra, it was said:
“In locating a patent the inquiry first is for the demarcations of boundary, natural or artificial, alluded to by the surveyor. If these can be found extant, or if not now existing, can yet be proved to have existed and their locality can be ascertained, these are to govern. The courses and distances specified in a plat and certificate of survey are designed to describe the boundaries as actually run and made by the surveyor, and to assist in preserving the evidence of their local position, to aid in tracing them whilst visible, and in establishing their former position in cases of destruction by time, accident or fraud. As guides for these purposes, the courses and*295 distances named in a plat and certificate of survey are useful. ”
In the instant case, when the facts indicate that the call for the Emsley Bertram line was a mistake, the original plat becomes potent as evidence of the real boundary of the survey, as well as evidence of the mistake made in calling for the Emsley Bertram line. A copy of the original plat is here included.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment be affirmed.