Altemus v. Nickell

115 Ky. 506 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903

Opinion op the court ry

JUDGE O’REAR

Apeiriong.

Wm. H. Nickell was the patentee of a boundary of 34,800 acres of land in Letcher county. The patent was issued after other patents for smaller tracts had. been granted by the State, covering in part the same land. To the extent of the laps of the elder and junior grants, the latter, by statutory enactment and judicial interpretation, were void, and passed no sort of right to the junior patentee. Gen. St., c. 109, section 3, now section 4704, Ky. St. 1899; Hartley v. Hartley, 3 Metc., 56; Goosling v. Smith, 90 Ky., 157, 11 R., 991, 13 S. W., 437. Wm. H. Nickell attempted to convey to Altemus and Jones the whole of the 34,800 *509acres, without excluding the previously patented land within the boundary. Among the elder grants embraced in Nickell’s patent was one then owned by G. W. Caudill, who was then in possession of his land — so the petition says. Thereafter Nickell acquired title from Caudill to. the oil, mineral, coal, gas and mineral products within the Caudill boundary, and took deed therefor. He has sold and conveyed the title so acquired to appellee. This suit is by the vendees of Nickell’s first grantees, Altemus and Jones, against his last grantee, appellee, to quiet their title to the oils, gas, minerals, etc., contained within the Caudill tract, upon the theory that Nickell’s after-acquired title inured to their benefit, as warrantees under his deed.

Conceding the correctness of the general proposition that one who conveys, with warranty, land to which he has not the title, and afterwards acquires the title, will be held estopped to claim it as against his warrantee, and that it inures, by the fact of his conveyance and warranty, to his grantee, we come to consider whether the doctrine can be applied in this case. Gaudill being in the adverse possession of the tract claimed by him at the time Nickell conveyed to Altemus and Jones, that conveyance, so far as the tract in Caudill’s possession was concerned, was in violation of the champerty statute of this State. Section 210, Ky. St., 1899, re-enacting section 2, c. 11, Gen. St., in force when the conveyance under consideration was made, reads, in part: “All sales or conveyances, including those made under execution, of any lands, or of any pretended right or title to the Same, of which any other person at the time of the sale, contract or conveyance, has adverse possession, shall be null and void.” And section 216 (chapter 11, section 8, Gen. St.) reads: “Neither party to any contract made in violation of the provisions of this chapter shall *510have any right of action or suit thereon.” This statute, without material alteration, has been in force in this State since 1824. The same policy had prevailed previous thereto, and, indeed, had come to us from our mother Commonwealth. This settled policy was one in behalf of the public. Its aim was “to protect bona fide occupants of land against vexatious litigation growing out of champertous contracts which tend to generate suits that otherwise in many cases would never have occurred. So far as the parties to such contracts may alone be concerned, it is not a matter of public concern whether their contracts be valid or invalid, legal or illegal. Neither their interests nor their rights were considered by the Legislature. The peace of society and the repose of occupants were alone consulted” by the statute. Cardwell v. Sprigg’s Heirs, 7 Dana, 38. Not only are the sale and the conveyance prohibited and declared to be void, but the further prohibition is added that neither party to that transaction “shall have any right of action or suit thereon.” The vice of the act is guarded against by making it absolutely ineffectual for every and any purpose.

The basis of the doctrine that after-acquired title attaches for the benefit of the vendee of one who has conveyed with warranty, but without title, is the warranty. In very ancient times, before the system of passing title by bargain and sale came into use, it was upon the implied warranty. But running through the treaties on the subject, it will be observed that a warranty must have existed in fact, or be supplied as a fiction, to support the reasoning by which the passing of title by estoppel was maintained. It must have been such warranty as runs with the land, and must have been attached to, and have been a part of, the deed of conveyance. Bigelow, Estoppel, 386 et s-sq.

*511If, then, the deed containing the warranty is void, every part of it must be ineffectual. To allow that the parties to a transaction prohibited as vicious might do by indirection and circumlocution that which they could not do directly, would be to bring a reproach upon the administration of the law. In the well-considered case of Graves v. Leathers, 17 B. Mon., 665 (opinion by Simpson, J.), it was observed .that, “.under the construction which has uniformly been given to the statute by this court, such deeds have been regarded as void, not only so far as the occupant of the land was concerned, but also as between the vendor and vendee.” The deed being void so far as the land embraced therein, but then in the adverse possession of others, was concerned, its warranting clause was equally nugatory with its granting clause. It was ineffectual to pass title, then or thereafter. Vitality could not be imparted to it by the fraud of one of the parties, more than by his honest intentions. If the grantor was free to ignore his champertous deed, and to repossess himself of the property, even as against his vendee (Crowley v. Vaughan, 11 Bush, 517; Cardwell v. Sprigg’s Heirs, supra), he certainly could acquire from a stranger, and hold, a perfect title, without regard to his own previous void deed.

It follows that the judgment of the circuit court, being in accord with these views, must be affirmed.