109 Ky. 595 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Opinion op the court by
The original suit out of which this litigation grew was begun by C. W. Short in a proceeding against A. A. Arthur to enforce a vendor’s lien on a large tract of land situated in Bell county, Ky. Arthur answered, disclaiming any personal interest, and alleged that he purchased the land as agent of the appellant, the American Association, Limited, and asked that it be made a party. He also alleged that Innis and his wife, appellees here, claimed title to a part of the Short land; and he made his answer a cross petition against them, and asked that they be required to set up their claim and interplead with Short, and that the conflicting claims between them be settled.
1. Should appellees be denied relief because thej did not come into court with clean 'hands? The allegation of the answer of the association which raises this issue is as follows: “The several patents set up in the cross petition, numbering 46,342 — 46,403, seriatim and inclusive, issued to said Innis, are all of them and each of them fraudulent and void, issued without any warrant of law whatever. That said Innis fraudulently procured his name to be stricken from the surveyor’s book in each of said surveys, and the name of some fictitious person to be substituted therefor; and afterwards said Innis fraudulently procured transfers to be made of said surveys in the name of and purporting to be by said fictitious persons to said Innis, and procured said patents claimed by him and Jannie Innis herein to be issued to him as assignee of said fictitious persons.” In support of this allegation of fraud it is shown that the surveys were originally made in the name of Edward Innis, and the names of other persons substituted. It is also proven by divers citizens of Bell eounty that they were not acquainted with, and never, heard of. these substituted names. It also appears from the evidence of persons employed in the land office that the signatures to the assignments on the back of the certificates that were filed in the land office in forty-nine out of
“Any person who wishes to -appropriate any vacant or unappropriated lands may, on applioation to the county court of the county in which the same lies, and paying therefor such price as the court may allow, not less than five dollars per hundred acres, obtain an order of the court authorizing him to enter and survey any number of acres of such land in the county, not more than two hundred.
“The party obtaining such order may, by entry in the surveyor’s book of the county describing the same, appropriate the quantity of land called for in one or more parcels as he may think proper; but no one person shall, under this chapter, enter, survey or cause to be patented, more than two hundred acres of land in any one county.
“Such survey must be made within six months from and after the date of entry.
“A plat and certificate of survey must be made out by the surveyor and recorded in his books, and the original thereof, and a copy of the order of the court under which it was made, must be deposited in the register’s office within six months after the survey is made.
“A patent may be issued on the survey within three months after a 'plat and certificate thereof, and a copy of the order, are filed in the register’s office.
“When a survey has been carried into grant the register shall write across the face of the order on which the survey was made, ‘Satisfied,’ and sign his name thereto.
“The legal title to-the land shall bear date from the time of making the survey.
“One year from the time this revision takes effect is allowed for returning all surveys theretofore made; but if the survey was made six months before the same was deposited with the register the title shall take effect from the date of the patent.
“None but vacant land shall be subject to appropriation under this chapter. Every entry, survey or patent made or entered under this chapter, shall be void, so far as it embraces lands previously entered, surveyed or patented.
“The register shall receive plats and certificates of sur
“No land shall be subject to appropriation under this chapter that lias reverted to the Commonwealth by escheat, or has been defeated for an omission to list the same for taxation, or failing to pay taxes thereon, or which has been once patented, and the title to the same has in any way become vested in the Commonwealth.”
The maxim, “One who comes into equity must come with clean hands/’ is as old as courts of equity, and is the ex. pression of the elementary and fundamental conception of equity jurisprudence; and, although not the source of any distinctive doctrines, it furnishes a most important and even universal rule, affecting the entire administration of equity jurisprudence as a system of remedies and remedial rights. Tt is based upon conscience and good faith. See Pom. Eq. Jur. section 398. “Broad as the principle is in its operation, it must still be taken with reasonable limitations. It does not apply to every unconscionable ¡act or inequitable conduct on the part of a plaintiff. The maxim, considered as a general rule controlling the administration of equitable relief in particular controversies, is confined to misconduct in regard to, or at all events connected with, the matter in litigation, so that it in some measure affects the equitable relations subsisting between the two parties, and arising out of the transaction. When a court of equity is applied to for relief, it will not go outside of the subject-matter of the controversy, and make its interference to depend upon the character and conduct of the moving party in any way affecting the equitable right which he asserts- against the defendant, or the relief which he demands.” See Id., sec
Another point relied on, is that appellees could not acquire title by merely surveying a base line, and then platting the entries upon this line. This is not a new suggestion. The identical question was raised and construed in the case of Cain v. Flynn, 4 Dana, 499. It was held that
It is next contended that both the statutory and equitable rule of pleading require that a plaintiff in a suit to quiet title must show possession to entitle him to any relief, and that a court of equity can, not give, affirmative relief to a party whose title has been obtained by fraud. The soundness of these legal propositions can not be denied, but it does not seem to us that they apply to the facts of this case. Appellees' did not come into court seeking affirmative relief. They were brought in by appellants over their protest. Appellants alleged that they were in. possession of and held1 legal title to the land in contest, and asked the court to so adjudge, making appellees defendants, and calling upon them to set up their title and claim for adjudication by the court1; and they were finally forced to do so. There was no motion on the part of appellants to strike out any part of their cross bill, or limit the range of the investigation. The whole case had been prepared by both sides at great labor and expense; and the chancellor, having acquired jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter of the contest, can not be ousted of such jurisdiction by the voluntary dismissal of appellant’s cross bill against appellees, after such jurisdiction had fairly attached, on the eve of the submission of the case upon its merits. We are unable to distinguish this- case from Harris v. Smith, 2 Dana, 11. In that case Judge Underwood, for the court, said: “A party not in possession can not maintain an original bill to quiet his title- or compel the relinquishment of an adverse claim. But where one in possession brings his bill against those from whom he derives title, and makes others from whose claims he- apprehends danger, defendants,, requiring them to inter-
The judgment of the chancellor sustaining the title of appellees to the four tracts of land which were claimed by appellants under patents which were junior in date to those of appellees, but under surveys and entries which were senior in date to those under which appellees claimed, presents a more serious question. The statute provides viz.: “That none but vacant land shall be subject to appropriation under this chapter; that every entry, survey or patent made or issued under this' chapter shall be void so fa.r as it embraces land previously entered, surveyed or patented.” There was some apparent conflict in the opinions of this court construing this section of the statute. And in the case of Gibson v. Board (Ky.) (43 S. W., 684), all of the opinions of the court theretofore delivered were considered, and the conclusion reached that the doctrine announced in McMillan’s Heirs v. Hutchenson, 4 Bush, 613; Kirk v. Williamson, 82 Ky., 161; Goosling v.
Admitting the conclusions reached by the court in these cases, the distinguished counsel for ¡appellees calls our attention to the following subsection of section 4704 of the Kentucky Statutes, which for the first time took effect on December 1, 1873. It is as follows: “One year from the time this revision takes effect is allowed for the return of surveys theretofore made; but if the survey was made six months before the same was deposited with the treasurer, the title shall take effect from the date of the patent.” And he claims that in none of the cases heretofore considered by this court was the question suggested by this amendment to the statute raised or decided; that, as all of the entries under which appellants claim were prior in time to the taking effect of this amendment, and as they were not returned within one year from the daté thereof, the rights which had accrued under such previous entries a.nd surveys were lost, and the title only took effect from the díate of the patent, which, being junior in point of time to the patents of appellees, conferred no title. In response to this contention it may be said that the following subsection to the same section provides, viz.: “That the register may receive plats and certificates of survey after the expiration of the time herein allowed for the return of the same, but in such cases the legal title shall take effect only from the date of the patent.” There is no repeal of the subsection which declares that every junior entry, survey or patent of lands previously entered1 •surveyed or patented is void. Taking all of the sections