127 Ky. 812 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Appellants sued appellee for cutting and converting to his own use 3,000 white oak trees of which they claim to he the owners. Issue was. joined upon the question of ownership, and the case submitted to the court upon an agreed state of facts, whereupon the court found that appellee was the owner of the timber in litigation, and dismissed appellants’ suit. Believing that he erred in so doing, appellants prosecute this appeal.
The facts are as follows: On the, 12th day of October, 1899, Shelby Coffee and others by deed conveyed to D. Hungerford all of the white oak timber above 18 inches in diameter upon about 1,500 acres of land, except 28 board trees, which had at the date of this sale been branded. All of the timber* embraced in this sale was blazed and branded with a branding hammer with the letter “M” thereon, and it was specified that in the} use of thq “M’1 it had been.
For appellants it is insisted that this timber in question, though the purchaser had 10 years within which to remove it, was personalty, and they base this claim upon the opinion of this court in the case of Byassee v. Reese, 4 Metc. 372, 83 Am. Dec, 481, in which it is said: “A sale of standing trees, in contemplation of their immediate separation from the soil by either the vendor or vendee, is a constructive severance of them, and they pass as chattels.” In that case the sale was verbal. The timber was-branded, but no date fixed within which it should be removed, and the court said that this was contemplation of immediate severance. For appellants it is contended that this language, “in contemplation of immediate separation from the soil,” is used to distinguish a sale of standing trees, which passes no interest in the land except a right to enter upon it for the purpose of removing the timber, from a contract conferring the exclusive right to the land for a time for the purpose of making a profit out of the growth of the timber upon it; that the court did not intend by the expression, “hq contemplation of immediate
For appellee it is urged that the parties to the original contract did not treat these trees as personalty, and, as evidences of that fact, they had the writing evidencing the contract of sale prepared and executed in due form as a deed to realty, and that after its execution it was placed on record, as any other deed conveying realty would be. These circumstances tend most strongly to support the contention of appellee. In order to comply with the statutory provisions in every respect, all that would have been necessary would have been to have the deed of sale reduced to writing. The statute does not require that it be recorded. The contemporaneous construction placed upon their contract by the parties, as evi
We come next td a consideration of the second question involved in this litigation, and that is, without regard to the character of the property which these trees assumed, and treating them as either realty or personalty, did any title to this timber pass from Hungerford to Eosengrant, as against appellee, an innocent purchaser for value? The title was in Hungerford, and was of record. The only evidence of the title which Eosengrant had was the indorsement on the back of the deed from Coffee to Hungerford, and this indorsement was never acknowledged or recorded, and there is not the slightest claim that appellee, or Marr and Herbert, from whom he acquired title, had any notice whatever that Eosengrant had purchased or was claiming said property. As above stated, this memorandum on the back of the Coffee deed was sufficient to pass title as between. Hungerford and Eosengrant, as it complied fully with subsection 13-, section 1409, Ky. St. 1903. Prior, however ,to this sale by indorsement on the back of the deed, the trees had been blazed and branded as aforesaid, and in order to protect himself, and give vitality and life to his purchase, Eosengrant should have complied at once with .subsection 14 of section 1409, which is as follows: “Whenever any timber has been branded by the seller or by another with his consent, with thd brand of the! purchaser or other person or corporation, then the title to said
Neither appellee nor those under whom he claims at the date of their purchase had any notice whatever that appellant were claiming title to the property in litigation. They were innocent purchasers for value, and under section 1908, above referred to, are protected in their purchase, even if the contention of appellants is correct, and the timber regarded as personal property. If it is regarded as realty, then appellee is protected in his purchase under section 496 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903, wherein it is provided: -‘No deed or deed of trust or mortgage conveying a legal or equitable title to real or personal estate shall be valid against a purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice thereof, or against creditors, until such deeds shall be acknowledged or proved according to law, and lodged for record.” Appellant Rosengrant does not claim that he ever received a deed from Hungerford to the timber in question, and hence, of course, coxdd not have complied with the provisions, of section 496, above, referred to. So that, considering the trees in question as either realty or personalty, the claim and contention of appellants thereto must fail, in as much as the record clearly .establishes the fact that appellee was an innocent purchaser thereof for value. At the time that appellee and those under whom he claims' made their respective purchases the record evidence showed that the title to this timber was in their immediate grantor. By the record he traces a perfect chain of title back to the original grantors, Coffee and others, whereas appellants trace their title back to Rosengrant, and there is no record evi
Perceiving no error in his ruling, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.