135 Ky. 94 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the court By
Affirming.
R. Boyd, Sr., instituted this action against appellants, Nathan Buchanan and others, to recover two tracts of land lying in Whitley county, Ky. Appellants filed an answer pleading that they were in possession of the first tract named in the petition, but were not in possession of the second tract. They denied plaintiff’s title to the first tract and pleaded title in themselves. Thereafter R. Boyd, Sr., filed a reply denying the affirmative allegations of the answer. Subsequently, and without objection on behalf of the appellants, plaintiff amended his reply and set forth the sources of his title. He pleaded: That the tracts of land described in the petition were conveyed to him on August 14, 1889, by Juda Leforce and Lee Leforce. That Juda Leforce was then the widow of D. H. Leforce, who had theretofore died intestate in Whitley county, Ky. That Lee Leforce, the other
Thereafter appellants, Nathan Buchanan and others, filed a rejoinder to plaintiff’s reply, wherein they pleaded: That in 1881 they instituted an action against D. H. Leforce to recover judgment for many hundred dollars; that said action remained on the docket of the Whitley circuit court until the death of I). H. Leforce, which occurred on the 3d day of May, 1887; that after the death of D. H. Leforce, and within six mouths thereof, said action against D. H. Le-force was revived against Lee Leforce, his only child and heir at law, and the administrator of said D. IT. Leforce; that said action was thereafter transferred to the equity side of the court’s docket, and an amended petition filed, by which it was sought to settle' the estate of D. IT. Leforce and to sell his land for the purpose of paying their debt; that the plaintiff in this action failed to cause his deed to be recorded in the clerk’s, office of the Whitley county court, or failed to have it indexed in the index of records of deeds in said clerk’s office; and that appellants had no knowledge of the existence of said deed, and said deed was not in fact recorded in the clerk’s office of
It is further charged: That plaintiff was judge of the Whitley circuit court in which such action was pending from January, 1886, until January, 1893, and had notice of the pendency of said action; that plaintiff took title to said land subject to the rights and liens of appellants and all other creditors of D. H. Leforce. Plaintiff filed a demurrer to the foregoing rejoinder, which was sustained by the court. Appellants then declined to amend their rejoinder or other-' wise plead further. Judgment was then entered in favor of plaintiff. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted. Robert Boyd, Sr., died after the rendition of the foregoing judgment, and the case has been revived against his heirs.
It will be observed that the rejoinder admits that the amended petition, by which the appellants sought to subject D. IT. Leforce’s land to the payment of his debts, was not filed within six months after the death of said Leforce. Moreover, the rejoinder does not deny that appellants had notice of the fact that R. Boyd, Sr., had actually purchased the land in question from the widow and heir at law of D. PL Leforce. Tlie question, then, arises: Did appellants acquire a good title to the property in question by their purchase under such circumstances?
But it is insisted: That the petition, answer, and reply made an issue as to the ownership of the land; that the subsequent pleadings, consisting of the amended reply and rejoinder, in which R. Boyd, Sr., and appellants set forth their respective titles, were mere surplusage, and the court erred in determining the controversy by those pleadings instead of trying the case upon the issues which had been completed by the petition, answer, and reply. In support of this position, it is insisted that appellants might, under the general issue, have shown adverse possession for the statutory period. As appellants’ however,claimed title only from the time of the execution of the deed to them in the year 1894, and as this action was instituted in the year 1904, it is manifest that adverse possession can play no part in this case. Moreover, even though the filing of the amended reply and re joinder was unnecessary, yet where each of these pleadings was filed without objection, and the parties elected to set forth their respective titles, and it is apparent from the pleadings that appellants have no title, they cannot now complain because the court decided the issue which was presented in such pleadings without objection upon their part.
But it is argued that the amended reply was filed for the purpose of preventing the case from going to the jury. That may be true; but it is perfectly manifest that, with the question of adverse possession eliminated, the only other question in the case was . one of law. Under these circumstances, substantial justice does not require that this case be reversed and remanded for a trial by jury upon an issue which it