20 Ky. 61 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1826
Opinion of the court by
This was an ejectment brought in the circuit court by Cockrell, to recover the possession of one hundred and fifty acres of land, which was patented to him, in virtue of a survey made under a Kentucky land office treasury warrant.
M’Quinn, who was the tenant in possession of the land, appeared in court, caused himself to be made defendant, and pleaded the general issue. A jury was called to try the issue, and after being instructed by the court upon points of law made by the parties, found a verdict for M’Quinn;. and judgment was thereupon rendered against Cockrell.
The main question that appears to have been controverted in the court below, and the only one worthy of notice by us, relates to the boundary of the land described in a patent which issued from the Commonwealth of Virginia, to James Reynolds, for one hundred and twenty six thousand one hundred and forty acres of land, upon a survey bearing date the 18th of July, 1784.
That patent was read in evidence to the jury, by M’Quinn, and describes the land to lie on the left hand fork of the north fork of Kentucky, and bounded as follows, to wit: “Beginning fifteen miles from the mouth of said fork, when reduced to a straight line at a seall beech, marked with the letter R. E. B. standing near the edge of said fork,
The court then, on the motion of M’Quinn, instructed the jury “that the calls in the patent, “thence from the fourth course down the river these several courses,” should be construed by the jury as a call to run down the river, binding thereon with its meanders, to the beginning, and that the fourth boundary line of Reynolds’ survey was the said north fork of Kentucky.”
The question, therefore, which it becomes necessary for us to consider, involves the correctness of these instructions.
It should be remarked, that no attempt was made on the trial, to prove any marked lines or any course between the fourth corner on the north fork,
If, in the first branch of the instructions, the court was correct in supposing that the call in the patent to run down the river these several courses, &c. should be construed as a call to run with the river, it was unquestionably correct to instruct the jury that the north fork between the fourth corner of the patent and the beginning, formed part of the
The judgment must, therefore, be affirmed with cost.