172 Ky. 222 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Tbe title to two small, but evidently valuable, tracts of land? in Knox county is involved in this record of 1256 pages, and the vital issue is about the proper location of the beginning corner and the first two calls in the deed dated September 13, 1871, from Tarlton Lunsford to Richard Ricketts, which are described as follows:
“Beginning on a chestnut oak standing on a cliff; thence with said Lunsford’s outside line to two chestnuts; thence with same to a large poplar.”
Appellees contend that a marked chestnut oak snag on a high cliff near the top of the mountain, and near a line of John Alford’s 200-acre patent, is the beginning comer described in the Ricketts deed, and that the Alford patent line is the Lunsford outside boundary line referred to in that deed. Appellants contend that a fallen chestnut oak near the edge of a small cliff and near a line of a, 377-acre patent issued to Lunsford on ?Deeember 14, 1865, is the beginning comer described in the Ricketts deed, and that the Lunsford outside line referred to in that deed is the outside line of this 377-aere patent. The two chestnut oak trees claimed by the parties to be the beginning corner of the Ricketts deed are about forty poles apart, and the land in controversy is of triangular shape and inclosed upon the east by a line connecting these two chestnut oak trees, upon the northwest by the Alford patent line and upon the southwest by the Lunsford 377-acre patent lines, the lines, of these two patents converging at a point between the two chestnuts, the second corner, and the poplar, the third comer in the Ricketts land. Both of these chestnut oak trees claimed to be the beginning corner in the Ricketts deed are marked as corner trees, and both of them can
Lunsford owned at the time a large body of mountain land. A 200-acre patent issued to him April 27, 1854, not only covered the land in controversy but overlapped the Alford patent which was the senior patent of the two, and the Alford line rather than the 377-acre patent line was the outside boundary line of the lands to which Lunsford had title, and it would .seem clear that the chestnut oak snag and the lines as claimed by appellee were the beginning corner and first two lines described in the Ricketts deed, but this seemingly simple proposition is, to say the least, involved in some doubt by the fact that a short time before the -deed was made by Lunsford to Ricketts, he had his land surveyed and marked by proeessioners, and in so doing followed the outside lines of the 377-acre patent rather than the outside line of his 200-acre patent, and if the processioners’ line is taken as his outside line, the deed to Ricketts did not include the land in controversy, and the fallen chestnut oak contended for by appellant, as the beginning corner, is more probably the correct corner.
It seems strange upon the one hand that Lunsford would have permitted the proeessioners to run as his outside boundary line the lines of the 377-acre patent, when under his 200-acre patent of older date, he had title to the land in controversy not- covered by the 377-acre patent, but possibly covered by a junior patent to Elihu Cox, and it is equally as strange that if he meant this proeessioners’ line to be his outside boundary line that he did not refer to that line as such in the deed to Ricketts and in a deed' to Elihu Nelson for the land adjoining, made upon the same date, and within less than a month after the proeessioners’ line had been run.
The report of the proeessioners was. filed and recorded in the county court clerk’s office, but it was not signed and attested by Lunsford or any of the parties owning adjoining land, as the statute then in force required should be done before it would be binding upon any of the parties. Since therefore it was not binding
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed. .