89 Ky. 9 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action in ejectment was instituted by the appellee to recover certain land in the possession of the
We see nothing in the amended petition giving the chancellor the right to determine the question of title over the objection of the appellant. The question involved was one of title, boundary and possession, and the right of entry on land- previously patented. The junior patentee might hold to the extent of his actual inclosure, if the holding had been adverse for the stat utory period, or without an actual inclosure if there had been no possession by or under the elder patent. This is a plain case for an ejectment, and has no business in a court of equity without the consent of the parties. The appellee claims under the McNew patent, dated on the 22d of February, 1850, on a survey made in the year 1848. The patent is for 1,248 acres of land, the boundary being definitely set forth by courses and distances, excluding therefrom a number of acres contained in prior grants. The prior grants are one to John Gerhart for 30 acres, dated in February, 1834, and one to the same person, dated in. March, 1837, for
There are two patents junior in date to the McNew patent, one to a man by the name of Justice, dated in May, 1852, and the other to the defendant, dated in September, 1871. These patents, the proof conduces to show, lie within the McNew patent. There is no claim by the appellee of his right to recover any of the land held under the elder grants; but the controversy is with the junior patentees, and the question of fact arising between these conflicting claims we will not consider, as the case must go back for another trial. The exclusions or elder grants within the boundary of the McNew patent, under which the appellee claims, are not identified or mentioned in the patent to McNew-; neither described by boundary or by the name of the patentee or grantee. The McNew patent proceeds to define the specific boundaries of the patent, as much so as the courses and distances in an ordinary deed, the number of acres as being 1,248, and excluding therefrom the number of acres contained in prior grants, and that number is 210i acres, as the survey shows. It is insisted by the appellant that the patent to McNew is void for uncertainty, and that no action can be maintained as against the junior patentees for that reason. If in every patent that contains exclusions it .is necessary to describe the grant excluded, or to so identify it, either as to the number of acres, the boundary, or by giving the name of the grantee or the patentee of
We perceive no reason why such a grant should be held void, or the party under such a patent denied the right of showing title in himself to all but the exclusions contained in the grant. The burden is on the plaintiff in such a case to show that he is outside of the excluded territory, and not encroaching on the elder grant that he concedes, by the patent under which he claims, to be superior to his. If McNew had made the survey as accurate and as specific, or even much less so than his patent shows, without mentioning any elder grant as being within his boundary, it will not be pretended that his patent would be void. The law would then exclude from his patent that which was paramount in title, and that which he has, in this case, excluded by the terms of his grant. If he had brought his ejectment, with the exclusion mentioned in the patent erased entirely from its provisions, the law would have said to him that' he acquired no right to the elder possession or grant, because it was paramount to his; and the fact that he mentions prior grants in his patent without identifying them, can have no greater effect in weakening his title. If the elder grants are excluded, he recovers, as a matter of right, the balance of the land within his boundary. The principle recognized in the case of. Hamilton v. Fugett, 81 Ky., 336, has been misconceived or misunderstood, because, in the discussion of that case, this court said there were exclusions within the boundary of the Amyx patent that had not been
In Hillman v. Hurley, 82 Ky., 626, the patentee was asserting title to 4,000 acres of land out of a patent of 9,551. The grant was so indefinite and uncertain, both as to the boundary of the patent and the exclusion, as to render it impossible to locate the land; still, it is insisted by counsel, that motives of public policy must have influenced the decision in Hamilton v. Fugett, as if no patent could be held void or a recovery denied, although there is no certainty as to its extent, boundary or the exclusions contained in it. In other words, that a patent for all the land in Bell county, not otherwise appropriated, must be held as
In this case the exterior boundary is well defined, and its effect is to give the appellee the unappropri
It seems to us the judgment in this case is too indefinite. It gives to the appellee all the land, except a small inclosure, including the elder grants, when he is not claiming the exclusions. While the court ought not to adjudge that these lands belong to the defendant, they ought not to be given the plaintiff, or the defendant ousted from them at the instance of the plaintiff, if they are in the possession of any of the excluded territory. It is not necessary, however, to enlarge on this branch of the case, as it must go back for a trial at law, for the reason it has no place in a court of equity, unless by consent of the parties.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.