132 Ky. 112 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
April 3, 1876, there issued to Louis Harris a patent for 200 acres of land now in Leslie county, on Lick
Patents for vacant land are issued alone upon surveys thereof, made by the county surveyor of the county wher.e the land lies, and upon warrants issued by the county court of that county. The county surveyor is required to actually survey the land, and to make and file with the register of the land office (now the Auditor of State) a certificate of the survey as made by him, and a plot showing the boundary of the land..
■ The certificate and plat of the county surveyor of Harlan county were filed in the land office, upon which this patent was issued. The certificate of the survey contained the identical description given in the patent, except that in the third line, where the patent calls for “north 40 degrees west, 200 poles,” the certificate calls for “north 10 degrees west, 200 poles.” When the patent is run out by its calls it lies in this shape:
It contains less than 71 acres, and does not dose. In fact, its last line is far south of the beginning corner, while the next to the last line passes through the beginning comer and some rods beyond it. The patent lines cannot be made to close if run by its calls. The calls of the surveyor’s certificate do close. They embrace about 175 acres. The shape of the plot when run by the certificate agrees exactly with the plot filed with the certificate. The following map shows the lines of the plot when run by the certificate of survey, being shown in the solid lines, while the
It is evident from the foregoing that an error occurred in the land office in issuing the patent. It was in writing the course of the third call 40, instead of ten. The fact is shown to be that the patentee preempted and there was surveyed for him the land embraced in the lines laid down in the surveyor’s certificate. It is that fact which the patent is intended to carry into effect. It is the entry and survey which appropriated the land; it is the patent which confirms the fact, and undertakes to pass the title of the Commonwealth to the land actually entered and surveyed. If there is.a mistake in the
On November 7, 1889, the patentee sold the land supposed to be covered by this grant to J. C. Chappell, and executed a deed to him, in which the description of the land is in terms exactly like those in the patent. Chappell conveyed to Ashers, and they to appellee. Thereafter on May 10, 1904, the patentee executed a deed to appellant and J. L. Lewis for a boundary of land, which is ascertained to be the remainder of the original grant from the State, as run by the surveyor’s certificate and plat, after deducting from it that part of the land which lies within it, as described by the calls of deed from the patentee to Chappell as run literally. Appellant and Lewis contend that the patent should be construed as corrected by the calls of the surveyor’s certificate and the plat filed by him in the land office, which is right, as we have seen; but they contend that a different rule applies in the construction of the deed from the patentee to Chappell. Just why a different rule should be applied for construing ambiguous language in a patent from that in construing an ambiguous deed is not pointed out, nor are we able to see why it should be so. The purpose of each instrument is the same. It is to convey the title to a particular parcel of land. In construing each the intent of the grantor is sought for, and is to be effectuated if possible. The reason for the rule which is applied in constituting one paper applies with equal force to the other.
When appellant went to buy the residue of the patent boundary from the patentee, the way he discovered, or thought he discovered, there was a residuum, was by correcting the patent calls obviously
We conclude, as the circuit court did, that the deed from the patentee, Harris, to John C. Chappell conveyed all the land covered by the patent, and that appellant and Lewis took nothing by their subsequent deed from the patentee.
Judgment affirmed.