132 Ky. 156 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Tn September, 1898, Juliette C. Sumner filed' suit against J. EL Northup, wherein she sought to recover of him $1,000 damages', the value of certain timber which he had out and removed from land described in her petition as belonging to her. She also' asked that he be enjoined and restrained’ from committing-further trespass upon her land. He answered, traversing every allegation, of the petition, and in a separate paragraph pleaded that he was himself the owner of the land by purchase at execution sale. He alleged that one R. F. Yinson was a necessary party, and his answer was made a cross-petition against him. Yin-son was brought before the court, but made no defense. Thereafter an amended petition was filed, in which plaintiff pleaded that she and those under whom she claimed had been in the peaceable, adverse, open, and notorious possession of the land described in her petition for more than 15 and 30 years, and that by reason of such adverse holding she had acquired title by prescription. She prayed that she be adjudged the owner of the land, and as in her original petition. Plaintiff in her reply traversed the affirmative matter set up in the answer. A rejoinder on •the part of the defendant completed the issue. On motion of the defendant, the ease was transferred from the ordinary to the equity side of the docket, over the objection of the plaintiff. The proof was
In the motion and grounds for a new trial two points were made: First, that the pleadings did not warrant the judgment; and, second, that the evidence is not sufficient to support the judgment.
Plaintiffs claim title through Cornelius M. Pack, who on August 8, 1873, sold and conveyed to William. Sumner, by metes and bounds, courses, and distances, the land described in the pleadings; that William Sumner at once took possession of this land, and held it under his deed until his death; that he left a will, by the terms of which his wife became invested with the title to this same land, and upon her death it passed to the present plaintiffs. In the deed from Cornelius M. Pack to William Sumner, he not only describes the land with particularity, as above indicated, but, in addition thereto, gives a general "de
■The first objection raised by appellant, to wit, that the pleadings did not support the judgment, has no merit in it. This is simply a suit for damages growing out of a trespass to'realty. The petition alleges plaintiff to- be the owner of the land upon which the timber stood; that without right defendant had entered upon this land and cut and removed or destroyed timber to the value of $1,000. Issue was joined upon each material allegation of the petition. In the proof but little attention was paid by appellant to- the question of the value of the timber; it being practically admitted that he had cut a certain amount of timber upon the land in question, and, if it developed that .this land belonged to plaintiff, then he recognized a liability to the extent of the timber so
The only question remaining is: Does the evidence support the finding of the chancellor? A great deal is said by counsel in brief as to what weight shall be given the finding of the chancellor in this case; it being argued on the one side that, this being an action at law, it should not have been transferred to the equity docket, but should have remained on the common-law docket and the questions at issue should have been tried by a jury, but that, inasmuch as it was transferred on motion of appel-' lant to the equity side of the docket, and tried by the chancellor, his finding and judgment is entitled to the same weight as the verdict of a properly instructed jury. For the appellants it is not argued that the case was properly transferred, but that as it was practiced as an equity case it should be treated as such, and the judgment of the court, while entitled to some weight, should not be upheld unless supported' by sufficient evidence, and that this court should consider and judge and determine as to the truth of the matters involved, and necessarily as to the correctness of the conclusion reached by the chancellor. The cause of action set out in the petition is a purely legal one. It alleges that plaintiff is the owner of certain described lands, and that the defendant had unlawfully and wrongfully entered thereon, and committed trespass to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. The petition also alleges that the defendant was threatening to commit other trespasses on the land, and would do so unless prevented by the injunctive process of the court. It
The answer of Northup simply places in issue the questions of ownership, trespass and damage set up in the petition, and pleaded title in himself. It is true this answer said that Vinson was a necessary party, and the court permitted him to be made a party, and the answer made, a cross-petition against, him; and, although' this was done, it in no wise-changed or affected the issue between plaintiff and defendant, and, when the issue was completed, no equitable issue was made by the pleadings. The case-should not have been transferred to the equity docket. It was purely an action for damages, and plaintiff was- entitled to have the questions as to ownership,, trespass, and damage taken up and settled before the question of her right to an injunction was considered.. She could have demanded and had submitted to a jury these questions, of fact; but, as she failed to-d‘o so and the case was practiced throughout as an equity ease, under the authority of McCampbell v. McCampbell, 103 Ky. 745, 46 S. W. 18, 20 Ky. Law
. Plaintiffs show beyond question that Cornelius M. Pack had lived upon the 100-acre patent for many years, certainly for at least 24 years before the sale to William Sumner, and this 100 acres is within the Franklin patent. He had fenced some 30 or 40 acres of it, and exercised such arts of ownership over it that it can hardly be questioned that he had a,enquired a perfect title to this tract. Defendants’ counsel practically admit this to be true; but, as the timber in question was not cut off of this tract, it is insisted that the title to this tract, though perfected in plaintiffs, cannot aid them in their claim to- title to the remainder of the 925 acres. Having settled upon the 100 acres., Pack set about to have surveyed
Two propositions are clearly established by the evidence in this case: First, that Cornelius M. Pack had been in the actual possession of a part, if not all, of the land involved in this litigation for more than 15 years before he conveyed it to Sumner in 1873; and, second, that at the time of its conveyance hie was in the actual possession of all the land which he conveyed, claiming same to a fixed and well-established boundary. In the case of Cates v. Loftus’ Heirs, 4 T. B. Monroe 439, this court declared that, where one takes title to unoccupied land adjacent to that upon which he lives and in which he claims the fee, his possession by operation of law extends to the
Applying the principle announced and recognized •in the foregoing authorities to the case at bar, we find that-as soon as Cornelius M. Pack acquired a patent or deed to the tracts of land adjoining his original 100-aere patent, upon which he lived, and in
Defendant introduced some witnesses who say that as his tenants they took possession of some land in 1881 for him, but it is not clear from their testimony whether or not they ever attempted to take possession of the land involved in this litigation. Nor has defendant shown that he had any right to this land. If it was a part of any of the exclusions referred to in his deed, then he had no right to possession. As he did not know what, if any land, he bought, or if he bought any land, under his purchase, where it was located, we are unable to see how it can with hope of success be claimed that his agents ever took possession of his land or land to which he was rightfully
The judgment is therefore affirmed.