170 Ky. 824 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
On the 27th day of July, 1906, the appellee instituted this suit against appellant in the Pulaski circuit court. The petition averred that the appellee was the owner of a large tract of land, which was described by metes and bounds; that it became the owner of it by a regular chain of title from the Commonwealth of Kentucky; that the Barren Pork Mining & Coal Co. was its vendor; that while thé last named company was the owner of the tract of land, it instituted a suit against the appellant, in which it alleged that the appellant had entered upon the tract of land and unlawfully taken possession and claimed to own one hundred acres of the land, which was described by metes and bounds, and sought in the suit to recover the possession of the one hundred acres of land, and that its title to the land as against appellant and others, who were claiming other portions of it, be quieted; that on the 26th day of April, 1892, the appellant filed an answer, in which the ownership of the land by the Barren Pork Mining & Coal Co. was denied, and alleged that he and those under whom he claimed had had the adverse possession of it for the period of more than fifteen years before the commencement of the action; that a reply was filed to the answer, and the issue formed as to the ownership of the land and the right of the Barren Pork Mining & Coal Co. to recover it; that the cause was submitted for trial at the 'March term of the court, in the year 1894, and the court adjudged that the Barren Pork Mining & Coal Co. recover the land of appellant, except to the extent that the appellant had any enclosure of the lands on the 27th day of January, 1881, and resided thereon, and to the extent of such enclosure, it was adjudged that appellant was entitled to hold same against
Thereafter appellant filed an amended answer, in which he set out a boundary of land which he claimed, and alleged that it included the boundary described in his original answer as being claimed by him. The appel
Proof was taken by the appellee, but none by the appellant. The cause was submitted upon the pleadings and proof, and the court adjudged that the appellee 'was the oWiier and entitled to the possession of all of the land described in its petition, except the fifty acres of which the appellant was adjudged to be the owner, in the suit of the Barren Fork Mining & Coal Co. against him; that the appellee should recover all of the tract of land described in its petition, except the fifty acres owned by' the appellant, and that its title to it be quieted, and That the appellant should be perpetually enjoined from claiming or occupying or taking into his possession or using any portion of the land, except the fifty acres owned by him, to all of which the appellant excepted and has appealed to this court.
The appellant insists that the court was in error in sustaining the demurrer to the second, third, fourth, and fifth paragraphs of his answer as amended. It is gathered from all of the paragraphs of the answer, that the appellant was in possession of the lands, which he now claims and which lie outside of the fifty acres adjudged to him in the suit of the Barren Fork Mining & Coal Co. against him, at the time that' suit was instituted and at the time the judgment was rendered in that case and ever since that time, and for a period, in all, extending back for more than fifteen years before the institution of this suit; that no writ of possession was ever issued against him upon the judgment in that suit, and that since that time he has taken into his possession an additional portion of the boundary claimed by appellee in its petition, in addition to the land that was recovered of him in the suit of the Barren Fork Mining & Coal Co. against him. It is alleged in the petition and is not denied by the appellant, that' the Barren Fork Mining & Coal Co. alleged in its petition when it sued him, that it was the owner of all of the tract of land and that appellant was claiming to be the owner of one hundred acres of it, and that the result of’ that suit was a judgment to the effect, that appellant should hold all of the land which he had enclosed arid was residing upon, on the 27th day of January, 1881, and that the judgment of the court was for the recovery'
' It is a well established rule that the judgment of the court determines gll the questions in issue in the case, and all of the questions which should have been determined therein. The averments of the petition in this case, to the effect, that in the suit of the Barren Fork Mining & Coal Co. against appellant, that it was therein alleged,' that plaintiff, in that suit, owned all of the tract of land, which is described in the petition, and that appellant was only claiming one hundred acres of it, and that the judgment was to the effect, that he was entitled to all of the land of which he had title by adverse possession, the appellant was called upon to then set up an alleged title to any other part of the tract adjoining, other than the one hundred acres, if he had any claim or title thereto, and having failed to do so in that action in the face of the allegation that the plaintiff was the owner of all' of it, it seems that he was concluded by the judgment in that case as to the ownership of any part of the tract of ,land set up and described and claimed by 'the plaintiff except the fifty acres adjudged to be his. The statute of limitations gives title, only, to those who hold adverse - possession of land, claiming same as their own, undisturbed, continuously and peaceably; for as many as fifteen-years, and it could not possibly be said' that a holding has been undisturbed when a suit has been instituted against a party for the possession of.the tract of land and when there has been an issue made as to the ownership between the plaintiff and defendant, and a judgment rendered to the effect, that the defendant has no title to the property and that the plaintiff is entitled to have him evicted. An action at law is the only way provided for the disturbance of one in possession of a tract of land, which he is- holding and claiming. If a judg-> ment of eviction will not stop the running of the statute* of .limitations, it is hard to see what effect the judgment:
It is elementary that a quéstion, which has been judicially determined in a court of competent jurisdiction, is conclusively settled, so far as it relates to the parties to the suit or any persons in privity with them, and it is an estoppel to litigating again in a future action, such question between the parties or their privies in any court. It may be said as true, that the possession, which is necessary to make a deed of conveyance, to a tract of land, void under the statute against champerty, has the same elements as an adverse possession, which is necessary to create title under the statute of limitations, but a possession sufficient under the statute of limitations is,, in many
In the old case of Jones v. Childs, 2 Dana 34, it was expressly held, that the possession of one against whom a judgment in ejectment had been rendered for the possession of his holding, but which judgment had not been executed by the issual of a writ of possession and its execution, did not render void a conveyance of the lands by the owner, who had recovered the judgment authorizing him to evict the one in possession. Hence, the third paragraph of the answer, which relied upon the statute of champerty as a defense, was not sufficient in the light of the undenied allegations of the petition, that the privies of appellee had recovered a judgment against appellant for the lands in controversy, and the same rule, it seems, would estop the appellant from claiming or asserting title
The fourth paragraph of the answer, which alleges that the appellee’s vendor had abandoned its judgment and that by lapse of time it had become ineffective does not state any fact which would indicate an abandonment and it at best is a mere conclusion, which, coupled with the allegation of the staleness of the judgment, seems to be a reliance upon the fact that twelve years had expired without the issual of any writ of possession upon the judgment, and it was therefore stale and ineffective and had been abandoned. Under the statute, however, fifteen years must expire before the judgment becomes stale on account of lapse of time. Hence, there was error in sustaining the demurrer to the answer.
It is true that a suit in equity to quiet title to lands can not be maintained unless the party who instituted it has possession of the lands, as well as the legal title to them. Kincaid v. McGowan, 88 Ky. 91; Campbell v. Dorsey, 93 Ky. 41; Campbell v. Campbell, 23 R. 869; Sheffield v. Day, 28 R. 754. It is impossible to see how the appellant could be prejudiced by the portion of the judgment which quiets the title of appellee to the land in controversy, since the judgment upon the prayer of the petition seeking recovery of the land adjudges that the appellee is the owner of it and entitled to its possession and permits a writ of possession for its recovery in behalf of appellee. It is simply adjudging that appellee is the owner of the land in another set of words than the ones theretofore used.
The petition seeking a recovery of the- lands, properly, ought to have been brought at layr -upon the ordinary side of the, docket, and under section 10, of the Civil Code, if the appellant had any .objection to fits proceeding
Tbe fact that tbe court, also, in its judgment enjoined tbe appellant from using or taking into bis possession any more of appellee’s lands was a matter of which a court of equity bad cognizance, and we see no reason for complaining of that portion of tbe judgment as no objection was made to tbe prosecution of the action, which sought both legal and equitable relief, as an equitable action, to its conclusion. Tbe facts proven in evidence support tbe averments of tbe petition, and tbe proof of the adverse possession by tbe appellant of any part of tbe land recovered from him does not show a possession for such length of time as to establish title in him.
Tbe judgment is therefore affirmed.