Shaw v. Robinson

111 Ky. 715 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901

Opinion op the court by

JUDGE GUFFY

Reversing.

This action was instituted by the appellants in theGrayson circuit court against the appellees. It was substantially alleged in the petition that the plaintiffs were the owners and in possession of a tract of land, describing the same, and that defendant did on divers days during the year 1897 unlawfully and forcibly enter upon said land, and cut and destroy valuable oak and other timber trees. *718thereon, to the damages of plaintiffs in the sum of $200. The answer of defendants is a denial of the ownership and possession of plaintiffs of any part of the land described in the petition. Defendants also denied haying unlawfully or forcibly entered upon said land. The second paragraph of the answer alleged that defendant Robinson was the oiwner and in possession of a certain tract of land in said county, describing same; that his boundary of land embraces about 75 acres of land described in plaintiffs’ petition, but, if so, he is the owner of same, and plaintiffs have no title to same; that defendant and those under whom he claims hare been in continuous, peaceable, adverse possession of said land, residing upon it, and claiming it as their own, to a well-defined' boundary, for more than 30 years next before the commencement of this action; and he pleads the statute of limitations. It is further alleged that, on the 24th of July, 1888, all of said boundary of land was conveyed to him by deed, and that the same was, on the 22d day of February, 1892, recorded in the county clerk’s office; that the said Warren Purcell had a good and sufficient title of record to about 100 acres of said land lying on the north side thereof, but the balance thereof he claimed by possession as heretofore stated. He is unable to give the boundaries of these two tracts of land separately. The reply is a traverse of the' material averments of the answer. It is admitted that the boundary claimed ■ by defendants may contain a part of plaintiffs’ land, but it is denied that defendants are the owners thereof. At the conclusion of the testimony defendants demurred to the evidence and moved the court to dismiss the action on all the evidence, to which the plaintiffs objected, but the' court sustained the motion and dismissed plaintiffs’ action and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted. The evidence for the plaintiffs tends to show that the land in *719controversy had always been claimed by the plaintiffs ■and those under whom they claimed; that it is part of a 1,000 acre tract patented to Thomas Shaw in connection with one Hines; that plaintiffs never paid any taxes on the land, nor cut any timber off of it; that plaintiffs knew that Warren Purcell was claiming the land during his lifetime, and that he sold it to defendants. A patent to Thomas Shaw and Andrew Hines issued by the Commonwealth of Virginia was also read in the evidence. The patent was in consideration of a land office treasury warrant No. 13,098, issued the 3d day of February, 1783. The patent bears date 1st of June, 1787. The surveyor of Grayson county testified that he was acquainted with the 1,000-acre patent boundary; had surveyed all the lines, and that it is a well-defined survey of land; that the land in controversy is within this patent boundary, and it is also covered by the patent survey of Thomas Hines; that there is-a lap of the two surveys, and this lap embraces the land in dispute between the parties in this, action; that the defendant does not reside within the lap, or on the land in. controversy, but resides on an adjoining tract; that the old dwelling house of Warren Purcell was not on the land in controversy; during the lifetime of Warren Purcell six or seven acres of land covered by said lap were cleared and fenced, and have been in the possession of Warren Purcell and defendant Robinson for more than 15 years. Witness heard this land always spoken of as the Shaw land.. He also found that a line, well defined and plainly marked, had been run through the center of the 1,000 acres patented to Shaw and Hines. The line was a very old one. Hines -sold the land on the north side of this-line, while the lands on the south were claimed by the Shaws. The land in controversy lies on the south, side of said line. There are about sixty acres in dispute.

*720S. T. Shaw, witness for the plaintiffs, testified to the cutting- of a large number of trees which had injured the land considerably. The timber cut was white oak, and very valuable. He said he and J. O. Hall then owned the land; that they had bought it'from plaintiffs, and had a writing evidencing the purchase. Thinks the land worth $250 or $300. The defendant, Robinson, testified, in substance, that in 1888 or 1889 he purchased 250 acres of land of said Purcell at the price of $2,000, which was conveyed to him by deed; that the land in controversy is embraced in said deed, and that he had been claiming- it as his own ever since he purchased it; that “Warren Purcell, for many years before his death, claimed the land in controversy to a marked line, which I have often seen, and he cut some timber on it ten or fifteen years ago. He had no deed to the land in controversy; that is, to the land covered by the lap of the two patents. His dwelling house was not on this lap, nor is my dwelling house on it. While Purcell owned the lands which I bought of him he cleared six or seven acres on the corner of the land covered by the lap of the two surveys, and fenced it, and it has been in his possession and mine for more than fifteen years. I do not know how long Purcell had claimed the land covered by the lap of said surveys to said marked line, but my best judgment is that it was twenty years or more before he died. He paid taxes on all the lands he sold to me. The old dwelling house built by Purcell was not on the one hundred acre tract for which he h'ad a deed, and neither is my dwelling house. Purcell built on the land which he took up and claimed by possession, and 1 built on the same tract a short distance from the old house. My deed was recorded in the' Grayson county clerk’s office 22d of February, 1892, and 1 have been claiming the lands therein conveyed by possession to a well-defined boundary ever *721since, and have resided on the land all the time.” The deed from Purcell to Robinson was next read in evidence. The defendants then offered in evidence a patent from the Commonwealth of Virginia to Thomas Hines issued in consideration of a land office warrant No. 15,520, issued April 10, 1783. The patent bears the date July 10, 1786. The report of the surveyor was also read in evidence. E. T. and W. A. Kimble, J. A. Butler, W. A. Craig, J. M. Pryor, ,'and Sarah ‘Lahue, were introduced for the defendants, whose testimony tended to show that Purcell claimed the 150-acre tract, and exercised ownership over it, to a well-defined marked line for 25 or 30 years before his death.

It seems to be the contention of appellees that section ■251 of the Constitution bars appellants’ cause of action. It is intimated in the brief that the court below was of the opinion that the section aforesaid was a bar to this action, and for that reason dismissed plaintiffs’ petition. It is the contention of appellants that this action, being for trespass and injury to the land, it does not come within the provision of said section. Appellees’ contention is that the section of the Constitution is a bar to this action; that it is a bar to the suit for possession or recovery of the land; and that it necessarily follows that, if plaintiffs’ right to recover the land has ceased, they can not recover for trespass or the cutting and carrying away of any timber therefrom. It seems to us that, if plaintiffs’ right to recover possession of the land from the person in the •actual possession thereof becomes barred or extinguished, his right to recover for a trespass upon the land is also extinguished or barred. It seems to us unreasonable to say that a party can not recover possession of land from a person holding the same, and yet be entitled to recover for the cutting of timber therefrom. A party must either *722be in the actual possession of land or be the real owner thereof before he can maintain an action for trespass upon such land. It will be seen from the evidence in this case that defendant has no paper title to the land in dispute except the deed from Purcell, and it is perfectly manifest that Purcell never had any paper title at all. His right, if any he acquired, was by actual possession to a well defined marked boundary, and it is evident from defendant’s testimony that Purcell had not any possession of the land in controversy more than six or seven years, if at all, before his sale to defendant. Section 251 of the Constitution reads as follows: “No action shall be maintained for possession of,any lands lying within this State, where it is necessary for the claimant to rely for his recovery on any grant or patent issued by the Commonwealth of Virginia, or by the Commonwealth of Kentucky, prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and twenty, against any person claiming such lands by possession to a well-defined boundary, under a title of record, unless such action shall be instituted within five years after this Constitution shall go into effect or within five years after the occupant may take possession; but nothing herein shall be construed to affect any right, title or interest in lands acquired by virtue of adverse possession under the laws of this Commonwealth.” It will be seen from the section, supra, that a person can not be protected by said section unless he is claiming the land 'by possession to a well-defined boundary under a title of record. The contention upon the one side is that the deed front Purcell to the defendant comes within the provisions of the Constitution. In other words, that it is a title of record. On the other hand, it is contended that the word “record,” as used in the1 Constitution and statutes in regard to land titles, means a patent *723from the Commonwealth. This court, in Fairbairn v. Means, 61 Ky., 323, in discussing the statutes in' regard to occupying claimants, seems to have defined or settled the meaning of a title of record. The statute under consideration reads: “If any person, believing himself the owner, by reason of a claim, in law or equity, the foundation of which being of public record, hath, or shall hereafter, peaceably seat and improve any land, but which land shall, upon judicial investigation be decided to belong to another, the value of the improvements shall be paid by the successful party to the occupant,” etc. Revised Statutes, c., 70, section 1. The court, in discussing that statute, said: “The belief referred to in the statute is a belief which may be judicially ascertained, and which, therefore, must -be founded upon the fact that the occupant holds a title granted by the Commonwealth. Of course, he need not show that he has a valid title.” The court further said: “He must so believe by reason of a claim in law or equity, the foundation of which is of public record. The foundation referred to by the statute is a grant from the Commonwealth. Clay v. Miller, 4 Bibb, 461; Lewis’ Heirs v. Singleton’s Heirs, 2 A. K. Marsh., 214. The claimant must, therefore, show that he believed himself to be the owner of the land by reason of a. claim founded* upon a grant from the Commonwealth. In order to do so, he must necessarily connect himself with the grant by showing that he held the title which it granted. If seems to us that the manifest meaning and intention of! section 251, supra, was to protect persons in possession of land for which he or his vendors held a patent from the Commonwealth, and that the words “title of record,” used in the section, me'an a patent or title from the Commonwealth. We do not believe that the framers of the Constitution *724intended that any party except the holder of a patent or the vendee, either immediate or remote, of a patentee, should avail himself of the provisions of the section, supra. In other words, we hold that the term “title of record,” as used, means title derived from the Commonwealth. It results from the foregoing that the section, supra, has no application to the case at bar. Section 2377 of the! Kentucky ■Statutes is relied on by the appellees. The section reads' as follows: “That no action shall ,be maintained for the possession or recovery of any lands lying within this State, where the claimant relied alone for the recovery or possession of said lands on any grant or patent issued by the Commonwealth of Virginia or the Commonwealth of Kentucky prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and twenty, against any person claiming such land by possession to a well-defined boundary under a title of record, unless said claimant has actually paid or caused to be paid the State and local taxes assessed against said land for at least twenty years next preceding the bringing of said action.” This statute is evidently unconstitutional, for the reason, among other things, that it in effect forfeits or destroys the title to real estate simply for the non-payment of taxes; and,- not only this, but makes it*a forfeiture in effect in all cases unless the party-had for the past 20 years paid the taxes, etc. So far as the 20 years preceding enactment of the 'section is concerned, it would be retroactive or ex post facto, and for that reason alone is clearly unconstitutional. But we do not think the act is in any respect valid. It seems to us an attempt upon the part of the Legislature to divest the party of a title already acquired without due process of law., The statute, however, if valid, could not affect the case at bar, for it nowhere appears that any tax had ever 'been as*725sessed against the land in question ;> and, besides, this defendant has no title of record within the meaning of the statute. If it can be shown that defendant and those under whom he claimed had been in the continued, peaceable, adverse possession of a tract of land to a well defined marked boundary for 15 years before the institution of this suit, the same would be a good defense, unless the plaintiffs can show themselves entitled to some of. the exceptions or saving clauses of the statute of limitations. These questions are, however, questions of fact, to be submitted under proper instructions to the jury. The fact that plaintiffs had sold the land in contest -after the acts complained of, can not have the effect of defeating this, action. For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial upon principles consistent with this opinion.

Whole court sitting.

Judge O’Rear dissents.
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