166 S.W.2d 1006 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1942
Reversing.
This appeal, granted by the circuit court, was filed as an appearance case for our Winter Term, commencing January 5, 1942, and appeared on the docket for orders on that day. So appellees' brief was due to be filed December 27, 1941. Rule V, Paragraph 4. The clerk reminded counsel, by mail, on June 10th and again on August 21, 1942, that the case had been submitted and no brief had been filed for the appellees. None has ever been filed.
Our rules and practice are quite strict in their application to appellants; thus if an appellant does not file a brief, the appeal will be dismissed. Huff v. Begley,
In Preston's Heirs v. Preston,
We have deemed it sufficient in the present case merely to apply that portion of Rule V, Paragraph 2, reading:
"In the absence of disagreement concerning the facts and pleadings, the court will assume that the appellant's statement thereof is full and correct."
The appellant, M.L. Skaggs, filed this action in ejectment and prayed damages on account of the quarrying of a large and valuable amount of rock asphalt. The plaintiff claimed title and possession by both record and adverse possession. The defendants, C.B. Owen and Stokley Bowling, and the Ohio Valley Rock Asphalt Company as their lessee, also claimed title and possession in the same way and asked that they be adjudged the owners of the land. The plaintiff proved his claim of title back to a deed to a predecessor executed by William Potter, dated January 9, 1895, and that there is no record of any conveyance of this land back of that deed. In the year 1907 he took possession to a marked boundary and exercised dominion over it. In 1916 he moved to Texas and a few years later placed Gillis L. Vincent upon the land under an agreement that he could build a house and live on it until the plaintiff requested him *761 to move, in consideration of Vincent paying the taxes on the land. In 1932 Vincent obtained a quitclaim deed to the property from Sam L. Vincent, and in 1935 undertook to convey it to Isom Kinser, who, in 1939, undertook to convey it to the defendants, Owen and Bowling, who, that same year, leased the property to the Asphalt Company. Plaintiff's title was never disputed until the quitclaim deed of 1932, and he did not learn that anyone was claiming his land until about two years before he filed this suit. At the conclusion of plaintiff's evidence, the court peremptorily instructed the jury to find for the defendants.
The plaintiff in an action in ejectment may establish his rights by proving a connected record title back to the Commonwealth or to a source common to his own and the defendant's claim, or by proving continuous, adverse possession for 15 years. Engle v. Walters,
Judgment reversed.