142 Ky. 640 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
This is a suit in ejectment brought by E. K. Dority against his father, H. C. Dority, and the other children of H. C. Dority, to recover a small tract of land on Laurel Branch and the waters of Bear Creek in Whitley County. The jury found for the- plaintiff, and the defendants have appealed.
H. C. Dority, the father, owned and lived upon what is known as the “Abbott Survey” or patent of 250 acres. In 1854 Wait and Hudson patented 9,600 acres of land, which included the Abbott survey within its boundary, but expressly excepted it as being a senior patent. All the land west of the Abbott survey, including the land in controversy, was embraced within the Wait and Hudson patent of 1854. In 1882 H. C. Dority and his two sons, the appellee E. K. Dority and Emanuel Dority, surveyed as vacant land 200 acres on the west side of, and adjoining, the Abbott survey, upon which H. C. Dority then lived. This .survey was made upon .the idea that the 200 acres of vacant land was not embraced within the Wait and Hudson Latent, or within any patent. In 1884 the appellee E. K. Dority settled upon the northern end of this 200-acre tract, built a house thereon, and cleared and cultivated some ten acres of the land. In 1891, the Wait and Hudson 9,600-acre tract having come into the possession of Van Winkle and Chamberlain, and it being apparent that the title of the Doritys to the 200 acres they had surveyed in 1882 was inferior to the Wait and Hudson patent of 1854, E. K. Dority and Van Winkle made the following agreement:
“July 29, 1891.
“In 1882 together with my father, II. C. Dority and my brother Manuel Dority we laid an entry on 200 acres of land on waters of Bear Creek, Whitley Co., Ky. and for said entry a Kentucky' Patent was issued in our names. It now appears to me that said patent is located within and is inferior in law and age to the Wait and Hudson 9,600-acre patent, owned by Chamberlain and VanWinkle, and whereas I have probably built my barn within this 200 acre patent and desire to improve some
“Elisha Dobity,
“John S. VanWinkle.”
The Chamberlain interest in the Wait and Hudson patent was subsequently acquired by Roberta S. Bryant, of Danville, Ky., and on December 11th, 1900, she agreed with E. K. Dority to carry out the contract of July 29th, 1891; whereupon E. K. Dority executed and delivered to her his note, which reads as follows:
“$30.00 Pine Knot, Ky., Dec. 11, 1900.
‘ ‘ One day after date I promise to pay to the order of Roberta S. Bryant of Danville, Ky., Thirty Dollars and no 100 Dollars at Bryant Bros, office, Pine Knot, Ky., being first payment on land this day deeded said Dority by said Bryant, and for the payment of which a lien is retained in said deed. Value received with interest at 6 per cent per annum.
“No.-Due- E. K. Dobity.”
A deed was made by Mrs. Brvant to E. K. Dority in compliance with the contract of July 29th, 1891, but it was never put to record and has not been introduced in this case. The appellants repeatedly called upon E. K. Dority to file said deed for the purpose of showing its terms and as possibly shedding some light upon his title, but appellee has not filed it.
In 1899 Mrs. Bryant sold to H. C. Dority, the father, 145 acres which embraces a part of the land in question in this suit. This 145-acre tract and the adjoining 361-2 acres constitute the southern portion of the tract claimed by appellee. H. C. Dority subsequently gave a part of the 145 acre-tract to his daughter, Mrs. Slaven, and put her in possession thereof. Mrs. Bryant also sold the 36 1-2 acres to Emanuel Dority. H. C. Dority assisted his daughter, Mrs. Slaven, in building a house upon- the part he had given her, and she and her husband had been living upon it about ten years when this suit was brought in October, 1906. It appears, there
Tbe appellee rests bis title solely upon an alleged adverse possession of tbe land for more than fifteen years before tbe action was brought. Be did not show any record title to any portion of this land. There was, however, some parol, testimony tending to snow that be was claiming under what is known, as tbe Beatty and Ingram survey or patent. There is no record evidence, however, that there was ever such a survey made or patent granted. In 1881 the sheriff sold 100 acres, called the Beatty and Ingram tract, to Douglas for $3.61, tbe delinquent State tax for 1879; and,, in 1892 the sheriff of tbe county made a deed for tbe land to “tbe heirs” of Douglas, tbe purchaser, without specifying who tbe heirs were. 'Douglas was tbe father-in-law of E. K. Dor.ity, and E. K. Dority claims that Douglas gave tbe Beatty and Ingram 100-acre tract to bis daughter, who is tbe wife of E. K. Dority. He made her no deed to it, however, and tbis suit is brought in tbe name of E. K. Dority under bis possessory title. So, it can not be claimed that there is any record evidence showing title in E. K. Dority to tbe so-called Beatty and Ingram tract. Whatever title be bas is by possession only.
Subsequently, in about 1904, E. "K. Dority bad a survey made of what be calls tbe Beatty and Ingram tract, and it bas been copied into tbe amended petition in this case as showing the boundary be claims. It is evident, however, that this survey is not made from any record, but that tbe calls are arbitrary, and were made by the surveyor as directed by E. K. Dority. Tbe surveyor bad no deeds, plats, surveys, or other record evidence to go by, and E. K. Dority does not show that tbe calls he used were obtained from any record source, although be made diligent search with that view in end.
It is also contended that E. K. Dority acquiesced in tbe claims of bis sister, Mrs. Slaven, and bis brother, to tbe property now sued for, until after bis father had divided bis. lands among bis children in a way that dis.pleased E. K. Dority; and that be then, for tbe first
Furthermore, it does not appear that E. K. Dority ever had any well-defined boundary or well-marked line to any of this land, except to about twenty acres, which he cleared and fenced, near the northern end of the 200-acre tract, and which in no way interferes with the land on the southern end of the tract, which is now the subject of this action. E. K. Dority never cleared or fenced more than twenty acres of that land. According to his own testimonv the possession of the other part of -the track consisted in Ms cutting from it such timber as he might need for use or for sale. During, at least, ten years of this period, however, Mrs. Slaven and the other Doritys were doing the same thing with the southern end of the tract which they claimed.
The first question that is presented for decision is: "Was there sufficient evidence of adverse possession in E. K. Dority for the statutory period of fifteen years, to warrant the court in submitting his claim to the jury?
The appellants trace their title to the land in controversy back to the Commonwealth; while the appellee rests his claim entirely upon possession. While it is true, the appellee testified that he owned and claimed this ground, which was within a well-defined boundary, it is apparent that he draws a conclusion in so testifying, without explaining what he means by a well-defined boundary. Mere intention, unaccompanied by an actual faking of possession which is hostile and can be seen by the world, will not carry possession beyond the lines indicated by actual visible possession — in this case the land cleared and enclosed. (Taylor v. Combs, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 1828.) Where one claims under color of title and is in actual possession of á part of the land within his boundary, the law, by construction, carries his possession to the full extent of his boundary; but, where he' claims title by adverse possession only, he acquires no. title to any land except that which is in his actual
“Except as to a small part (some 10 or 12 acres) of the land sued for which appellee testified to having fenced in and held and used, lie showed no possession which would ripen into a title by the expiration of the statutory period. In 1890 he says that his father-in-law, Tom Meadors, put him in possession of a house on the Creek-more survey which the latter owned, and told him he could have it and the surrounding iand, consisting of certain fields. He understood his father-in-law to make him a present of the land. The Creekmore survey was conterminous to the land in question, the public road, however, running between the two tracks. The posses-sion which Meadors gave to his son-in-iaw is thus described by appellee himself: After having stated that his father-in-law gave him the land in controversy which he did not now own, and a part of his own land, he was asked this question: ‘What did Tom Meadors say about this land in question? A. He just waved his hand up that way, and said I could have all that land. Q. Did he give you this land? A. Tes, sir; that is what I understood him. Q. What did you do, if anvthing, toward taking possession of the land or improving it? A. In the spring of 1890 I fenced úp ten to twelve acres of it, and cleared a half or three-quarters of an acre.’ The witness does afterwards say that he claimed all of the land to a well-defined boundary, but showed on cross-examination that he knew nothing of the lines, and more especially showed that he did not know whether the lines of the tract were marked or not. * * * The property was rough, uninclosed mountain land; and, while appellee shows that he occasionally cut timber and tan bark, and committed other occasional acts of trespass, he had no sort of actual occupancy except of the ten or twelve acres he says he inclosed.”
“We have never held that a mere trespasser could obtain a possessory title unless he claimed to a well-marked or well-defined boundary. His possession must be such as gives the world, and especially those in interest, notice of the extent of his claim; and then, if the owner stands by and allows the trespasser to occupy and claim his property for the full term of fifteen years; he loses it, and the trespasser, under the statute, obtains title to the extent of his possession. The appellee had no such possession as is necessary to the acquisition of title by prescription, and what he did upon appellant’s land, according to his own testimony, did not give notice of his adverse holding, except to the few acres he inclosed. A wrong-doer cannot acquire title to another’s land by occupancy without giving notice for fifteen years of what he is doing and claiming.”
Under the facts as above stated, the court held that Roundtree’s possession was not adverse beyond the few acres which he had actually cleared and cultivated. The same result must follow here. We think this rule of law is both applicable and controlling to the facts of this case.
E. K. Dority is not claiming under any title of record. He obtained a deed from Mrs. Bryant to the 100 acres which he now occupies, and the parol evidence in connection with his contract wuh Van Winkle and the note subsequently given thereunder to Mrs. Bryant, slows that he obtained only the sm-Puce rivht to the 100 acres of land which he now occupye, and which does not over-lap the land in controversy. But he does not even rely upon that title; he rests simply upon his possession. We are of opinion that he did not make out such a case of possession that warranted the court in submitting his claim to the jury. His actual, adverse possession,. as above defined, was limited to the twenty acres which he had fenced and cultivated on the northern end of the tract, and which in no way touched, or interfered with, the 145-acre tract, or the 361-2 acre tract to the south of him and which is now in controversy here. 'When his father bought the 145 acres from Mrs. Bryant in
, "We are of opinion that the circuit judge should have sustained appellants' motion for a peremptory instruction to find for them, and that the judgment in favor of appellee should be reversed. It is so ordered, with instructions to take further proceedings consistent with this opinion.