189 Ky. 529 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Alleging it was the owner of and in possession of a-described tract of land appellee, Kentucky Union Company, by its petition in this case sought to enjoin appellants from the commission of certain trespasses thereon.
In tbe judgment appealed from tbe prayer of tbe petition was granted, tbe petition and counterclaim of Henry-Duff and other appellants to be made parties was dismissed, as likewise tbe petition of appellants, Charles P Morse, and others.
By separate appeals the unsuccessful parties are seeking’ a reversal of said judgment.
Tbe land in controversy covers an area of 903 acres on Lick branch of tbe North fork of Kentucky river.
Colonel Edward Strong acquired by deed of July 27, 1829, from. Henry Duff, title to 500 acres, more or less, on tbe North fork of Kentucky river, “to include all tbe land fit for cultivation on said branch. ’ ’ Tbe tract lying’ on tbe east side of Lick branch is not in controversy.
Colonel Strong bad a g-ood possessory title to this boundary'and lived thereon until bis death in 1869. Prior to bis death Colonel Strong claimed title to tbe land .in dispute, that west of Lick branch. This right, however, was. questioned by others, as appears from two agreements between Breck and South on the one part and Edward Strong on the other, one bearing date May 25,. 1860, tbe second-undated and in which first parties dismiss a pending suit in ejectment against Strong, leaving Strong and Barnett .to settle tbe matter of the latter’s improvements. Barnett resided on tbe land until 1864 or 1865, when be moved, but not until they bad bad litigation over tbe matter.
The colonel bad tenants on tbe Lick branch property. These are generally referred to as the “Coles- and Barnetts,” but as to tbe latter it is apparent the senior Barnett was claiming the land during his occupancy of same. As to the other tenants it is not clear' whether they resided on the land in controversy or not.. Tbe proof does not disclose that character of claim -or possession on the part of appellants sufficient under the statute to establish a title by adverse possession.
.During the Civil War, William Strong,, a son of Colonel Strong, was claiming the land and he forcibly removed Cole and Barnett therefrom. This was before his father’s death. There is evidence of a lease from Edward Strong to Elizabeth Cole, dated March 3,1865, of a tract of land on Lick branch.
In 1882 Captain Strong and his wife conveyed to James M. Thomas, agent, a total of 1,738 acres on Lick branch, reference being’ made to the deed from Wilson to Duff in 1828 and from' Duff to Edward Strong in 1829. By successive conveyance the Kentucky Union Company is claiming title to the land and the Kentucky River Hardwood Company to the timber.
Two periods of possession are relied upon by appellees, viz.: (a) from 1874 to 1891, during the actual possession by Captain Strong and his grantees, and (b) from 1894 to 1912, when the present suit was instituted.
As -appellants have in the main devoted their brief to a discussion, of the latter period and since the conclusión we have reached in regard thereto is decisive of the appeal we will consider only the second of the two expanses of time.
There are two main forks of Lick branch, the Right or Road fork and the Left fork from which the Wolf Pen and Cane Patch forks branch. Little and Big Rattlesnake branches are tributaries of the latter. At least two houses
The principal event in this record, the one permanently fixed in the minds of the two hundred and more witnesses, is the killing of Captain William Strong on Sunday, May 9, 1897. Things happened so many years before or after this time. But for this date it is doubtful if it would 'be possible to fix with any degree of certainty occurrences and events necessary to a settlement of this controyersy. We will discuss separately the occupancy of the two houses.
1. Cane Patch. It is conceded that Henry Clay, as a tenant of the Kentucky Union Company, erected a house and took up his residence on the property in 1894. The witnesses do not agree as to thé exact month; one of the appellants places it as February; Henry Clay says he moved there in the fall. Several of the appellants say that Henry Clay remained in that house until the fall or winter of 1896, probably October of that year, when he moved to his father-in-law’s place on Canoe fork,, and away from the land in controversy. Creen Clay, Henry’s brother, moved in about the time Henry is said to have vacated the premises. He remained but a few months and whether he took possession in the fall of 1896 or February of 1897, the witnesses (for appellant) agree that he left in the spring of 1897, and it is insisted that from this time no one ever occupied that house until 1899. Appellant Henry Strong places the last vacancy period as the “summer of ’97 or ’98.” If the premises were unoccupied during those months appellees’ ease must fail unless the house on Road fork was occupied at this time.
Many witnesses testify that the Cane Patch house was not occupied in 1897 and 1898. One of the reasons assigned is the trouble between two contending’ factions. Clay being friendly to the side of Captain Strong it is said he sought safety in Rich Hollow, a community removed from the neighborhood in which he had been living. Several testify they passed the Cane Patch house during these years and saw no sign of life there; weeds had taken the place, no crops had been planted and the house was well nigh uninhabitable. One witness says he was frightened by a number of sheep' that jumped out of the house as he passed by. Another says hogs and cattle passed in and out of the house.
On the other hand a vast number of witnesses testify the Cane Patch house was occupied continuously during
Rachel Clay (Henry’s wife) corroborates her husband as 'to the years they lived on Cane Patch; two of their children were born while they were there, Enoch in 1895, and Nancy in 1898; many others, including Mrs. Clay’s father and sister and oldest son, remember the birth of these two children while the Clays were on Cane Patch. Ellis Cole, who spent most of her time doctoring people, and who was importuned to remain in the neighborhood, was present when the elder of the two children was born.
Further proof of Henry Clay’s residence here is shown by the school census in 1898, which includes five of his children and the assessment rolls for 1897 and 1898, Cane Patch being within both the school and assessing districts in which Clay is.listed.
2. Road fork. Bob Little is to the Road fork what Henry Clay was to Cane Patch, and the occupancy of the former during the year of 1897 centers largely around the possession of Uncle Bob, now deceased. Elijah Bush moved in this house in Februray, 1899, and was there when his deposition was taken. Ellis Cole moved to this house in March, 1898, and remained a year, or until Elijah Bush came. It is appellants’ contention, supported by the testimony of several witnesses, that but for the occupancy of this house by Green Clay for about two months in the early spring of 1897 the house was vacant that year. It is their contention that Bob Little did not live there in 1897. As in the case of Cane Patch house
For appellees many witnesses testify that Bob Little was living on the Road fork both before and after the death of Captain Strong. These witnesses saw him there that year, and talked, to him. Green Cláy says lie moved there in the spring of 1896. Ike Clemmons was there at the time he hauled Ike’s furniture back to the river for him. Green left there in the spring of 1897, made a crop of corn the year he was there; after he left, Bob Little moved in. Uncle Bob’s son says they were on Road fork at the time Captain Strong was killed; they heard the shots and an hour or two later went to the Sulphur Gap and saw the dead man and his mule that had also been shot. Uncle Bob’s widow says they were on- Road fork from April, 1897, until the winter of that year and that Bob made a crop there. Some of Bob’s relations helped him replant corn that had been uprooted by some hogs—this was in 1897.
If there was a break in the continuity of possession, and in the occupancy of the two houses from 1894 to 1912, it must have been in 1897 and 1898. The tenancy of Ellis Cole shortens this period 'by almost a year, as it is admitted she was on the Road fork from March, 1898, to the spring of 1899 ; it is further limited by the testimony of appellants’ witnesses as to Green Clay’s sojourn on the Road fork in the spring of 1897; thus in fact the controversy is narrowed to a period of about twelve months. It is impossible to reconcile all the evidence, but the Weight thereof and the attendant circumstances favor the conclusion reached by the lower court.
The major portion of the testimony is that of interested parties. The heirs of Colonel Strong and Captain Strong are not lined up on one side. The Clays, their kinspeople and others state positively that Henry and his family occupied the Cane Patch house from 1894 to 1899.’ Henry was of a shiftless, nomadic nature, never remained long at any place, but the proof tends strongly to show his residence on Cane Patch for the years stated.
True there is much testimony that both these houses were in a dilapidated condition in both 1897 and 1898, and yet it is conceded that at least one of them was occupied a part of each of said years.
Witnesses testifying the houses were unoccupied were in the main those who chanced to pass along the road
Some of the witnesses were hunters, others were seekers after lost and strayed cattle, and in their journey they say there was no evidence of life in or about either house.
Both houses were erected in 1894. Regardless of the character of material or manner of 'construction, it is inconceivable that three years later they could have been in the ruined, caved-in, rotten condition depicted by the numerous witnesses. Insecurity of construction and unskilled workmanship might account for a place early getting out of repair, but timber will not decay nor a house become dilapidated in so short a time. Lige Bush, as he is called, has been in one of these same “uninhabitable” houses all these many years.
Other persons had lived on these two forks prior to 1894, and witnesses, including those introduced by appellants, testify to having seen houses on both forks before this date. It is quite possible therefore that the houses seen and described by some of the witnesses to have been in such a deplorable condition in 1897 were those built some time prior to 1894, and there is no contention these were occupied. The existence of these older houses serves as an explanation of the testimony of the witnesses as to the dilapidated houses seen by them and thus the seemingly apparent irreconcilability in the evidence disappears.
On the question of occupancy we think the proof establishes the fact that for the period" from 1894 to 1912 appellees have shown such a possessory title as entitled them to the relief granted.
The petition in this suit was filed August 7,1912. October 7, 1913, a motion was made for an issue out of chancery and for a trial 'by jury. This motion was overruled and this is urged as reversible error. Considerable proof had been taken before this motion was made, but it was agreed by appellants that all depositions previously taken
Section 10 of the Civil Code provides that a defendant by motion made when he answers may have an equitable action transferred to the ordinary docket. The motion should be seasonably made and this was not done in the present instance.
It is generally held that the motion should be made when the answer is filed, or within a reasonable time •thereafter, and what is a reasonable time is a matter within the sound discretion of the chancellor. Furthermore, the weight of the evidence is such we are convinced a jury could not have reached a conclusion contrary to that stated by the chancellor. Appellants were not prejudiced by the refusal of the court to sustain the motion to transfer, nor did the chancellor abuse his discretion in so ruling. Chenault, &c. v. Eastern Kentucky Timber & Lumber Co., 119 Ky. 170, 83 S. W. 552; Proctor v. Tubbs, 166 Ky. 676, 179 S. W. 620; Riffe & Jones v. McKinney Deposit Bank, 171 Ky. 761, 188 S. W. 775.
The point is made that the grantees of Captain Strong were joint tenants with the Strong heirs and the adverse possession of the former was not of the character required under the decisions of this court. Whether tenants in common or not, the possession of appellees and their predecessor in title was adverse, open, notorious, continuous and hostile for the statutory period and known by the Strong heirs to be so.
What has been stated herein applies to the appeal of Morse and others as well as Jack Strong, et al.
For the reasons stated the judgment is affirmed.