41 Ky. 429 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1842
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
In this action of ejectment, brought on the several demises of Janies Taylor and others, the jury found separate verdicts for the defendants, John Cox and Thomas Lancaster, and the plaintiffs motion for a new trial, as to each, having been overruled, a separate judgment was entered for each defendant, -for the reversal of each of which judgments, the plaintiff has appealed to this Court. The two cases, thus growing out of the same trial and standing on the same record, will be considered and decided together.
The action was brought in October, 1838, for land in possession of the defendants, lying within the boundaries of John Harris’ sixth survey of 5000 acres on Bank Lick and Licking, patented in 1815 to John Crittenden, and also within the boundaries of a patent to. John Fowler, dated in 1811, and of a patent to Ash, Morgan, &c. dated in 1794. The defendants claimed .to hold under Fowler’s patent. The lessor, Taylor, claims a several title to the whole-of the land in controversy, by a long possession, commenced in 1795, and also exhibits a conveyance to himself of a partial interest, undivided, in Crittenden’s patent, and of a similar interest in the senior patent of Ash, Morgan, &c. The other lessors are patentees or heirs of patentees, in the last mentioned patent. But .some of the patentees have not demised to
The evidence conduces to prove that, as early as 1795, John Crittenden took possession of Harris’ sixth survey to the extent of its boundaries, with a small exception, not necessary to be specified, by entering and improving within the boundaries of the patent of Ash, &c. and held and claimed it as his own by having agents and tenants on different parts of it, (except as to 1000 acres which may have been held under one Breading,) until about the year 1810, when he sold it and transferred the possession to the lessor, Taylor, in whom it was afterwards, in like manner, continued for many years, and until more than twenty years had elapsed from its commencement. No possession had been taken under the elder patent, either in 1795 or at any time until long after the expiration of twenty years from Crittenden’s entry, and at the time of his entry there does not appear to have been any possession adverse to him. He, therefore, acquired possession to the full extent of Harris’ sixth survey, and the same possession was transmitted to and continued in Taylor, unless as to the 1000 acres above mentioned, it was held by Breading. This being the state of the possession in 1811, when Fowler’s patent issued, and afterwards; the
But in the year 1815, and probably before the date of the patent to Crittenden, the possession taken by him in 1795, and transferred to Taylor, had continued for twenty years; and assuming that it was taken by Crittenden, claiming the land as his own and adversely to all others,
But before any such entry was made on the survey of Harris, and under Fowler’s patent, Taylor had, by deeds of 1819 and 1821, acquired an undivided interest in the elder patent of Ash, &c. And except so fardas the right of entry under that patent had not been previously destroyed by adverse possession, the union of that title with Taylor’s possession had the effect of constructively extending his possession for the benefit of himself and his co-partner, to all such parts of the said elder - patent as were not held adversely, and also of restricting to the actual close, the possession gained by any subsequent entry under the junior patent of Fowler. But at that time
Upon the evidence, the question whether there was or was not a continued possession of the Breading tract for twenty years, adversely to the patent of Ash, &c. before Taylor took possession in 1822 or 1823, is left entirely uncertain. But the early history of that possession is only material for determining whether, at the time when Taylor entered upon it, the right of entry was in Breading, or belonged to the title of Crittenden or to that derived. from the patent of Ash, &c. But however this may be, it is certain, upon the facts now appearing, that the right of entry was not in Fowler’s patent. And as the possession, to the extent of the boundaries of the 1000 acres, as well as outside of them, was in Taylor, holding an interest in the elder patent, and also in Crit-. tenden’s title either wholly or in part, when the entry or entries were made in 1828-9 or 30, under which the defendants claim ; it seems to be certain that those entries upon the constructive possession of Taylor, being made without right, could have given no possession beyond the actual close, though the right of entry may have been in
It remains to be said in relation to the possession of Crittenden and the right derived therefrom, that if he did not take possession, claiming the land as his own exclusively, but took and held it under Harris’ claim, for the benefit of the proprietors thereof, and so transferred it to Taylor, the right of entry gained by the continuance of that possession for twenty years, vested in the persons entitled to Harris’ survey, and unless Crittenden was the sole proprietor thereof, it did not vest in him exclusively, until the patent issued to him; and so if Crittenden took and held the possession exclusively for'himself, claiming
The instructions, numbered 7th, 8th and 9th, given on motion of the defendants, relating to the extent of the possession that might have been acquired by the entry of Klette, upon the interference of Fowler’s patent, with that of Ash, Morgan, &e. and by the subsequent entries of the defendants, or those under whom they claim, within the interference between Fowler’s patent and Harris’ survey, seem to be erroneous, or at least misleading,' inasmuch as they imply that the jury might find that by the first entry Fowler acquired possession to the extent of his patent, without regard to the constructive possession of Taylor or of Taylor and Breading, and also, that the sub. sequent entries of the defendants, or those under whom they claim, within the survey of Harris, might give them possession beyond their actual enclosures, notwithstanding the possession of Taylor, and though the right of entry was not in them or in Fowler, under whom they entered; which finding, under our view of the law, as stated in this opinion, the evidence did not authorize. The instruction, number two, given for the defendants, importing, that if they had been in peacable possession for seven years, of the land in contest, and embraced by certain deeds therein mentioned, which are conveyances to Taylor or his grantors, of the title under the patents of Ash, &c. and Crittenden, said deeds should be disregarded, must also be deemed erroneous, inasmuch as it does
The Court also erred in giving instruction, number eleven, that if the jury found for the plaintiff at all, it couid only he to the extent that the defendants were in possession at the service of the declaration. We suppose the recovery, if there should be one, should include not onty any extension which the defendants may have made of their improvements, after suit brought, if made . ...... .... ° under their original claim ox title, boundary and possession, but also, any new and detached improvements they may have made in the same period, and under the same claim of title, boundary and possession, such extended or detached Improvements being also within the same title of the plaintiff, which was litigated in the trial. There being, however, no evidence of any such extension or new improvement, nor any claim of the defendants but their original claim under Fowler, no instruction on this subject seems to have been necessary or proper, but the jury should have been left to find upon the proof of title and possession under the instructions applicable to those subjects, and the plaintiff, if successful, should have been left to have the judgment executed in the usual mode at his peril.
The 13th instruction, if given at all, should have been explained by adding that the patent and survey furnished, of themselves, sufficient evidence that the boundaries therein specified were actually demarked. There was, also, oral evidence to the same effect.
The Court having instructed the jury, on motion of the defendants, that there could be no recovery under the patent of Crittenden, unless it included the entry or a part of it, should also have instructed them, as asked to do by the plaintiff, that the patent itself, furnished, prima facie, sufficient evidence of such correspondence. Whether this instruction was given or not, is not certain,
For which errors each of these judgments is reversed, and each cause is remanded for a new trial, in conformity with the principles of this opinion.