Affirming.
Appellee, S.B. Combs, filed this suit under KRS
The tract in dispute consists of some 20 or 30 acres of not very valuable land on the waters of Acup Creek in Perry County. Appellee claims title through a Gidean Everage patent of 100 acres issued in 1848 and a tax deed of 1894, as well as by adverse possession. However, he does not claim title to any part of the Gideon Everage patent which overlaps the Jackson Combs tract of 400 acres covered by a senior patent issued in 1845. This overlap does not include the land now in controversy.
Appellant claims color of title by virtue of a judgment (which he may do, 1 Am. Jur., "Adverse Possession," sec. 199, page 904; Taylor v. Buckner,
Appellant pleads the champerty statute, KRS
Another attack appellant makes on the tax deed is that appellee did not meet the burden of showing there was a substantial compliance with all the statutory requirements relating to tax sales, citing several quite old cases such as Jones v. Miracle,
Thus this case is reduced to one of adverse possession. We see no good reason to discuss and analyze something over 150 pages of highly conflicting evidence. As was written in Reynolds v. Cobb,
The judgment is affirmed. *Page 556
