Bounds v. Bounds
Bounds v. Bounds
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff instituted this action of' ejectment in the Circuit Court of Knox county, in January, 1870.
The parties are sons of Francis Bounds, and both claim title under him, the plaintiff, under a deed of 3d January, 1859. The defendant claims that he was placed in possession of a tract of 172 acres (75 of which is sued for in this action) by his father, in March, 1844, who had it surveyed and the boundaries marked, and that he has ever since claimed the same adversely and held possession thereof up to the boundaries designated by the survey made by his father’s directions by Armstrong. This 172-acre tract was part of a larger tract, and at the same time two other tracts were surveyed and marked, one for the plaintiff and another for another son of the said Francis, Sr. ISfo deeds or obligations for title were ever made to any of his sons by the said Francis, Sr., except the deed of 3d February, 1859, for 75 acres of the 17 2-acre tract, which was made to the plaintiff. The defendant, however, insists that his possession — which he claims to have been adverse for more than thirty years, claiming up. to lines of survey made by Armstrong, a surveyor — vests him with the title, or at least bars any action against him for the recovery of said land; and that being in the adverse possession of the land sued for at the time of the execution of the deed of 3d January, 1859, under which plaintiff claims title, the deed was- champertous, and the suit should have been dismissed by the court. The defendant proved that the surveys for the three •sons of Francis, Sr., were in the handwriting of Rob
To the reading of this “Exhibit A” to the affida-. vit to the jury the plaintiff excepted, upon the ground that the contents of a lost paper cannot be established by an ex parte affidavit. But the exception was overruled and the affidavit and “Exhibit A” were allowed to'•be read — the defendant proposing to account for the loss of the original paper by the affidavit,
It is assigned as error by plaintiff — 1, that the notes of survey by Robert Armstrong, found amongst his papers, were improperly allowed to go to the jury; and 2, that “Exhibit A” to the affidavit of defendant, being the survey plat and certificate of said survey, as stated in the affidavit, were likewise improperly allowed to go to the jury.
Two specific objections to the competency of the notes of survey found with Robert Armstrong’s papers, were taken in the court below, and are insisted on here: 1. That their genuineness had not been established. 2. The papers themselves were mere hearsay.
As to the handwriting of Robert Armstrong, there was certainly sufficient evidence to be submitted to the jury, and there being none to the contrary, as to the fact that the notes of survey were in his handwriting, we think it sufficiently established; but whether they were made under the circumstances and for the purposes insisted on by defendant, or were admissible as evidence at all, is another question. Plaintiff insists that these “notes of Armstrong,” as being hearsay evidence of the fact proposed to be proved by them, are inadmissible. The purpose for which they were offered, was that they might be considered by the jury “as corroborative and circumstantial evidence to establish the fact that the certificate of survey had been made” which is alleged to have been given to
The affidavit of defendant states with sufficient distinctness, the existence of a lost paper — its loss and his diligent and unsuccessful search for it. This was sufficient to authorize the introduction of proof of its contents, but it was not proper upon the affidavit, only, to allow what was represented therein, as a copy, to go to the jury. The defendant should have been examined as a witness before the jury, subject to the right of cross examination by the adverse party, to have made his statements evidence. If the land sued for was in fact surveyed, and metes and bounds distinctly defined by a certificate of the surveyor, for the defendant, and this was delivered to him by his father, intending the land as a gift, and the certificate of survey as a. muniment of title and
It has been repeatedly held by this court, that a mere naked possession, or the holding as a trespasser without excuse, and without title, legal or equitable, valid or invalid, or by some kind of writing by which to determine the extent of the possession, must be restricted to the enclosures actually made: 5 Sneed, 307.
But an unregistered deed, title bond or entry, though there has been no survey, furnished evidence of the extent of the possession; and a certificate, purporting to have been issued by the County Court of Cumberland county, Kentucky, where it was supposed the land lay, was, in connection with parol evidence, admissible as defining the extent of the defendant’s possession, though inadmissible as evidence of title: 9 Hum., 339.
For. the errors hereinbefore indicated, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
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