Judges: Clay, Com, Missioner
Filed Date: 11/12/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
This suit was brought by the West End Improvement Company, suing for the benefit of L. M. Rieke, J. Ch Utterbáck and D. H. Hughes, against John L. Farr, to recover the balance due on the purchase price of a lot which had been sold to the defendant by executory eon-tract. The defendant asked a rescission of the contract and the recovery of the amounts which he had paid) on the contract. On final hearing, the counter-relief asked by the defendant was denied and plaintiffs werei given judgment in accordance with the prayer of their, petition. The defendant appeals.
The facts out of which the litigation grows are fully] set forth in the case of Husbands v. Paducah & Illinois R. R. Co., 176 Ky. 290, 195 S. W. 831. Briefly stated they are as follows: The lot purchased by the defendant isi located in the “Colonial Heights” sub-division of Paducah, which sub-division is located just beyond the cor-' porate limits of that city. The tract of land eonsti-i tuting this sub-division was first divided and laid off into lots, streets and alleys, about twenty-five years ago, by the West End Improvement Company, which caused a plat of said sub-division to be duly recorded in the! office of the clerk of 'the McCracken county court. In June, 1910, the West End Improvement Company sold to Messrs. Zachary & Raymond all that part of the ad-' dition not theretofore sold, and in the month of February, 1913, executed a deed to the purchasers carrying out that contract. Zachary & Raymond then took possession of the property, renaming it “Colonial Heights,” and caused a new map to be made, which was substantially the same as the one made by the West End Improvement Company. They graded and graveled all the streets running through the sub-division, installed a sewerage system, laid water mains and connected them! with the mains of the Paducah Water Supply Com
It is the contention of defendant that the plaintiffs actively assisted and aided the rallroád company in violating the covenants and restrictions under which he and the others purchased their lots. The plaintiffs take the position that as the right of way was condemned by! the railroad company, a step which they could not pre-i vent, they cannot be held responsible for the railroad’s! action in interfering with plaintiffs’ easement over the streets and alleys in question.
Without giving the evidence in detail, we may briefly summarize it as follows: W. J. Hills, superintendent, 1, N. C. & St. L. R. R. Co., was acting in behalf of the Paducah & Ill. Railroad Company in. the acquisition of its right of way into Paducah. He was assisted in securing the right of way for the railroad by Mr. Utterback. During all that time, plaintiff, D. H. Hughes,- was acting as counsel for the railroad company, and the title bond to the tracts of land constituting the company’s right of way was taken to plaintiff, Rieke. When plaintiffs purchased the remainder of the sub-division they knew* of the covenants and restrictions under which the lots theretofore sold had been purchased. It is also clear that they made the purchase with the view of conveying to the railroad company a right of way over the subdivision. After they made the contract agreeing to
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, with directions to enter judgment in conformity with this opinion.