Citation Numbers: 207 Ky. 42
Judges: Turner
Filed Date: 1/30/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/24/2022
(Opinion of the Court bt
Reversing.
Appellant, as plaintiff, filed his equitable action in the Letcher circuit court alleging he was the owner of and in the actual possession of a tract of land, described by metes and bounds, containing 104 acres, more or less, lying and being in Letcher and Knott counties. He alleges that defendant, Adams, was wrongfully and without right setting up claim to a portion of said tract of land and asserting title thereto, which was hostile to plaintiff’s title and ownership, and cast a cloud thereon; that defendant had recently, wrongfully and without right gone upon a portion of the land and cut down and destroyed valuable growing timber and had started to build fences on portions thereof with a view to ousting the plaintiff of possession, and of ultimately depriving him of the possession and title. He prayed for a judgment quieting his title as against defendant, and asks for an injunction enjoining and restraining him from further trespass thereon.
Thereafter the plaintiff filed his amended petition wherein he avers that defendant had recently, prior to the filing of the action, unlawfully, wrongfully and without right gone upon portions of the land described in the original petition and cut and destroyed valuable growing timber, and that a portion of such timber was located on that part of the tract lying in Knott county and a portion on that lying in Letcher county. He further alleges that the fences erected upon the lands as set forth in the original petition are upon portions of said land lying both in Knott and Letcher counties, and that defendant had given it out in words and speech that he was the owner of portions of said tract of land lying in each of the counties of Knott and Letcher.
Thereafter defendant filed his answer and disclaimer wherein, after denying certain material allegations in the petition in a separate paragraph asserts that he never did and does not now claim any portion of the land described in the petition which is situated in Letcher county, and expressly again disclaims any interest, right, title or claim to such portion of the tract of land described in the petition, and agrees that plaintiff may take judgment against him for all that portion of same lying in Letcher county. In still another paragraph he alleges that he is the owner of and in the actual possession of a certain described tract of land lying entirely in Knott county, Kentucky, which he says conflicts with the boundary set out in the plaintiff’s petition, and to which he asserts title to the extent of such conflict. He then asserts title by adverse possession of himself and those under whom he claims for the statutory period, and in still another paragraph asserts such adverse possession for a period of more than thirty years.
To that answer the plaintiff filed a general demurrer but without waiving same filed his reply wherein he
Without a formal order of submission, and without the taking of any evidence whatsoever, the court entered a judgment wherein it recited that defendant had entered his motion to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction by the court to try the issues involved so far as that portion of the tract of land described in the petition lies in Knott county, and a 'judgment was entered dismissing the action in so far as the same affected or related to that part of the land lying in Knott county, the court being of opinion that it had no jurisdiction. It was adjudged, however, that under the pleadings, the plaintiff was the owner in fee simple of all that part of the tract of land described in his. petition lying in Letcher county, and as to that part lying in Knott county his action was dismissed without prejudice.
This appeal is by the plaintiff from so much of the judgment as dismissed his action in so far as it affected that part of the land lying in Knott county.
The only question we deem it necessary to consider is whether, wholly apart from the allegations in the amended petition, that defendant had committed acts of trespass upon parts of the land in both counties, even if the petition on its face had alleged that the acts of trespass had been committed only upon that part of the land in Knott county, would not under our statutes the Letcher circuit court have jurisdiction.
The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land lying in Letcher and Knott counties containing 104 acres, and the description in the petition by metes and bounds discloses that it is a single body of land.
Section 11 of the Kentucky Statutes provides:
“It shall and may be lawful for any person having both the legal title and possession of lands, to institute and prosecute suit, by petition in -equity in the circuit court of the county where the lands or ■some part of them may lie, against any other person setting up-claims thereto.”
Again, our Civil Code of Practice, in dealing with the venue of actions concerning real property, in section 62, provides:
“Actions must be brought in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated:
“1. For the recovery of real property, or of an estate or interest therein.
“2. For the partition of real property except as provided in section 66.
“3. For the sale of real property under title 10, chapter 14, or under a mortgage lien, or other encumbrance or charge, except for debts of a decedent.
‘ ‘ 4. For an injury to real property. ’ ’
Clearly this is an action for an injury to real estate1, and to quiet the plaintiff’s title as against the unfounded claims, as alleged, of defendant, and that tract of land happens to lie partly in one county and partly in another. Neither of the enactments quoted undertake to fix the venue of such action where the injury to the tract in -such circumstances is committed in one county or another; it is the injury to the tract of land as an entirety, ■as an entity, with which they are dealing. It undertakes to fix the venue of such an action, not with a view to what part of the tract of land the trespass may have been committed upon, but to fix the venue- in either county where -the trespass has been committed against any part of that tract of land, whether in the one county or the other. The legislative purpose appears plainly to have been that when a tract of land lies partly in two or more counties the aggrieved party in his action affecting any part of it
It seems, therefore, necessarily to follow that when such an action is instituted in any county where any part of the land lies the courts of that county have full jurisdiction to determine the whole controversy between the parties without reference to what part of the land may be involved, or in what county such land may lie. The action is authorized for an injury to the land as an entity without regard to the political subdivisions where the different parts of the land may lie; the owner is given the right to go into> the courts of any county where a part of that tract of land may lie and there seek redress for the injury, to his land as an entity, without regard to whether committed in one county or another, or whether the injury occurred only in that part lying in one county.
The courts will never construe a legislative enactment, in the absence of explicit language, so as to necessarily increase litigation or costs to litigants. To say that a landowner who happened to own a tract of land lying in three counties should be compelled to go into the courts of one of them because of a depredation upon one part of his land upon one day, and into the court of another the next day because of a similar depredation by the same party on another part of his land, and into the courts of still another county for such depredations by the same man on the third day, would be to require the very thing which the two statutes quoted were inténded to avoid.
The language is broad and unequivocal, and gives such jurisdiction
“In the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated,” and to “the circuit court of the county where the lands or some part of them thereof may lie.”
This language necessarily means that the aggrieved party owning such a tract of land may select the county in which he will institute his action, and when once instituted that court has jurisdiction of the whole subject
An injury to a part of a tract of land is an injury to the whole of that body of land, whether it lies wholly in one county or partly in two or more, and therefore the conclusion that it was the tract of land as a whole which the legislature had in mind when it conferred the jurisdiction upon any one of the counties in which a part of the land might lie, appears unmistakable.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that under the terms of these statutes the jurisdiction conferred upon the courts of any one of the counties where a part of the land may lie is the jurisdiction to settle the whole controversy between the parties respecting that particular tract of land.
The subject matter of the controversy is the tract of land as an entirety, and it matters not where the particular part in controversy may lie, the courts of either county is given jurisdiction under the express language quoted in both the statutes and the code. Any other interpretation would read into them an exception which the language does not justify, and which would be subversive of the legislative purpose to let the aggrieved party select the county in which to file his action in such cases.
The precise question we have here has never been passed upon by this court, but there is one case in this1 state which in dealing with section 62 of our Civil Code at least has inferentially adopted the construction we have given.
In the case of Harlan v. Howard, 79 Ky. 373, there was involved a land patent embracing lands in two counties; the contention was made that when a tract thus lies in two counties possession of it in one of the counties did not give possession of that portion in the other county, and the court after pointing out that this was the correct rule ujtder some old opinions said that section 62 of the Civil Code changed that .rule, and then said:
“And it follows that, although the Keith patent boundary may lie in the two counties, proof of title and the right to possession of any portion thereof in*48 Lewis county, where this action was brought, will sustain it to the extent of-such proof, and also as to such parts of the boundary in Greenup county, connected with that in Lewis county, as to which the evidence may establish a like title and right of possession. ’ ’
_ Unmistakably this language is a recognition of the legislative purpose to treat such tracts of land so lying in two or more counties as an entirety, and to hold that evidence of title and the right to possession of that part of the land lying in the county other than the one where the suit was pending would sustain a judgment as to such land in the other county, where it was physically connected with and embraced in the same patent as the lands in the county where the suit was brought.
Other authorities are 40 Cyc., pp. 49, 50 and 51; 27 R. C. L., p. 792; Whitney v. Central Georgia Power Co., 19 Anno. Cases, p. 982, and note; Smith v. Southern Railway Co., 136 Ky. 162; East Tenn., etc., R. R. Co. v. Atlanta and Florida Co., 15 L. R. A. 109.
However, as the trial court erroneously decided that it had no jurisdiction as to the land lying in Knott county and as there has been no trial upon the merits of the controversy affecting such lands, we will not upon this reversal direct the entry of a judgment, but will reverse the same for further proceedings to the end- that there may be a trial upon the merits.
The judgment is reversed in so far as it dismissed the action concerning that part of the land lying in Knott county, for further proceedings consistent with ibis opinion.