Marinaro v. Deskins

Decision Date24 March 1961
Citation344 S.W.2d 817
PartiesCataido MARINARO et al., Appellants, v. Boone DESKINS et al., Appellees.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court — District of Kentucky

E. N. Venters, Pikeville, for appellant.

Henry D. Stratton, Pikeville, for appellee.

PALMORE, Judge.

The appellant is one of several plaintiffs who, claiming to be the owners of various undivided interests in a 100-acre tract of land on Cumberland Mountain in Pike County, Kentucky, and to be in possession of the land, brought this action against the appellees for damages resulting from the cutting and removal of timber. On the basis of testimony heard in support of a motion for temporary injunction, supplemented by depositions taken subsequently, the trial court sustained a motion by appellees for summary judgment dismissing the action. Appellees did not introduce any evidence.

The complaint as amended included a claim of title by adverse possession and was traversed, inter alia, by a general denial of each and every allegation. The judgment rests on the failure of the plaintiffs to produce any substantial evidence of title, either by adverse possession or otherwise.

The plaintiffs claimed their title through one Jasper Mullins, who died in 1924. Taken in its most favorable light, the evidence showed that Mullins bought the property from Dave Hall in 1912 and thereafter lived on it for perhaps 10 years. The deed from Hall was not introduced in evidence. Whether Mullins was in possession at the time of his death is not clear, but we assume that he was. During his occupancy Mullins invited one Bev Wallace to move onto the place and stay there as long as he lived. After the death of Mullins none of his heirs (according to Wallace's testimony) ever asked Wallace to leave, and he still lives there. However, instead of claiming as a tenant of the Mullins heirs Wallace continued in possession under a claim of title in himself, and during the course of his testimony admitted that at one stage he caused to be prepared and recorded a forged deed purporting to convey to him a 375-acre tract embracing the acreage involved in this suit. (See French v. Elkhorn City Land Co., 293 Ky. 250, 168 S.W.2d 746, wherein Wallace's claim of title was defeated.) Wallace was a key witness by whom the plaintiffs sought, but failed, to prove that his possession of the property was for their benefit.

There was no evidence that any of the heirs of Jasper Mullins ever themselves assumed actual possession or continuous physical dominion over the property in question or that any of them or their purported successors in interest were in possession at the time this action commenced. One of the children of Jasper Mullins testified that he was guardian for some of the other children after the death of their father and that he 'used to visit' the place 'pretty often' and at one time 'noticed Bev Wallace off of it,' but had last been there some 6, 8, or 10 years ago. The strongest portion of his testimony was as follows:

'Q. 38. How long did you have control of this land? A. Well, up until not very long ago I told Kelly [the appellant, Marinaro] to go up there and look after it.

'Q. 39. How long ago? A. About a year ago.

'Q. 40. You had it from the time Jasper Mullins died, a year or two--A. How?

'Q. 41. You had it from the time Jasper Mullins died until a year or two before,--year or two ago? A. Well, a year after Jasper Mullins died.

'Q. 42. You had possession of it after Jasper Mullins died? A. I was supposed to.

'Q. 43. Well, did you have it in charge? A. Yes sir.

'Q. 44. About a year or two after Jasper Mullins died until about a year ago? A. Yes sir.'

We consider this testimony far short of substantial evidence that the Mullins heirs actually and continuously possessed the land for any period of time after his death. Patently, then, since they cannot claim the benefit of Wallace's possession, which was hostile to them, their claim by adverse possession is limited to the period of occupancy by Mullins and fails for lack of 15 years' continuity. The case is distinguishable from Howard v. Mitchell, 1936, 268 Ky. 429, 105 S.W.2d 128, where the heirs of the first possessor acquired title on the theory that the succeeding possession of his widow, tacked to the first possession, inured to their benefit.

Though it was unnecessary to the conclusion reached in the Howard case, the opinion recites that possession under claim of right raises a rebuttable presumption of ownership, and that possession is prima facie evidence of title. Hence the appellant in this case argues that proof of Jasper Mullins's possession raises a rebuttable presumption of ownership at the time, which ownership would now be vested in his heirs and their successors.

For most practical purposes possession is ownership as against all but the legal titleholder. The principle was thus stated...

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8 cases
  • Minish v. Huey
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Sixth Circuit
    • July 31, 1973
    ...plaintiffs, by virtue of simple deeds to the Boulton and Westrick farms, were the "legal" owners of those farms; see Marinaro v. Deskins, 344 S.W.2d 817, 819 (Ky.1961); Chalk v. Chalk, 291 Ky. 702, 165 S.W.2d 534 (1942); Scroggins v. Nave, 133 Ky. 793, 119 S.W. 158, 159 (1909). Accordingly,......
  • Goss v. Bisset
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court — District of Kentucky
    • January 27, 1967
    ...no one but him.' Id., p. 246. As it has been observed before, possession is title except against the true owner. Cf. Marinaro v. Deskins, Ky., 344 S.W.2d 817, 819 (1961). Several of the disputed items fall within the classification of 'trade fixtures,' which would remain the property of the......
  • Fleming v. EQT Gathering, LLC
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court — District of Kentucky
    • February 16, 2017
    ...trespass was committed, or when the action was instituted, it follows that she could not maintain the action."); see Marinaro v. Deskins, 344 S.W.2d 817, 819 (Ky. 1961). ...
  • Grand Lodge Free v. City of Taylor Mill
    • United States
    • Kentucky Court of Appeals
    • February 10, 2017
    ...laid down with regard to chattels also prevail with regard to land. . . .' Holmes, The Common Law, pp. 241, 242, 244.Marinaro v. Deskins, 344 S.W.2d 817, 819 (Ky. 1961). As the residential units at Springhill Village are "occupied" by the Residents, we conclude as a matter of law that they ......
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