Opinion of the Court by
Judge LassingAffirming.
Tn September, 1898, Juliette C. Sumner filed' suit against J. EL Northup, wherein she sought to recover of him $1,000 damages', the value of certain timber which he had out and removed from land described in her petition as belonging to her. She also' asked that he be enjoined and restrained’ from committing-further trespass upon her land. He answered, traversing every allegation, of the petition, and in a separate paragraph pleaded that he was himself the owner of the land by purchase at execution sale. He alleged that one R. F. Yinson was a necessary party, and his answer was made a cross-petition against him. Yin-son was brought before the court, but made no defense. Thereafter an amended petition was filed, in which plaintiff pleaded that she and those under whom she claimed had been in the peaceable, adverse, open, and notorious possession of the land described in her petition for more than 15 and 30 years, and that by reason of such adverse holding she had acquired title by prescription. She prayed that she be adjudged the owner of the land, and as in her original petition. Plaintiff in her reply traversed the affirmative matter set up in the answer. A rejoinder on •the part of the defendant completed the issue. On motion of the defendant, the ease was transferred from the ordinary to the equity side of the docket, over the objection of the plaintiff. The proof was *161taken by deposition. Before the case was finally called for trial, the plaintiff bad died, and the defendant had taken the benefit of the-bankrupt law. His trustee, by proper order, was made a party defendant to the suit, and the case was in due time revived in the name of the heirs of the plaintiff. The regular judge had been engaged as counsel before his election, and was for this reason not qualified to sit and1 hear the case, and a special judge was appointed to try the same. After a lapse of about 10 years the case was finally submitted for judgment upon the pleadings, exhibits, and proof. The chancellor found plaintiff to be the owner of the land, and entitled to $378, the value of 434 oak trees which defendant Northup was shown to have cut from the land. A judgment was entered accordingly. A motion and grounds for a new trial were made and overruled, and the defendants have prosecuted this appeal. • ;
In the motion and grounds for a new trial two points were made: First, that the pleadings did not warrant the judgment; and, second, that the evidence is not sufficient to support the judgment.
Plaintiffs claim title through Cornelius M. Pack, who on August 8, 1873, sold and conveyed to William. Sumner, by metes and bounds, courses, and distances, the land described in the pleadings; that William Sumner at once took possession of this land, and held it under his deed until his death; that he left a will, by the terms of which his wife became invested with the title to this same land, and upon her death it passed to the present plaintiffs. In the deed from Cornelius M. Pack to William Sumner, he not only describes the land with particularity, as above indicated, but, in addition thereto, gives a general "de*162soription -wherein he recites his source of title, tracing it bach to the Commonwealth: through six patents, which'were issued to him or others whose interests he acquired between the years 1846 and 1873. Defendant claims title as follows: A patent was issued by the Commonwealth of Virginia to Thomas Franklin on January 2, 1786, for 8,000 acres of land. In 1836 one "William Faulkner obtained a judgment against Thomas Franklin and the 8,000-acre patent was sold in satisfaction thereof, and James M. Rice, commissioner, conveyed the survey to William Faulkner. Later this survey was sold to J. R. Ward to satisfy a debt he held against Faulkner. Thereafter John Burchett brought suit against J. R. Ward, alleging that he owned an interest in the land. In this same suit it was made to appear that Burchett and Ward were indebted to one Richard Apperson, Sr., in the sum of $125, a contingent fee for his services in recovering the 8,000 acres of land for them. Apperson, by cross-petition, asked that a sale of the land be made to satisfy his debt. In the meantime James Fulkerson claimed to- have become the purchaser of Ward’s interest. About the same time Burchett sold Ms interest to one J. McHenry, and he was made a party to the suit. A judgment was finally entered in 1860 directing the land sold. In obedience to this judgment, it was sold, and Richard Apperson, Sr., became the purchaser. He died before the deed was made to him. His son, Richard Apperson, Jr., was judge of the Lawrence circuit court at that time. The case was transferred to the Greenup circuit court, where it remained without an order being made in it for 10 years, when it was retransferred to the Lawrence circuit court and the sale confirmed. A deed was made to Richard Apperson, Jr., executor of his *163father’s will. He sold the land' to R. F. Vinson, who failed to pay for it, and in time suit was brought by Lewis Apperson, administrator de bonis non, against Vinson to recover the purchase money. In due time a judgment was entered against Vinson. Upon this judgment execution issued and the land was levied upon. This execution was returned to court, no sale having been made under it. Later, under a vend, ex. it was sold, and J. H. Northup became the purchaser. He paid the purchase price, though at the time he filed his answer in this spit no deed had been made to him for the land. The Apperson deed was made by W. O. Ireland, a commissioner, and conveys the land by the following description: “All of the land's unsold by John Burchett and J. R. Ward in the 8,000-acre survey, and patented to Thomas Franklin.” The deed from Richard Apperson, Jr., as executor, to R. F. Vinson, thus describes the land: “All the land unsold by John Burchett and J. R. Ward in the 8,000-acre survey and patent of Thomas Franklin, and the land described in the deed' of sheriff of Lawrence county to James' Fulkerson, on file with the papers of the suit in chancery in Lawrence circuit court of John Burchett against J. R. Ward’s heirs. All situate in Lawrence county, Kentucky, on the waters of Sandy river between the Louisa and Tug Fork.” It is not altogether clear that the land involved in this litigation lies within the Franklin survey, for the vend. ex. under wMch it was sold directed the sheriff to sell, “a tract of land lying in Lawrence county and partly in Martin county, containing 4,000 acres, which land was deeded from Richard Apperson to R. F. Vinson,” etc. It will be observed that this- calls for 4,000 acres of land, which; was deeded by Richard Apperson to Vinson and others, *164and that it lies .partly in Lawrence and partly in Martin county,' Ky. From this description it is extremely doubtful if any of the Franklin survey was covered by this sale. However, as this question is not seriously raised by counsel for appellees in tbeir brief, and, as this opinion is rested upon another point, we have, not deemed it necessary to go into this question. This Franklin survey is fairly well fixed and located, but the exclusions referred to in the deed nnder which Northup claims, are not located, and neither Yinson nor Northup, both of whom testified, know how much land Northup claims, or where it is located; it being the contention of Northup andYinson as well that they purchased all of the land which had not theretofore been sold by Bnrcbett and "Ward, though how much or how little they do not know. Vinson testifies that, when he made the purchase, he supposed he was getting a large body of land, as he only understood that there was something like 3,000 acres which Burchett and Ward had sold.
■The first objection raised by appellant, to wit, that the pleadings did not support the judgment, has no merit in it. This is simply a suit for damages growing out of a trespass to'realty. The petition alleges plaintiff to- be the owner of the land upon which the timber stood; that without right defendant had entered upon this land and cut and removed or destroyed timber to the value of $1,000. Issue was joined upon each material allegation of the petition. In the proof but little attention was paid by appellant to- the question of the value of the timber; it being practically admitted that he had cut a certain amount of timber upon the land in question, and, if it developed that .this land belonged to plaintiff, then he recognized a liability to the extent of the timber so *165cut. Hence, in the main, the proof was directed toward establishing the question of ownership: For the end sought to be accomplished the pleadings were faultless.
The only question remaining is: Does the evidence support the finding of the chancellor? A great deal is said by counsel in brief as to what weight shall be given the finding of the chancellor in this case; it being argued on the one side that, this being an action at law, it should not have been transferred to the equity docket, but should have remained on the common-law docket and the questions at issue should have been tried by a jury, but that, inasmuch as it was transferred on motion of appel-' lant to the equity side of the docket, and tried by the chancellor, his finding and judgment is entitled to the same weight as the verdict of a properly instructed jury. For the appellants it is not argued that the case was properly transferred, but that as it was practiced as an equity case it should be treated as such, and the judgment of the court, while entitled to some weight, should not be upheld unless supported' by sufficient evidence, and that this court should consider and judge and determine as to the truth of the matters involved, and necessarily as to the correctness of the conclusion reached by the chancellor. The cause of action set out in the petition is a purely legal one. It alleges that plaintiff is the owner of certain described lands, and that the defendant had unlawfully and wrongfully entered thereon, and committed trespass to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. The petition also alleges that the defendant was threatening to commit other trespasses on the land, and would do so unless prevented by the injunctive process of the court. It *166prayed judgment for $1,000, the damage alleged to have been done, and asked that the defendant and his employes' he enjoined and' restrained from further trespass, etc. The suit for damages, being strictly a legal demand, was not cognizable- in equity; and prior to August, 1851, when the jurisdiction of the chancery courts was enlarged, could not have been considered in a chancery court, whereas the injunctive relief could be afforded only in a court of chancery. Subsection 3, section 11, Oiv. Code Prae.,. provides that: “If there be an issue which was not cognizable in chancery, and an- issue which was exclusively cognizable in chancery before the first of August, 1851, the plaintiff may have the former issue tried before the latter is disposed of. ’ ’
The answer of Northup simply places in issue the questions of ownership, trespass and damage set up in the petition, and pleaded title in himself. It is true this answer said that Vinson was a necessary party, and the court permitted him to be made a party, and the answer made, a cross-petition against, him; and, although' this was done, it in no wise-changed or affected the issue between plaintiff and defendant, and, when the issue was completed, no equitable issue was made by the pleadings. The case-should not have been transferred to the equity docket. It was purely an action for damages, and plaintiff was- entitled to have the questions as to ownership,, trespass, and damage taken up and settled before the question of her right to an injunction was considered.. She could have demanded and had submitted to a jury these questions, of fact; but, as she failed to-d‘o so and the case was practiced throughout as an equity ease, under the authority of McCampbell v. McCampbell, 103 Ky. 745, 46 S. W. 18, 20 Ky. Law *167Rep. 552, and Campbell v. Trosper, 108 Ky. 602, 57 S. W. 245, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 277, it will be treated as snob, and the case decided here upon its merits. The rule is that, where an action at law is tried by the court without the intervention of a.jury, his finding .is treated as- the verdict of a properly instructed jury, and the judgment based thereon will not be disturbed if there is any substantial evidence to support it. The reason for this rule is apparent. In such cases the evidence is given by the witnesses orally before the judge. He sees and observes them while they testify, and from their testimony he makes up his findings of fact upon which to base his judgment; but, where the case is prepared as an equity case and the testimony taken by deposition, all of the evidence is presented here for our consideration as» fully as it is in the lower court, and in such cases we judge the case on its merits; and the finding of the chancellor exerts a controlling influence only where upon the consideration of the entire record the mind is left in doubt.
. Plaintiffs show beyond question that Cornelius M. Pack had lived upon the 100-acre patent for many years, certainly for at least 24 years before the sale to William Sumner, and this 100 acres is within the Franklin patent. He had fenced some 30 or 40 acres of it, and exercised such arts of ownership over it that it can hardly be questioned that he had a,enquired a perfect title to this tract. Defendants’ counsel practically admit this to be true; but, as the timber in question was not cut off of this tract, it is insisted that the title to this tract, though perfected in plaintiffs, cannot aid them in their claim to- title to the remainder of the 925 acres. Having settled upon the 100 acres., Pack set about to have surveyed *168and patented to him other lands adjoining his holdings, until in¡ 1873 he had in this way acquired title to and was claiming the whole of the boundary of land in question. Having'acquired this property, as above indicated, the next question is: Did Cornelius M. Pack extend his possession over these after-acquired lands? Was he in the actual possession of the lands described in his deed to Sumner? Leander J. Pack, a son of Cornelius M. Pack, testifies that he was practically raised upon this land'; that Ms father lived there some 20 or 30 years before he sold it, and, as tenant of William Sumner, for 8 or 10 years after he sold it; that he was familiar with the land and its boundary; that he helped survey it at the time his father sold' it; that its boundary lines were well defined and marked in 1873, at which time his father sold' it. L. A. Preston says he helped survey it after this litigation was begun in 1898, and that in making said survey they ran by the deed from Pack to Sumner; that they found' part of the corners, some they did not; that they had no trouble in tracing and closing the calls, although this was some 25 or more years after the date of the conveyance by Pack to’ Sumner, during wliich time the face of the country had become more or less changed by reason of the fact that tire timber had in places been out and burned, while at other points the land had been cleared, still, without difficulty, they were able to discover several of the corners and to trace the boundary lines as set. out and' defined in the deed from Pack to Sumner. If these objects and lines were visible or easily discoverable after the lapse of so long a time, it is evident that the testimony of Leander J. Pack is true when he says that at tire time his father sold this, land its boundary was well defined and marked. At *169that time — i. e. in 1873 — from the evidence in this case, it is clear that Cornelius M. Pack was claiming all of the land which he sold to Sumner. He had lived upon it for many years, reared a large family upon it, and, as they grew to manhood, had settled his sons and a son-in-law upon parts of it. They built houses for themselves, fenced off portions of it, and exercised such acts of ownership as one would over lands of that character. Their father cut and sold timber from various parts of it as much as 15 or 20 years before the date of the conveyance to Sumner. The possession of his- sons and son-in-law was his possession, as they were not claiming against, but under him, and in 1873, and in fact for many years thereafter, according to the testimony of all the witnesses, no one disputed his title to any portion of the land which he conveyed to. Sumner. In fact, Yinson, who purchased in 1877, or four years after the date of the Sumner deed, does not claim that he attempted to put any one in possession of this land until 1881, when he leased to his tenant Fluty, and Fluty sublet, a portion of this lease to J. B. Peters.
Two propositions are clearly established by the evidence in this case: First, that Cornelius M. Pack had been in the actual possession of a part, if not all, of the land involved in this litigation for more than 15 years before he conveyed it to Sumner in 1873; and, second, that at the time of its conveyance hie was in the actual possession of all the land which he conveyed, claiming same to a fixed and well-established boundary. In the case of Cates v. Loftus’ Heirs, 4 T. B. Monroe 439, this court declared that, where one takes title to unoccupied land adjacent to that upon which he lives and in which he claims the fee, his possession by operation of law extends to the *170outside boundary of the newly acquired land. To the same effect are Young v. Withers, 8 Dana, 167; Griffith v. Dicken, 2 B. Monroe, 24; Smith’s Heirs v. Frost’s Devisees, 2 Dana, 146; Overton, etc., v. Perry, Jr., etc., 111 S. W. 369, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 931. This last case is the latest enunciation of this court upon this question. In that case the title to the land involved was made to- rest, upon adverse possession alone. In 1883 one William Mynheir purchased a tract of land adjoining his home farm on which he lived. Thereafter Mynheir had the two tracts of land surveyed and the boundary marked so that it included' the newly acquired land. From that time on he claimed to the outside boundary of the newly acquired land, and, in passing upon the question as to whether or not Mynheir would have to make a new entry upon this newly acquired land in order to extend his possession to and over it, this court said: “It was not necessary for him to make a new entry upon the land for the reason that the land being contiguous to his home place, and, being surrounded by a well-defined boundary, Mynheir’s possession upon acquiring tbe land immediately extended to the whole boundary thereof. ’ ’ And in the cases of Scott, etc. v. Mineral Development Company, 130 Fed. 497, 64 C. C. A. 659, appealed from the circuit court for tbe Eastern District of Kentucky, this principle was fully recognized and upheld. To the same effect is Taylor & Crate v. Burt & Brabb Lumber Co., 109 S. W. 348, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 191.
Applying the principle announced and recognized •in the foregoing authorities to the case at bar, we find that-as soon as Cornelius M. Pack acquired a patent or deed to the tracts of land adjoining his original 100-aere patent, upon which he lived, and in *171which it is conceded he held a good title, his possession was at once by operation of law extended to the outside boundary of the thus newly acquired land where the same was marked and defined, unless said newly acquired land was at the time in the possession of someone else. The evidence shows conclusively that the land in controversy constitutes one body and all adjoins the-original home farm of Cornelius M. Pack; that its outside boundary was in 1873 well defined and marked; and that at the time of its sale and conveyance to Sumner -no one other than Pack and his immediate family was in the possession of same or any part thereof. Nor is there any evidence that any one else at that time or for many years thereafter was making claim to any part thereof. Sumner was placed in possession of the entire tract of land upon the date of his purchase, and he, through his tenants, remained in possession thereof until he died, and his wife and plaintiffs have been in control since that date. .This evidence clearly made out for plaintiffs a prima facie case, and shifted the burden upon defendant.
Defendant introduced some witnesses who say that as his tenants they took possession of some land in 1881 for him, but it is not clear from their testimony whether or not they ever attempted to take possession of the land involved in this litigation. Nor has defendant shown that he had any right to this land. If it was a part of any of the exclusions referred to in his deed, then he had no right to possession. As he did not know what, if any land, he bought, or if he bought any land, under his purchase, where it was located, we are unable to see how it can with hope of success be claimed that his agents ever took possession of his land or land to which he was rightfully *172entitled. Conceding- that defendant’s agents attempted to take possession of Ms land for Mm, it is an open question whether they did or not. The burden is upon him to show and establish the tracts excluded from his purchase, and until this is done he could not know where Ms land, if he owns any, is located. He has failed to show that the land involved in this litigation does not form a part of some one of the exclusions referred to1 in the Apper'son deed, and, until these exclusions are ascertained' and located, he cannot know whether or not the land in question was ever purchased by him. Under this state of the record the chancellor was fully warranted in reaching the conclusion which he did.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.