.Opinion'of the Court by
Judge Miller— Reversing.
. This is the • second appeal of this case^ Under the opinion npon the former appeal, which may he fonnd in 30 Ky. Law Rep., 634, the only question left to he determined npon the return of the case to the circuit court was, whether appellant bought the 80 acres, he claims, with the knowledge that appellee was claiming below the old Schroeder line, marked E. P. on the diagram made a part of the opinion. A jury trial was had npon *619that issue, which resulted in a hung jury; whereupon the court, on May 20th, 1908, upon its own motion, referred the cause to the master commissioner to report on the question as to who was the owner of the land in contro-, versy; and, in determining that question, he should consider “all the evidence in the record,” and any additional evidence that might be offered. At the time this order was made there was neither objection or exception to the ruling; but, on the next day thereafter, the appellant moved the court to be allowed to object and except to the order made the day before. No ruling, however, was made upon the motion. Subsequently, on M!arch 18th, 1910, appellant’s attorneys filed an affidavit stating that defendant’s attorneys had objected to the order of May 20th, 1908, transferring this action to the equity docket, with direction .to the commissioner as above indicated. At the November term, 1909, the commissioner filed his report, in which he found-that the appellant, Young, was-the owner of the land in controversy-; and no exceptions having been filed to said report, it was confirmed two. days later, and by a formal judgment the plaintiff’s petition was dismissed, and appellant was adjudged to be the owner of the land in controversy. On the next succeeding day, however, the judgment was set aside upon the motion of appellee, without any grounds having been' assigned therefor, and the appellee thereupon filed exceptions to the report of the commissioner. Upon the trial of said exceptions the appellant offered to read, the' evidence heard upon the former jury trial, ás shown by the bill' of exceptions therein, to which motion the appellee objected. The court sustained the objection and refused to hear the evidence; and; having expressed the opinion that the- exceptions should be sustained, and that appellee should have judgment, the appellant their moved the court to refer the action to a jury to try the issue raised by the pleadings. At the October term,' 1910, the court entered a final judgment overruling ap-' pellsmt’s motion for a jury trial, and determining thaf the appellee, Duggins, was the owner, and entitled to the ■ possession of the land in dispute. From .that judgment: Young appeals.
Appellant insists that the court erred in transferring the case to the equity docket and in refusing to sustain his motion for a jury trial. Treating appellant’s motion to -have his objection to the order of -transfer noted of record as having been waived on. account of his fail- ■ *620ure to press it to a determination, we are of opinion that appellant’s motion for a jury trial was waived by his subsequent acts in moving the court to try the case upon appellee’s exceptions to the commissioner’s report, before it had passed upon his motion for a jury trial. Furthermore, nearly a year after the case had been transferred appellant gave his own deposition, and took another deposition, in support of his view of the ease. It was then too late for him to insist upon his right to a jury trial. In its controlling facts this case is strikingly like Blanton v. Howard, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 929, wherein this court said:
“From our view of the case it was not necessary to discuss the question as to whether the appellants had the right to have the issues of fact tried by a jury. The case was referred to the commissioner without objection by the appellants; they appeared before the commissioner, introduced their testimony and when the commissioner made his report they appeared and filed exceptions to the report, which were tried by the court. This was all done without any objection upon their part.' In our opinion it is too late now to make the question that the ease should not have been referred to the commissioner, and as to the proceedings had in the case.”
The effect of appellant’s course in this case was to proceed under the order transferring the case to equity without objection, until the case had been prepared and tried; it was then too late to ask a jury trial
We are of opinion, however, that the court was in error when it refused to permit appellant to read in evidence the proof which had been taken by the official stenographer on the jury trial. The order of the court directed the commissioner to consider all the evidence in the record. This proof was a part of the record at that time, and we see no reason why, under the order in this case, the proof should have been retaken in the shape of formal depositions, since the order was broad enough to embrace this proof, and was not objected to by appellee. This practice was approved in Finley v. Meadows, 134 Ky., 75 — where the proof had been taken by the official stenographer in the jury trial, and the ease, as here, had been subsequently transferred to equity.
Furthermore, this excluded proof contained the testimony of seven witnesses,' which tended strongly to support appellant’s view of the case, and had been used by *621the commissioner in making his report to which appellee was excepting. Aside from the question of the admissibility of the evidence in the shape of a former bill of exceptions, and as a mere matter’of procedure, the appellee should have made his objection to its use by an exception to the commissioner’s report; and, in case of the exclusion of the transcript, appellant would then have had the opportunity of curing the defect. If any of the testimony could not have been secured for the subsequent trials, appellant had the undoubted right under section 4643 of the Kentucky Statutes to use the transcript of the former evidence to that extent.
For the error in excluding this proof, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, with instructions to try the case upon the record as made up including the testimony embraced in the bill of exceptions as a part of the proof.