50 W. Va. 604 | W. Va. | 1901
This is a chancery suit in the circuit court of Barbour County brought by Maggie Bennett against W. N. Pierce to enforce a lien for purchase money reserved in a deed of conveyance from Bennett to Pierce, resulting in a decree against Pierce for the purchase money and subjecting the land to sale, from which decree Pierce appeals.
Pierce resists payment of the purchase money on the ground of defects in the title to the land conferred by the deed from Bennett to him. This case was once before in this Court, as will be seen in 45 W. Va. 654. It was there stated that two of the deeds were defective as to married women, heirs of John Dalton, because of insufficient certificates of acknowledgment. As to four of the said femes, Elizabeth, Ingaby and Martha Dalton and Airy Barnes, the defect alluded to has been cleared up, so that Pierce can be in no peril therefrom. Elizabeth and Ingaby Dalton have by a new deed made since the former decision of this Court, and before the last decree of the circuit court, cured the vice of their former deed. Martha was not an heir, but the wife of an heir, and is dead, so that there is no danger from her claim. Airy Barnes died some six years before the decree, and-her husband some fourteen years before, and the statute of lim
It will be said that some of these heirs were married women, or infants, perhaps. We do not know from the record just when the husbands died, or if an heir died whether his children were infants, and if so when they ceased to be. The answer I make to this suggestion is this, that as shown above Pierce is holding under an executed contract, a deed, not an executory contract, and he holds the affirmative on the assertion, or rather the suggestion, that there are defects, and he must prove every element essential to establish that there is an outstanding and still-subsisting interest, not barred by limitations, When one is de
This disposes of the whole case so that it is hardly necessary to notice separately the exception of Pierce to the commissioner’s report on the ground that he did not, as required by the decree, report the character of the estate of John Dalton vested in Maggie Bennett, and what part of such estate and the character thereof was outstanding, and in whom vested. The commissioner substantially complied with this requisition, reporting that the true title was vested in Maggie Bennett. We see no reason to reverse the decree, and it is therefore affirmd.
Affirmed.