42 W. Va. 10 | W. Va. | 1896
In the Circuit Court of Nicholas county, July 29, 1891, Jane Bryant and John K. Bryant, her husband, filed tlieir bill in chancery against Washington Groves and the other
The question first presented is whether the pleadings and exhibits filed therewith justified the decree. If not, then the defendants are without reason to complain of the court for refusing them a continuance. The bill contains the following allegations, to wit: “That the said William Groves, during the whole of the years 1872 and 1173, owned, held, and had, in said county and in Kentucky district, the district in which said lands are situated, and in his possession, more than sufficient and plenty of personal estate, such as a wagon, blacksmith tools, cattle, windmill, and beds, etc., and money, visible and to be seen, out of which it was the duty of said sheriff' to collect the said taxes for 1872 upon said tracts of land; and it was the duty of said sheriff'to have collected and realized said taxes out of said personal estate, aud said William Groves was ready and willing in fact, to pay said taxes, and desired to pay same, and did not know at the time that said lands were illegally returned delinquent as aforesaid, all which facts were well known
Plaintiffs further aver that the said William Groves, in his lifetime made advancements to all of his said children, with the exception of the said Jane Bryant and Elizabeth Dorsey, equal in value to the full share of each in all of his estate; and it was intended, understood, and agreed by,
The answer of Washington Groves plainly and positively denies these allegations, and there is no proof to sustain them.
In the second point in the syllabus in the case of Pusey v. Gardner, 21 W. Va. 469, it was held: “The burden of charging as well as proving fraud, mistake, or misrepresentation is on the party alleging it; and a plaintiff is no more entitled to recover without sufficient averments in his bill than he is without proof of his averments when properly made. The one is as essential as the other, and both must concur, or relief can not be granted.” Hence these allegations must be considered as entirely waived by the plaintiffs -when they insisted on a hearing without proof thereof, andas though they were entirely stricken from the case as completely as if never made. The case would then rest on the following admitted and established facts: That the land in controversy, having been returned delinquent for the non-payment of taxes for the year 1872, in the name of William Groves, the then owner, was sold on the 14th day of October, 1873, and purchased by Washington Groves; and hot having been redeemed by William Groves in the manner provided by law, the purchaser obtained a deed therefor from the county court clerk on the 12th day of April, 1875, and immediately had the same recorded, and had the laud transferred on the land books to himself,
It is alleged, and not denied, as an excuse, that the female plaintiff'was under the coverture of the male plaintiff’, who unites in this suit, aud therefore she was disabled from bringing the same. But such excuse is not tenable, for this is a suit by husband and wife jointly for the recovery of the wife’s separate property, which might have been brought thirteen years before, or at any succeeding period. In the case of Simpson v. Edmiston, 23 W. Va. 675 (eighth point of syllabus) it is held that “a purchaser of land sold for delinquent taxes, after he acquires a deed therefor, will
As heretofore shown, while the plaintiffs attempt in their bill to explain the cause of the delay in the assertion of their rights, such allegations are denied, and are without evidence to sustain them. Hence there is no satisfactory explanation of their delay. Bill v. Schilling, 39 W. Va. 108 (19 S. E. 514); Whittaker v. Improvement Co., 34 W. Va. 229 (12 S. E. 507); Curlett v. Newman, 30 W. Va. 182 (3 S. E. 578); Pusey v. Gardner, 21 W. Va. 470; Trader v. Jarvis, 23 W. Va. 100; Hale v. Cole, 31 W. Va. 585 (8 S. E. 516); Walker v. Ruffner, 32 W. Va. 297 (9 S. E. 215).
At the time the land was sold for taxes, it was of but little value, as is evidenced by the tax assessments. It was wild, unimproved, situated in a remote part of Nicholas county, far away from a railroad or other public improvements, and was n.ot worth the annual tax, though small, except as a mere matter of future speculation. Eor these reasons, William Groves may have concluded it not worth redemption, and permitted the tax deed to stand, as it relieved him from the payment of the taxes. His silence under the circumstances is strongly presumptive of the waiver of his rights, and his assent to the acquirement of title on the part of his son. The plaintiffs allow thirteen years after the death of William Groves to slip, away, although, as they claim, the female plaintiff, by arrangement with father and children, was to have one-half of the lands for her inheritance; yet they made no effort during the wdiole time to take possession of the land, or pay the taxes thereon, but sit idly by and allow Washington Groves to hold the land in his own name, and pay the taxes, vdthout an offer to reimburse him. In the meantime the country is developed, railroads and highways are built, rivers are slacked and cleared of obstructions, sawmills are brought into the county, the way to the market is opened, the land becomes
In their brief, counsel for plaintiffs say: “The decree was rendered in the court below upon the bill and answer and exhibits therewith filed, and must stand or fall upon the same showing here;” also that “this is not a case of fraud, nor one depending on parol evidence,” — thus abandoning all the charges of fraud, misconduct, or deception on the part of the defendant Washington Groves, and leaving their clients without any excuse whatever for their long delay in not attacking his tax deed, which they allege to be illegal and void.
While it is true that the burden of proving an affirmative allegation in an answer as matter of defense is on the defendant, such as the statute of limitations, yet the defendant can not be called upon to prove anything until the plaintiff'has, by his allegations and proofs, established such a case as would entitle him to relief, in absence of rebutting proof on the part of the defendant. This the plaintiff's have failed to do, and therefore they have not shown themselves entitled to the relief sought; and, for this reason the decree will be reversed, and the bill be dismissed.