6 W. Va. 452 | W. Va. | 1873
Plaintiff alleges in his bill that the heirs and devisees of Bishop Cleggett owned about 1100 acres of land on Big Sandy creek, in the county of Barbour, a large portion of which was wild and uncultivated, but unusually fertile and valuable. That one Hester H. Kittle made two entries and surveys upon said land, one of 85 acres, and another of 187 acres, adjoining lands belonging to Henry Keiscr and John Dolten, which surveys and entries were made about the year 1853. That Plaintiff being one of the heirs of said 1100 acres, and as well the attorney to sell the same, entered caveats to prevent
The assignment to Woods is not attested by two witnesses, though it was acknowledged before a justice and admitted to record. The assignment of Woods to Plaintiff, though attested by two witnesses, was never otherwise acknowledged, and was never admitted to record. The agreement or covenant named in the answer of Woods is filed, and is dated the 15th day of May 1857, and is a sealed instrument. The agreement is substantially as stated in the answer of Woods, except the Clegget tract is described as containing 2,010 acres, instead of 1,100. In the agreement, among other things, it is stipulated that; “In consideration of the premises, and for the sole purpose of settling the said caveats, and forever quieting
The following errors are assigned by Plaintiff’s counsel as being sufficient to reverse the decree, viz:
There was no proof that the 85 acres were outside of the other survey. The court ought to have had that fact verified by actual survey or otherwise.
3. Assuming that land was the consideration of the debt, it was at most a claim of title, not a title. If anything passed or appeared to pass by the contract it was at most a doubtful equity — not a title, because if notin the survey of 1,100 acres, or 2,010 acres, it passed nothing, and if in it, it passed nothing, as the title was already in Clegget to that survey.'
4. As the title to the 85 acre tract was repudiated by the court, the sum of $200 should have been ratably abated, for if it was not so, and both tracts were outside of the large survey, Woods would get the lands and the compromise money too, which is not consistent with the idea that there was a lien on the land.
The cause was heard upon the bill and answers without replication. It is provided by the 35th and 36th secs, of Chap. 125 of the Code that, “The defendant in a suit in equity may, in his answer, allege any new matter constituting a claim for affirmative relief in such suit, in the same manner and with like effect as if the same had been alleged in a cross bill filed by him therein; and in such case, if the plaintiff desire to controvert the relief prayed for in the answer, he shall file a a reply in writing, denying such allegations of the said answer as he does not admit to be true, and stating any facts constituting a defence thereto. Every material allegation of the bill not controverted by an answer, and every material allegation of new matter in the answer constituting a claim for affirmative relief, not controverted by a reply, shall, for the purposes of the suit, be taken as true, and no proof thereof shallbe required.” Under these provisions of the Code, and the practice in chancery, all the material allegations of the answer of Woods must betaken as true, in the absence of any replication. Woods
The assignment of Kittle to 'Woods is not an assignment of the certificates of survey, but only an assignment of the interest of Kittle in the surveys. The assignment of Kittle to Woods vested in Woods the equitable right to demand and receive from Kittle the legal title when patents issued upon the entries and surveys. The same remarks apply to the assignment from Woods to Plaintiff, except that Plaintiffs right to demand and receive the legal title when patents issued, is subject to the provisions of his agreement with Woods. As Plaintiff never paid the ¡§200 of purchase money to Woods, and Kittle not having conveyed the legal title to Woods or Plaintiff, nor Woods to Plaintiff, Woods may properly assert a lien against the 187 acres in this suit. Plaintiff in his bill says the assignment to Woods was made to him for valuable consideration, thereby in effect alleging that he had paid to Woods the purchase money. This allegation is denied by the answer, and the answer alleges that the whole of the $200 of purchase money with its interest is unpaid. The agreement of Plaintiff and Woods shows the amount of the purchase money, and so does the answer of Woods which is taken as true. See the doctrine as to purchase money liens, when the legal title is not conveyed by deed to the purchaser, fully discussed in the opinion of the Court of Appeals of Virginia, in the case of Yancey vs. Mauck, et als, 15 Gratt., 300. We think the principles held in that case as to liens 'are correct in cases to which they are applicable, and that some of them are applicable to this case, and tend to support the decree made by the Court below as to the lien for $200, &c.
What we have already said in another place as to the payment of the $200 and interest, and in addition thereto the conveyance of so much of each of the smaller tracts to Woods as is not within the boundaries of the larger tract as claimed by Plaintiff, applies to the fourth assignment of error. The language of the agreement between Plaintiff and Woods is that, “ In addition to said sum of two hundred dollars to be paid as aforesaid, said Thomas John Clagget further agrees to convey, &c.” It is clear from this provision, that an abatement of the purchase money as now claimed by Plaintiff, was not contemplated or expected by either party at the making of the agreement. The fourth assignment of error is therefore not well founded.
In addition to the above assignment of errors, it is claimed here that the agreement of Woods and Plaintiff is as to the boundaries of a tract of 2,010, and not of 1,100 acres, and that the smaller tracts may not be embraced within the boundaries of the 1,100 acres, and still embraced within the boundaries of the 2,010 acres as claimed by Plaintiff. It is evident from the allegations of the bill and the answers that the parties, in
For these reasons the decree of the Circuit Court, which is appealed from, must be affirmed, and the appel-