78 W. Va. 735 | W. Va. | 1916
This writ of error’ was awarded Davis Colliery Company, a corporation, plaintiff, to a judgment of the circuit court of Randolph county in favor of the defendants, W. E. and I. B. Westfall, rendered upon the verdict of a jury, in an action of ejectment, finding defendants entitled, in fee simple, to 295 acres of land, a part of the land claimed by plaintiff. Defendants offered no evidence and relied upon the insufficiency of plaintiff’s evidence to identify the land claimed by it.
It is proven, and was also admitted by opposing counsel, in his oral argument, that the contending parties claim title to the 295 acres from Alfred Hutton as a common source, plaintiff claiming, mediately, under a special commissioner’s deed, made in 1897, pursuant to decrees pronounced in certain creditors’ suits brought against Alfred Hutton, in his lifetime, for the enforcement of liens against his real estate,
The record of the proceedings in the above-mentioned creditors’ suits was admitted as evidence, and the proceedings therein show that they were referred to a commissioner to ascertain and report the lands owned by said Hutton and the liens thereon. The commissioner reported as follows: “that he has ascertained from the evidence of Alfred Hutton taken by him, your commissioner, on the 9th day of December 1891 that the said Alfred Hutton is the owner of the following real estate, to-wit: 700 acres in the District of Middle Fork in said county of Randolph, on the waters of the Middle Fork River near the town of West Huttonsville, being a part of a 1000 acre tract bequeathed to the said Alfred Hutton by his father. ’ ’ He also reported him to be the owner of other tracts, likewise described by acreage and location, but with which we are not now concerned, a portion of the land, described as 700 acres, being all that is here involved.
It appears that, in those suits, all the lands then owned by said Alfred Hutton were sold, and were not sufficient to pay all the liens thereon, and that other lands, which had been previously aliened by him and which were liable in the hands, of the purchasers, were' also sold. The lands of his alienees: could not have been sold, if he had had any land remaining-After modifying the commissioner’s report in some respects* immaterial to the matter .under consideration, the court corn-firmed it, and decreed Alfred Hutton’s lands to be sold, and., in the decree of sale, described the tract in question as follows: “One tract of seven hundred acres in the district of Middle Fork in this County on the waters of the Middle Fork River near the town of West Huttonsville, being a part
After his death, the heirs of Alfred Hutton, conceiving that only 700 acres, part of a larger tract then owned by him, had been sold, conveyed to defendants 295 acres, by metes and bounds, out of the 996 acres. So. that, the question presented is one of description, or identity of plaintiff’s land; its title is not disputed. Defendants insist that the description in plaintiff’s title papers does not embrace the 295 acres which they claim under' a deed from Alfred Hutton’s heirs. That is certain which is capable of being made certain, is a familiar legal maxim. And recognizing the burden of identifying its land and proving that its boundaries included the land claimed by defendants, before it could recover, plaintiff put in evidence the proceedings in the aforesaid suits, which was not only proper, but also necessary in order to prove its title. Defendants insist that those proceedings show that only 700 acres, not defined by metes and bounds or otherwise identified, were sold out of the larger tract of 1000 acres, whereas plaintiff insists -that the remnant, which Alfred Hutton then owned, of a larger tract described as containing 1000 acres, was sold, and was a distinct tract and simply described as containing 700 acres, and that it is immaterial whether it contained more or less than that number 'of acres. As we have already indicated, we think it clearly appears that it was the purpose, in those suits, to sell all the land Alfred Hutton then owned.
After the death of Alfred Hutton, his heirs brought a partition suit against this plaintiff, which was dismissed. Plaintiff offered the record of that proceeding in evidence, which the court rejected, upon objection of defendants, and this is assigned as error. A demurrer to the bill in that case was
The judgment will be reversed, the verdict set aside and the case remanded.
Reversed, verdict set aside and case remanded.