76 W. Va. 370 | W. Va. | 1915
Plaintiffs, some of whom are the heirs at law of David G. Sayers, their co-plaintiffs joining them because of the existing marital relation, brought this suit, praying cancellation of a deed made to defendants by the heirs of H. C. Auvil as a cloud on plaintiffs’ title to a tract of 51 acres of land in McDowell county, and for other relief later referred .to and discussed; and from a decree denying such relief and dismissing their bill, plaintiffs have appealed.
Sayers died intestate, seized and possessed of a tract of 3139 acres, embracing, according to plaintiffs’ contention, the 51 acres in controversy. He acquired exclusive title to the tract under a decree of partition entered July 5, 1889, in the chancery cause of William A. Whitley and others against Henry Harrison’s heirs and others, pursuant to the report of T. P. Brewster and A. J. Beavers, two of the commissioners appointed for the purpose by a decree entered at the preceding May term of the court having jurisdiction of the cause. On October 25, 1889, Sayers, out of lands other than the tract claimed by plaintiffs, conveyed to H. C. «Auvil 100 acres, which defendants claim embraces the lands in controversy, the title to which descend to their grantors as heirs at law of the grantee.
Apparently acting upon the theory or belief that their title was free from taint and unassailable on any reasonable ground, defendants early in the year 1909 constructed a building on the 51 acres, and in it as their tenant placed one Joe Crigger to hold for them possession of the lands, then and perhaps still unenclosed. True, the building was hastily constructed and temporary in character, but not in these particulars different from many others in mountainous parts of many counties in this and other states. But, whatever its character and purpose, plaintiffs conceived, and in the nighttime carried into execution, the plan whereby they sought to effect a change in possession, by inducing defendant’s tenant to exchange residences with his cousin, Jim Crigger, plaintiffs’ tenant on adjoining lands, the purpose being to secure for themselves such possession as would confer jurisdiction to maintain this suit to cancel defendants’ deeds as clouds on their title. For, virtually without exception, the rule is that, unless some other special grounds for equitable intervention are averred, a holder of the legal title to real estate must, in order to maintain* a bill' to quiet title or remove cloud, be in possession of the land when the proceeding is instituted. Clearly, such is the requirement in this jurisdiction. Poling v. Poling, 61 W. Va. 78; Whitehouse v. Jones, 60 W. Va.
Such possession plaintiffs did not have when they brought this suit, if they fraudulently obtained that on which they now rely, unless the 51 acres are a part of the 3139 acres; because possession so procured will not avail as ground for the maintenance of a bill quia timet. As an essential jurisdictional fact, the possession necessary for such relief in equity must have been acquired in a legal manner. Campbell v. Davis, 85 Ala. 56; Hardin v. Jones, 86 Ill. 313; Trotter v. Slayton, 41 Ore. 117; Stark v. Storr, 6 Wall. 402; Goldsmith v. Gillelmd, 22 Fed. 865; Collier v. Carlisle, 133 Ala. 478. So that plaintiffs’ effort to put themselves in a position to say by their bill that they had possession of the lands in dispute cannot secure the endorsement or approval of á court of equity. Such endorsement would set at naught the provisions of §4, ch. 93, Code, saying: “The attornment of a tenant to any stranger shall be void, unless it be with the consent of the landlord of such tenant or pursuant to or in-consequence of the judgment, order or decree of a court”. Construing this section, we said, in effect, in Coal & Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co., 71 W. Va. 21, Voss v. King, 33 W. Va. 236, and Stover v. Davis, 57 W. Va. 196, among other cases, that the recognition of the title of another than the landlord who put him in possession, or attornment to such other, by the tenant of an adversary claimant, will not interrupt the continuity of the landlord’s possession except as provided by that section, unless with knowledge or notice the landlord acquiesces in the disloyal conduct of his tenant; or, as in Voss v. King, if a tenant takes a secret lease or conveyance from -another claiming to be the true owner, without the knowledge of his landlord, the character of his possession will not be altered. 32 Cyc. 1341.
But plaintiffs argue that as defendants were trespassers on the 51' acres, their acquisition of the possession was not wrongful, but legitimate and lawful, and therefore not an
Of the same character, and subject to the same criticism, is the further argument sought to be impressed upon us, that, as .plaintiffs were and continuously since the death of Sayers had been in possession of the 3139 acres, they were also in possession of the 51 acres, because the latter was a part of the Sayers tract. As observed, this contention assumes as true the subject matter of the whole controversy. If the fact be as so assumed, this litigation must terminate favorably to plaintiffs; for they have had possession of, and paid taxes on, the 3139 acres, and every part of it since the death of their ancestor. But, as indicated, there exists a real and substantial disagreement between plaintiffs and defendants as to the exact situs of the 51 acres, and that diversity involves a determination of the question whether the land in dispute falls within the exterior boundaries of 3139 acres allotted to David G-. Sayers in the decree of partition in the Whitley suit, or within the boundaries of the 100 acres conveyed by Him to Auvil by the deed of October 25, 1889.
Having reached the conclusion that plaintiffs did not, at the institution of this suit, have the possession deemed requisite solely for cancellation of defendants’ deeds as clouds on the title to the 51 acres, was there jurisdiction' on other grounds alleged in the original and amended bills to grant such relief? Plaintiffs assign as erroneous the virtual refusal of their claim for recovery of the timber removed from the land in controversy by defendants’ vendees. The fact of such sale and removal, while denied in the answers, is substantially proved. But defendants contest the right to such recovery, on the ground of ownership under their deeds from the Auvil heirs. Surely, such relief alone, based -as it is upon controverted claims of title, does not justify the main
Plaintiffs also seek to support equitable jurisdiction for the award of relief by cancellation, upon the averment that defendants fraudulently procured the inclusion of the lands in controversy in the grant to them by the Auvil heirs, with knowledge that the.51 acres were not conveyed by Sayers to their ancestor, wherefore his heirs had no title to pass to defendants. But this charge cannot avail for any purpose, wúthout evidence to support it; and we find none in the record.
Bid the prayer for an injunction, upon the mere probability or inference that the defendant Dry Pork Colliery Company would proceed to mine coal under the 51 acres, confer jurisdiction in equity to grant the relief prayed by plaintiffs ?' Although equity has, under certain limitations, jurisdiction to restrain a trespass, the only allegation in the original bill is to th'e effect that defendants Lambert, Taylor and Litz have leased the 51 acres, together with other adjoining lands, to the colliery company for the mining of the coal therein, and that it was then engaged in operations on the adjoining lands, “and will mine and remove all the coal from the 51 acres unless restrained from so doing”. Nor are the averments of the amended bill definite as to the acts and purposes of the company. The charge therein is that the company “is now mining and removing coal” from a mine situated on such other land; that it “is asserting the right to mine and remove the coal from said 51 acres”; that its operations are so situated that “the coal in said 51 acres can be mined and removed from said mine now open and being operated; “that so far as they know or are informed” the company “may be now actually mining the coal” under the 51 acres, “and that if defendants are allowed to mine and remove the same they will thereby destroy the corpus
' But, with more merit, plaintiffs contend that the averments contained in defendants’ answers in the nature of cross-bills, that they have title and actual possession of the 51 acres, and praying affirmative relief by the cancellation of plaintiffs’ title to the tract should the court be of opinion the 51 acres was part of the lands conveyed by the Auvil heirs, gave jurisdiction, agreeably to the doctrine asserted in 32 Cyc. 1338, that a defendant who files a cross-bill to quiet title thereby gives jurisdiction of the whole controversy, although plaintiff asking the same relief as to his title is not in possession of the land encumbered. But, after the court had expressed a purpose to deny plaintiffs’ any relief upon their bill, and before the entry of the decree now under review, it being entered upon a rehearing awarded on plaintiffs’ petition, defendants moved to strike from their answers any and all allegations of new matter, if any were averred, as grounds for affirmative relief by way of cancellation of plaintiffs’ deeds as clouds on defendants’ title, and for specific performance of an alleged contract to convey the lands in dispute if not already embraced in the 100 acres, which motion was sustained, and such matter stricken from the answers, over plaintiffs’ protest and objection. Whether this ruling was erroneous, as plaintiffs contend, it is unnecessary to decide, because they were not prejudiced by it.
For, conceding as unwarranted the withdrawal of the new matter in the answers of defendants and their prayer for affirmative relief, it is proper to inquire whether, under the proof, equity has jurisdiction to remove a cloud from or quiet the title of either party to the suit. To confer jurisdic
Does the case fall within the limitations so prescribed? After stating that the land granted is located "on the south side of Dry fork of Tug river, adjoining lands of Preston Beavers and lands of said Sayers and said Auvil, and being the lower part of the lands sold to J. A. Mulkey by D. G-. Sayers and Harrison August 4, 1879, for which they executed their title bond, which has since been assigned to H. C. Auvil”, the deed from Sayers to Auvil further bounds and describes the 100 acres as "beginning at a spotted oak, corner to 100 acres known as the Harvey George tract, thence a straight line up the hill to a low gap on top of the ridge that divides Dry fork and the Left-hand fork- of Lick branch, thence running up said ridge with the top thereof to the head of the Lynn hollow, thence down a spur between said hollow and Dry fork to the division line made by and between Daniel Johnson and Albert- Sheppard, former owners of said land, thence with said division line to- line of said 100 acres, and
We are therefore of opinion to affirm the decree.
Affirmed.