3 W. Va. 426 | W. Va. | 1869
John Mitchell, of Lewis county, in his life time owned a tract of land in that county, containing 1,000 acres, which was conveyed to him by Hanway and Anderson.
Prior to August, 1835, he had sold and conveyed all of said tract except about 269 acres, 240 of the 1,000 acres having been conveyed to his son, John Mitchel, Jr.
On the 14th of August, 1835, John Mitchel, the father, executed a paper in the nature of a title bond whereby he bound himself to make his right to one undivided half of the residue of the 1,000 acres to his daughter, Jane God-frey and her heirs, and the other half was to belong to his daughter, Margaret Mitchel. Mrs. Godfrey and her husband John Godfrey, had taken possession of the eastern end of the 269 acres some time before this, and .built a house and made some improvements under, as she claims, a verbal promise of her father to sell her the one-half of the said residue or remnant of the 1,000 acre tract.
Margaret Mitchel, it appears, became dissatisfied with the arrangement thus made for her, and her father afterwards took the land back and sold it to his son, John Mitchel, and made .other provisions for Margaret. John Mitchel, the father, afterwards departed this life, leaving numerous children and grand-children, a portion of whom afterwards conveyed to the said John Mitchel, Jr., the land so purchased of his father in his life time.
Some time in the year 1838, probably in March, a partition of the residue of the 1,000 acres was made between John Mitchel, Jr., and Jane and John Godfrey, and each of the parties took and held their respective parts thereafter in severalty according to the division line made at the time.
On the 19th of March, 1838, John Mitchel, Jr., sold by metes and bounds, a portion of the part that fell to him in the partition to one John Bond up to and adjoining on part of the division line, and afterwards conveyed the same to him by deed bearing date on the 2nd day of May, 1843. And on the 26th of April, 1843, he conveyed the residue of his part to one Jacob Heavener.
The bill alleges that John Mitchel, the father, in his life time, having told the complainant, Jane Godfrey, (then a widow with three children), that he would sell her the one half of the residue of the 1,000 acre tract, which they allege contained 300 or 400 acres, she, upon the faith of this promise, moved and settled on the eastern end of it, and built a house and made some improvements, and afterwards intermarried with the said John Godfrey; and that after this the title bond of her father, John Mitchel, was executed binding him to make her title to one-half of the residue of the 1,000 acres, and giving her sister, Margaret Mitchel, the other half.
The bill charges that John Mitchel, Jr., after the death of his father and after the complainants had been in possession, for some time, without their knowledge, procured one Michael G. Bush, a surveyor, to run a division line between them, giving to them not more than 50 or 60 acres of not more than equal value, exclusive of improvements, with the residue of said tract, and that they strenuously protested against the inequality of the partition at the time it was made and ever since. That both Bond and Heavener had notice when they purchased, thattheland was undivided, also that they notified Bond when he was making his improvements that he was trespassing on their rights and they intended to bring suit, &c.
The said Bond and Heavener filed their separate answers to this bill, in which they each deny that they had notice or knowledge at the time they respectively purchased, that the land was undivided, but on the contrary they each aver that the division was not made at the instance of John Mitchel, Jr., alone, but that it was made by the complainants and
Numerous depositions were taken on the question of the inequality of the division made by the complainants and John Mitchel, Jr., .and the acquieseenees of the complainants in said partition.
The testimony as to the equality of the partition so made is conflicting, but preponderates in favor of the complainants.
The court upon the hearing rendered a decree for partition and appointed commissioners for the purpose, 'who proceeded to make another partition and reported that the former partition was unequal, and they accordingly gave to the complainants 35f acres more land, making their share 102-1 acres, instead of 661- as iQ the former partition, a part of the 35-f acres being taken off the Bond part and the residue off of the defendant Iieavener’s part.
The report of the commissioners was confirmed by the final decree in the cause, which is the error complained of here.
It is insisted by the appellants that, under the facts and circumstances of this case, they ought not now to be disturbed in their possessions, whether the partition made by
That the complainants, with a full knowledge of their own rights in the premises and of the respective purchases of the appellants and the-payment of their purchase money and the making of improvements on the land, stood by and failed to make known to the appellants, or either of them, their alleged rights and claim to the land so purchased, or to express any dissatisfaction with the partition so made between th.em and John Mitchel, Jr., and that by their concealment of their right, if any they had, and their acquiescence in the purchase of the appellants the complainants are estopped and ought not to be permitted in a court of equity to assert any right or title to the land in controversy, as to the appellees.
No principle of equity seems to be better established, or is more readily applied in a court of equity, than that if a person knowing his own rights stands by and encourages or permits an innocent party to purchase his property or to make valuable improvements upon it without making known to such purchaser his rights in the property, is es-topped thereafter from asserting any claim to it. 1 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, sections 384, 385, and authorities cited; 2 T. C., 422; 1 Fonbl., 151, 152.
Do the facts and circumstances of this case bring the ap-pellees, or either of them, within the scope and inference of this doctrine?
Although denied by them in the bill" it is made abundantly clear by the testimony in the cause, that the complainants both had knowledge of, participated in, and agreed to the partition made by them and John Mitchel, Jr., and that all parties were satisfied with it at the time it was made. Michael G-. Bush, the surveyor who run the division line and whose evidence is in the record, says that he was called on by John Mitchel, Jr., and John Godfrey, to come and run the division line between said Mitchel and John and Jane Godfrey. That he went accordingly, but when he got there Mrs. Godfrey was not agreed to the line
John E. Mitchel, a nephew of Jane Godfrey and John Mitchel, Jr., says he was present when said Bush was preparing a writing for the complainants and John-Mitchel, Jr., to sign in reference to this partition, and Bush asked the parties if they were satisfied with the division and they all replied that they were. That he lived within a half mile of complainants and of the land purchased by Bond and Ileavener, and that they each took and held possession of the land from the time of their respective purchases.- That their purchases were notorious and a general neighborhood talk from the time they were made, and that he never heard any dissatisfaction expressed by complainants in re-1 lation to the purchase of said land by the said Bond and Ileavener.
It is also proven by other witnesses that both Bond and I Ileavener took and held possession of their respective parts, and soon after their purchases deadened the timber up or quite up to the division line, and continued to im
Other witnesses also proved that they were well acquainted with the complainants; were frequently with them, but never heard either of them express any dissatisfaction with the division of the land or with the purchases of the land by Bond and Heavener. And it is also proved that John Godfrey was present at the time of Ileavener’s purchase and made no objection to the same.
There' is no evidence in the record showing that the complainants, or either of them, ever made any objection or expressed' any dissatisfaction to either Bond or Heavener with the partition made between them and John Mitchel, Jr., or of the purchase of the land by Bond and Heavener.
But it does appear from the evidence that on several occasions they expressed themselves to others as being dissatisfied with said division on account, as they claimed, of its being unequal.
From all that is disclosed in this record, therefore, I feel compelled to the conclusion that the complainants, and each of them, must be considered as occupying the position of a party, who, being aware of his own rights, yet stands by and allows his property to be purchased, paid for and improved by an innocent purchaser, without making known to such purchaser his rights and claim to the property.
And according to the principle of equity before adverted to, the conduct of the appellees in the premises amounts to a constructive or legal fraud, at least on the rights of the appellants to the land thus clearly acquired by the laches of the complainants.
The next inquiry is, are they both involved and brought within the influence of the doctrine applicable to such cases,
This then being the governing principle in cases of this kind, the facts and circumstances of the present case, as it seems to me, make it a strong one for the application of the doctrine; and I can see no equitable ground upon which after the lapse of more than twelve years’ acquiesence on the part of the appellees, they can claim exemption from the general rule in like cases. From the foregoing views, therefore, I am compelled to the conclusion that the bill in this case should have been dismissed, instead of the decree that was rendered for partition.
But if I am in error in this view there is still another objection urged against the decree complained of. It is insisted here that the original partition was at least binding as to the appellee, John Godfrey, who is still living and entitled in right of his wife to the control of the land in controversy.
It seems too well settled that in a case of voluntary partition of the wife’s land by the husband and wife and an-, other tenant in common, parcener, or joint tenant, the husband who is sui juris will be bound even in a case where the wife is not, and that he will so be bound during coverture, or if he be tenant by the curtesey during his life; and that a bill filed for partition by him and wife during such cover-ture or life, as the case may be, should be dismissed.
Judges Brown and Maxwell concurred in reversing the decree and dismissing the bill, but without prejudice to the rights of Mrs. Godfrey or her heirs, as they were of the opinion that she was not bound by the fraudulent acts of her husband, nor had she in any other way lost or surrendered her right to a fair and equitable partition of the land in question.
Decree reversed.