84 W. Va. 559 | W. Va. | 1919
Prior to the year 1861 James Atkinson' became the owne> of a tract of land of 468 acres, another tract of one hundred acres, and an undivided one-half interest in a tract of 293 acres, all situate in the county of Kanawha. The bill in this case alleges that,. while the record shows that said Atkinson'owned an undivided interest in the 293 acre tract, he and his co-owner had by parol partition assigned to themselves respectively separate pareéis of this land, and had made such parol partition effective, so that' upon the allegations of the bill said Atkinson was the owner, not of an undivided interest in this tract biit of a tract, part ihereof, consisting of 146% acres, assigned to him by such parol partition. His interest in said three tracts being so defined at that time, he, in the year 1861, conveyed to his daughter Caroline Samples a one-half undivided interest in the 468 acre tract, a one-half undivided interest in the one hundred acre tract, and a tract of 73% acres carved out of the 146% acres belonging to him, part of the 293 acre tract. In the year 1866 he made a deed to his daughter Mary Jarrett: conveying to her a one-fourth undivided interest in the 468 acre tract, a one-fofirth undivided interest in the one hundred acre tract, and a tract of about forty acres carved out of what remained to him in the 293 acre tract, the intention being to convey to her about half of the remainder thereof. This left in Atkinson at the time of his death in 1867 a one-fourth undivided interest in the 468 acre tract, and a like interest in the one hundred acre tract, and a tract of about 34 acres, part of the 293 acre tract.
The bill shows that from 1867 to 1890 inclusive there was charged upon the land books in the name of Atkinson’s heirs a tract of 25 acres, the allegation being that this was intended to represent his one-fourth interest in the one hundred acre tract; a tract of 117 acres, intended, as it is alleged, to represent his undivided interest in the 468 acre tract; and 34 acres, being the amount remaining to him of the 293 acre tract. From the years 1891 to 1898 inclusive these charges were combined and entered upon the land books in the name of said Atkinson’s heirs as 176 acres. It will thus be seen that the undivided interest of
The bill further shows that the land conveyed by him to his daughter Mary Jarrett, as aforesaid, fromj 1867 ,to 1873 inclusive, was charged on the land books as 25 acres, intended to be her one-fourth undivided interest in the 100 •acre tract; and 117 acres, intended to be her one-fouifch Undivided interest in the 468 acre tract; and it does not ap'pear from the bill that at first any charge was made on the land books against Mary Jarrett for the tract conveyed out of 'the 293 acres. Subsequently, however, the two charges aforesaid were combined, and to the same there was added 40 •’•acres, representing the tract conveyed to her out of the 293 -acre tract, and it was carried on the land books in this way in her name, and after her death in 1892 in the name ■•of her heirs.
The interest of James Atkinson in the respective tracts ■•of land under the assessments above indicated was returned ■ delinquent for the non payment of the taxes assessed thereon for the year 1892, sold by the sheriff, - and purchased at 'said sale by M. F. Osborne. No redemption of the same was made within the one year provided by law, and on the 10th day of April, 1895, a deed was made to the said Osborne ■conveying to him, not a tract of land containing 176 acres, -as the same was entered upon the books, but an undivided ■one-fourth interest in the 4.68 acre tract; an undivided one fourth interest in the 100 acre tract, and the-remainder of the -293 acre tract by metes and bounds. Plaintiffs allege that Osborne did not have this land entered on the land books ' under his tax deed, but it still remained charged thereon in the name of Atkinson’s heirs. In 1898, however, Osborne •conveyed whatever interest he acquired under his tax.deed to the defendant Sarah C. Osborne. In -1899 the sheriff •■again sold the lands as delinquent in the name of Atkinson’s heirs, and at this sale the same were purchased by the defendant Mariah F. Stone, and not being redeemed she, on "the 25th day of January, 1901, procured a deed to be made ■to her, not for the tract of land as it was charged upon
The interest conveyed to Mary Jarrett by her father •James Atkinson, being charged upon the land books as above indicated, was by the sheriff of Kanawha county sold for’ •deliquent taxes assessed against the same for the years 1897 and 1898, and at this sale the defendant S. S. Moore be•came the purchaser. Moore assigned and transferred his interest in the purchase to the defendant L. A. Beckwith, and the same not having been redeemed within the time required foy law, Beckwith procured a deed to be made to him conveying this interest, not in the manner in which it was charged upon the land books, but as an undivided one-fourth interest in the 468 acres, a one-fourth undivided interest in the 100 acres, and a tract of 40 acres out of the 293 acres, Subsequently the defendant Beckwith conveyed the interest vested in him, if any, under this deed to the defendants J. A. 'Osborne and M. F. Osborne.
• The bill alleges that these purchasers under the tax sales -aforesaid have been in possession of the lands ever since, 'have extracted oil and gas therefrom, have cut the timber therefrom, and have sold and conveyed away a number •of parts of said tracts of land, but the vendees of such ' Tracts are not made parties to the bill, nor is it disclosed in the bill who are such vendees.
This suit was brought by a number of the heirs-at-law ■of James Atkinson, deceased, and of Mary Jarrett, deceased, -claiming that the assessments of the lands as aforesaid were void, and that the sales made thereunder and the tax deeds -above referred to are'absolutely void and ineffective to pass the title of their respective ancestors; claiming further that ■even though said tax sales were valid, because of the relationship of the holders thereunder and the plaintiffs, the
The bill prayed that said tax deeds and the various deeds made to the defendants, ■ above referred to, be set aside and cancelled as void. It further prayed that if such relief could not be had, that the defendants be declared to be trustees holding the said title for the benefit of all of the heirs of James Atkinson and Mary Jarrett, and offered to pay their part of the amount necessary to acquire this outstanding title. It further prayed for partition of. said lands among the heirs of James Atkinson and Mary Jarrett, and for an accounting of rents, issues and profits derived from the land, as well as for the waste committed thereon. The defendants demurred to the bill which demurrer was sustained, with leave to the plaintiffs to amend, and the case is certified to this Court to test the propriety of the ruling of the lower court upon said demurrer.
It is insisted that the'demurrer was properly sustained: first, because the bill shows upon its face that there is a want of proper parties to the suit; second, because it appears "from the bill that the plaintiffs have no interest in the subject-matter of the litigation, the title to the said real estate being* forfeited and vested in the State of West Virginia; third, because the plaintiffs are barred by their laches; and fourth, because even though, the deeds under which the defendants claim were void, originally, they are good as color of title, and the' defendants .have been in adverse possession of the land for more, .than the statutory period, and have acquired good title thereto by reason of such adverse possession. ■ .
As before 'stated, it is alleged in the .bill that the defendants have conveyed away numerous .tracts or lots out of these various parcels of land, and it is insisted that the vendees under such conveyances must be made parties to .the bill, inasmuch as if the deeds under, which defendants claim are
It is further insisted that the demurrer was properly sustained for the reason that the allegations of the bill show that any title the plaintiffs ever had in this land has been
But the defendants say that it appears from the bill that since these tax sales, all of which were made more than ten years ago, the lands were never assessed for taxes in the name of the plaintiffs and their associates, but that the same were assessed in the name of the defendants and the taxes paid thereon by them, and that the payment of taxes by the defendants would not protect the title of the plaintiffs from forfeiture, which being true, any title that the plaintiffs had in the lands at the time of the making of the tax deeds, if it did not -pass by those deeds, became vested in the state for non entry upon the land books in the name of the plaintiffs since that time. It is true that the claimants under the tax deeds do not hold in privity with the former owners, as was held in State v. Harman, 57 W. Va. 447, and that the assessment of the lands for taxes in the-name of the tax deed purchaser would not prevent forfeiture of the title of a former owner in a case where the tax ■ deed is void, and did not pass the title, but that such title would become forfeited and vest in the state for non entry upon the land books after five years. That doctrine would apply here and would defeat plaintiffs were it not for their claim that because of ■ their relationship to the defendants the purchases at the tax sales were simply re-'
The defendants further insist that the plaintiffs are barred by their laches, and by the adverse possession of the lands for more than 10 years. Of course it is settled that a tax -deed, even though void, is good as color of title. State v. Harman, 57 W. Va. 447; Yellow Poplar Lumber Co. v. Thompson, 108 Va. 612. This proposition is not disputed, but it is contended that the possession- of the defendants was not adverse. It ■ is claimed by the plaintiffs that before the possession of a'cotenant is adverse, not only must such cotenant in possession claim the whole of the estate as his own, but the eotenant out of possession must have actual notice of this claim. Anyone of the joint owners of a tract of land is entitled to be in the possession of it, and it will not be presumed that a joint • owner in possession is holding under ally other than the true title, unless he shows that his cotenants have had actual notice of such other claim, and the Statute of Limitations will not begin to run against such cotenant out of possession until such actual notice is conveyed' to him, or he has notice of a state of
Were the plaintiffs guilty of laches in failing' to assert their interest in the land under the circumstances shown by the bill? It is shown that for many years the defendants and those claiming under them have been exercising acts of ownership upon this land inconsistent with the interest of joint owners therein; they have been removing timber therefrom, extracting petroleum oil, and have been making sale of large parts of it, and defendants contend that the plaintiffs’ acquiesence in their treatment of the land in this way bars them from now asserting a claim after the land has become largely increased in value by the discovery of minerals thereunder. On the other hand, the plaintiffs aver that they were entirely ignorant of their interest in the land; that they lived in distant parts of the country, and as soon as they became possessed of information that they had interests in the land they immediately began proceedings to recover the same. It is also a fair inference from the allegations of the bill that they knew nothing of the acts of absolute ownership committed by the defendants. The question of when one is barred from asserting an interest in real estate because of laches is one so dependent upon the exact relations of the parties that it will only be determined upon demurrer to a bill when the facts alleged make it clear that the plaintiff with full knowledge of the facts has slept thereon to the disadvantage of the defendant. Ordinarily a court of equity before reaching a conclusion upon a question so decisive of the rights of the parties will await the tak
It follows from what we have said that the demurrer to-the bill was properly sustained, and we answer the question certified accordingly. Affirmed.