Claiming to be the owners of one-twentieth of the oil in a tract of 51 acres of land situate on Blue Creek in Kanawha County, a part of which has been extracted by the defendant Ohio Fuel Oil Company, plaintiffs, some of whom are infants suing by next friend, brought this suit in equity, praying to have their interest declared and for a discovery of the amount of oil extracted, when and to whom! sold, and for an accounting for the price received therefor. The Ohio Fuel •Oil Company demurred to the bill and filed a special plea. Its demurrer being overruled, it appeared in open court by counsel and waived its right to file an answer and re
Upon appeal to the circuit court of said county, the decree was reversed and annulled on the 18th of January, 1919, and’ the cause remanded with directions to the court of common pleas to dismiss plaintiff’s bill, and from the last named de- ' cree plaintiffs have- appealed to this court.
There is no disputed fact, and’the sole question is one of' law presented by the Ohio Fuel Oil Company’s special plea, setting up the deed from William L. Hindman, special com
Nancy (James) Kennedy died testate in the year 1891, leaving a will which was probated in the county court of Kanawha county October 21, 1891, whereby she devised and bequeathed all her property, real and personal, to her husband David M. Kennedy and Chloe M. Snyder jointly. The said David M. Kennedy thereafter intermarried with one of the plaintiffs, Barbara Kennedy, and died intestate, leaving John D. Kennedy, David B. Kennedy, Gordon G. Kennedy,' and Mattie M. Kennedy, the last three of whom are infants and sue by their next friend, the said John D. Kennedy, children of himself and his second wife, Barbara Kennedy, as his only heirs at law. Barbara Kennedy joins in the suit in her own right as widow of David M. Kennedy and also as guardian for her aforesaid infant children.
The bill avers that on the death of Samuel James, Sr., his daughter Nancy Kennedy inherited a one-fifth interest in the one-half of the mineral in said 51 acres, of which Samuel James, Sr., died seized; that one-half of said one-fifth passed by Nancy Kennedy’s will to her husband, and that his children inherited of him said interest, which was one-twentieth of the whole, subject to their mother’s dower therein.
But it appears from a copy of the record exhibited with the plaintiffs’ amended and supplemental bill that in December, 1877, a partition suit was brought by Jesse James against David M. Kennedy, Nancy Kennedy, his wife, and the other heirs of said Samuel James, Sr., to partition the lands of which their ancestor died seized; that in said proceeding the lands were partitioned in kind, except the lands described in said proceedings as being on Blue Creek, which the commissioners who had been appointed to make partition thought it would be advantageous to all concerned to sell, and so recommended to the court. The plaintiff in his bill in that proceedings alleged that he did not believe the Blue Creek lands susceptible of partition and that it would be advantageous to the heirs to have it sold. In pursuance
The general description in the commissioner’s deed of the land conveyed, as “the residue” of the 1000 acre tract on Blue Creek, and as the land “of which said Samuel James died seized,” includes and passed to the grantee the estate of inheritance, owned by him at the time of his death, in any and all parts of the 1000 acre tract. The case presented is not one of repugnant descriptions in the deed itself. The question is, whether or not the general description in the commissioner’s deed and the. proceedings by which it was authorized to be made, includes the mineral interest in the 51 acre tract. As we view the case, there is no ambiguity in the description. The rule in construing deeds as well as wills is, that the intention of the grantor or donor is of paramount importance, and when his intention clearly appears from the written instrument viewed as a whole it must prevail. Uhl v. Railroad Co., 51 W. Va. 106. It can not be presumed that the heirs of Samuel James, Sr., meant to dispose of a part only of the lands of which he died seized, in fact, a contrary presumption prevails in the absence of any showing that such was not their intention. Nothing appears here to indicate that such was not their intention, and the presumption that' it was their purpose to dispose of all of the land is made conclusive by the fact that the bill asked for a sale and division of the proceeds of lands that could not be partitioned in kind, and the bill was taken for confessed as to the adult heirs.
The general description of the land conveyed by the special commissioner’s deed embraced the interest owned by Samuel James, Sr., at his death, in the oil and other minerals in the 51 acres. Herbert v. Wise, 3 Call 239; Adam v. Alkire, 20 W. Va. 487; and Collieries Co. v. Campbell, 72 W. Va. 451.
We affirm the decree of the circuit court. Affirmed.