47 W. Va. 575 | W. Va. | 1900
Kerns leased to Nay, by lease dated September 19, 1892, a tract of seventy-five acres of land in Marion County for development of oil. This lease was assigned by Nay to Koen, and by Koen to the South Penn Oil Company. Said lease reserved to Kerns a royalty of one-eighth of the oil which might be produced from the land. By a deed dated
The pivotal, crucial question in this case is, was there a mistake made in the execution of the deed from Kerns to. Koen for a share of the oil? More closely, did Elijah Kerns intend to sell one-sixteenth of the oil, or one thirty-second thereof? Should the-deed have conveyed a moietyr of an eighth of the oil, or a moiety of a sixteenth? In the morning of the day, according to Nay’s evidence, Nay asked Kerns if he had offered to sell his royalty, and Kerns replied that he did not know, and asked what he would give for it, to which Nay responded that he thought he could make him (Kerns) two hundred and fifty dollars out of it, and Kerns told him to sell it. This is the whole
Holding, as we do, that upon this conflict we cannot find that the mistake alleged existed, the case ends here logically; but I will add that another obstacle which the plaintiff must overcome is proof of notice on the part of Bartlett that he knew of the mistake alleged by the plaintiff to exist in the said deed. Here again the conflict of evidence is great. Such notice must be clearly proven. The circuit court has found the point against the plaintiff. Nay assented to the said change in the deed. If he was the purchaser, such assent would utterly preclude relief, unless it were proven that both he and Kerns thought the deed conveyed what it did not. Pom. Spec. Perf. Cont. § 241. If he bought for himself, it would preclude relief to him; if he bought as agent of Koen, it would bind Koen; or, at least it would not call for compulsion against Kerns, unless
I omitted to say in its proper place that plaintiff claims that Bartlett had uotice by record from xhe fact that in a certain other suit of Koen involving another interest in this oil land, to which Bartlett was a defendant, the bill alleged that Kerns had, by said deed, conveyed to him a sixteenth of the oil, and that this was notice to Bartlett that such was his right; but the answer to this is: First, tnat bill never hinted of any mistake in the deed, did not predicate Koen’s ownership of a sixteenth on a mistake; and, second, while the bill did allege that • Koen owned, under Kerns’ conveyance, one-sixteenth, it averred that he derived it by tbe said deed, and said deed was exhibited with the bill; and that deed, when read, denied that statement of the bill, because it showed that it conveyed “the one undivided moiety of the one-sixteenth part of all the oil,” etc. How could that be notice to anybody of a secret mistake in that deed? But, as I said above the case ends when we decide that the mistake is not proven with that distinctness required by law, but is involved in contradictory evidence, leaving the case, to say the least, in clouds of doubt, so that an appellate court cannot safely resolve that doubt by overturning the presumption that the circuit
Affirmed.