69 W. Va. 421 | W. Va. | 1911
Withdrawal of this ease from the consideration of the jury by a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant constitutes the basis of all the errors assigned.
It is an action of ejectment for the recovery of 35 acres of land, lying within the boundaries of a 9,000 acre grant, according to the claims of the plaintiff, but wholly or partially outside .thereof, under the defendant’s interpretation of the evidence. Though the evidence set forth in some hundreds of pages of the printed record, pertains to locations, boundary lines and possession, these are by no means the only questions involved. On the contrary, failure of the plaintiff to adduce any evidence of the location of exceptions from his title papers may render all this great mass of testimony utterly valueless to both parties.
In, his declaration the plaintiff demands the whole of the Isaac Hilliard 9,000 acre survey, granted to Hilliard July 17, 1797, and then a portion thereof, 35 acres, described as the land actually 'withheld. The defendant entered a disclaimer as to all the land except the 35 acres and apparently as to a small portion of it. The Hilliard grant came down to the plaintiff by a long chain of conveyances, but certain deeds excepted portions thereof. One made by William H. Johnson and wife to Thomas W. Ewart, Sept. 14, 1869, excepted 684 acres out of the southwest corner of the grant, and also' 800 acres, granted, according to the recital in the exception, to Sterling Johnson, and “to be surveyed and set off to said Sterling in a square form on one of the outside lines” of the Hilliard grant. By a deed dated March 28, 1878, Ewart conveyed to McEldowney the land he acquired from Johnson and also the excepted 800 acres, reciting a purchase thereof from Sterling Johnson. As the land in controversy here lies in the eastern portion of the Hilliard grant, if in it at all, the 684 acre exception, lying in the southwestern
The defendant is in possession of the 35 acres, claiming title thereto. It is a portion of an 85 acre tract, surveyed and entered, by Thomas Tucker, under a land office treasury warrant, issued May 10, 1848. . Tucker sold his right under this survey to Silas Wiatt, giving him a memorandum of the sale. Wiatt assigned this to James Edgell, who conveyed a portion of the land to Abram Ice. By a deed, dated Jan. 5, 1894, he conveyed the residue thereof, the 35 acres in controversy, together with two other tracts, making an aggregate of 92.25 acres, to his son, James A. Edgell, the defendant in this action. As the 35 acre tract had never been entered upon the land books for taxation, it was sold, in the manner prescribed by law, as forfeited land, in the year 1889, and purchased by said James A. Edgell.
If this land is not within the Hilliard patent, or, if within
Impossibility of locating the excepted land is the burden of complaint against the application of the rule of practice above mentioned. This has not been shown. The record discloses no evidence of any effort to locate them. Eor aught that appears, the deeds may be recorded and cover the land in controversy. Ho witness testifies to any unsuccessful effort of any kind to locate them. Whether proof of inability to do so would vary the rule of practice we are not called upon to say, since the record discloses none.
The form of the declaration, relied upon as dispensing with the application of the rule, pertains to the issue, not the proof. The count, particularly demanding the 35 acres, with the plea
This conclusion necessarily and admittedly justifies the giving of the peremptory instruction, affirms the judgment and renders consideration of the additional assignments of errer useless.
_. 7 Affirmed.