41 W. Va. 695 | W. Va. | 1896
Johnston Moore filed a bill in equity in the Circuit Court of Mercer county, setting up that he owned certain lands derivatively from an old grant from the commonwealth of Virginia, and that possession actual under it had been held since its emanation, in 1795, and he was still in such possession; that three certain junior grants for three tracts had been issued, and no possession had ever been taken under them, and those tracts lay wholly within the boundaries of the plaintiff’s land; that R. B. McNutt, as commissioner of school lands for Mercer county, had instituted a proceeding to sell the three tracts claimed under said junior grants for the benefit of the school fund, as lands sold for non-payment of taxes, and purchased in by the state; that the owners claiming under the junior grants had filed petitions in said proceeding of the school commissioner, praying to be allowed to redeem their land from such delinquency and revest title under said junior grants in them, as provided by statute; that the proceeding of the school commissioner also sought the sale of a tract of land as waste and unappropriated, but that it was not such, but was included within the said older grant, and owned by the plaintifi; that certain orders for the sale of the land had been made in said proceeding of the said commissioner; that the owners under said junior grants were combin
The bill prayed that the said hostile junior grants, and all documents passing the lands mentioned in them to their present claimants, and all orders in said proceeding of the commissioner of school lands, be cancelled and set aside as void, and held for naught, and that further steps in said proceeding for the sale of said land be enjoined, and that the claimants under said hostile junior grants be silenced in their claims under them, and be enjoined from further claiming the said land, or asserting title thereto. Upon demurrer the bill and amended bill were dismissed, and Moore appealed.
It is settled that chancery will, under circumstances, exercise jurisdiction to remove clouds over title to real estate, in order to quiet and perfect the superior title. De Camp v. Carnahan, 26 W. Va. 839; Pom. Eq. Jur. § 1395; Story, Eq. Jur. §§ 694, 699, 700; Helden v. Hellen (Md.) 45 Am. St. Rep. 371, and full note; s. c., 31 Atl. 506. But it will not do so in every case of adverse claim. It will not help one who has legal title, and is out of actual possession, against an adversary claimant in possession, because there is adequate remedy by ejectment. Clayton v. Barr, 34 W. Va. 290 (12 S. E. 704); Carrington v. Otis, 4 Gratt. 235, 252; U S. v. Wilson, 118 U. S. 86 (6 Sup. Ct. 991); Helden v. Hellen, (Md.) 45 Am. St. Rep. note, page 375; s. c. 31 Atl. 506. De Camp v. Carnahan, 26 W. Va. 839, so far as it is contra, is not according to the great weight of authority; but the case was really one based on equity jurisdiction—for partition. See Clayton v. Barr, page 297; 34 W. Va., page 706 (12 S. E. 704).
As equity will not remove a cloud over title where there
But, whether a party in actual possession can sue an ad" verse claimant in ejectment or not, it has been very long settled that one in actual possession, with legal title, may sue his adverse claimant in equity, and thus overthrow his
Equity will interfere in advance, by injunction, to prevent a cloud from being cast on title, upon the same principles on which it will remove a cloud from title. Tucker v. Kenniston, 93 Am. Dec. 425, and note; 1 High, Inj. § 372; Miller v. Cook (Ill. Sup.) 10 Lawy. Rep. Ann., note, page 293; s. c., 25 N. E. 756.
But had the court jurisdiction to stop) the commissioner of school land from the prosecution of said proceeding ? The circuit court thought not, and gave that as one reason for sustaining the demurrer, in its decree. It can not be that whenever a commissioner of school lands is prosecuting a proceeding, in obedience to the command of statute, to sell the lauds of the state for the benefit of the school fund, any person claiming another title to the land can step in and, on merely the ground that he holds what he claims to be a better title, enjoin the entire proceeding. It is substantially the state’s suit, though we may cal! the commissioner a “ministerial officer.” He may not be purely such. At any rate, we do not think an adversary claimant, merely as such, can stop the steps thus taken to dispose of state lands. "Where would it end ? The sale does not affect him, unless a party. And under the piresent statute he is made, or can become, a party, as the proceeding is a suit. It is suing the state, virtually. She has not authorized such a suit. Though this proceeding was under the old law, be
I think the bill is multifarious. It brings in three different tracts of land, with their different titles and different owners. What interest in common have they ? Why involve the owner of one distinct tract with matters of evidence and law pertaining exclusively to another tract and its owner? Then it brings in a separate tract as ownerless, because waste and unappropriated. What have the owners of the three tracts to do with this waste tract? There is no bond in common, no unity or common interest, between these four tracts, save only that they are adverse to the plaintiff’s claim; and that is no bond between them, giving them any affinity to one another. How many tracts and different owners can be brought into one suit, all having different facts? Where is tobe the end of the complications and prolixity growing out of so many lawsuits in one proceeding? Now, each of these tracts has a separate defense against the plaintiff’s tract—as wide apart it may be, as the poles, and, as between the plaintiff and their owners, distinct. But it is said the commissioner’s proceeding is against all, and this justifies their union in one suit; but as there is no jurisdiction as to this commissioner, that ground of union falling out, the matters are
It is argued that, as to the three tracts forfeited for delinquency, the proceeding of the commissioner of school lands was under chapter 134, Acta 1872-73, and that it was repealed by chapter 95, Acts 1882, and therefore the proceeding of said commissioner died, and the court had no longer any jurisdiction to entertain it. We are cited to Curran v. Owens, 15 W. Va. 208, in support of this proposition. That case held that where a statute made the sale of liquor to certain persons a cause of action for their wives and others, which, without the statute, would give no action, the repeal of the act without any saving clause would end a pending action, But that principle can not apply here. The acts of 1872-73 and 1882 were both, in terms, amendatory of chapter 105, Code 1868. This act of 1882 did not say that those lands which the act of 1872-73 required to be sold for the school fund should no longer be liable to sale—did not destroy the cause of action, as did the repealing act in the Curran Case; but, on the contrary, it expressly repealed the provisions of the act of 1872-73, declaring that those classes of lands should continue to be sold, and provided for a proceeding to sell them. It retained the officer called the “commissioner of school lands,” and required him, as before, to ascertain and report them to the self-same court, and carry on certain proceedings to secure their sale. It simply modified or amplified that proceeding, converting the proceeding as it had existed under the act of 1872-73 from a non-judicial and administrative proceeding, not having formal parties, into a more efficient proceeding—one judicial in character, in that it required formal parties; made it a suit inter partes. Why does this mere amendment destroy pending proceedings to accomplish the same purpose contemplated in the modified remedy provided by the new statute? This latter act repeals all acts and parts of acts coming within its purview. This would be a repeal, if that were all, but it says all acts “inconsistent therewith.” There is nothing in the continuance of pending proceedings inconsistent with the act. They
We affirm the decree of the Circuit Court.