91 W. Va. 96 | W. Va. | 1922
The decree complained of denied the relief prayed for and dismissed plaintiff’s original, amended and supplemental bills.
The suit is for the purpose of setting aside an option dated July 27, 1918, from the plaintiff to R. C. Britton and Charles W. Good, and the assignment thereof from them to Y. L. Black, trustee; and to set aside a deed from plaintiff to said Black, trustee, dated July 31, 1918, and a deed from said Black, trustee, to defendant A. C. Lawrence, and others, dated November 6, 1918; and for an accounting and disclosure of 1-8 part of the royalty oil produced from the lot of land described in said option and deeds, and a recovery for the amount so ascertained in favor of plaintiff; and the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property described in said option and deeds. For some time prior to July, 1918, plaintiff owned in fee a small lot of land on Kelly’s Creek in Cabin Creek District, of Kanawha County, on which was a small dwelling house where she formerly resided, and which lay between two other lots designated as the Thomas Burke lot and the Hudnall lot. She had executed an oil and gas lease thereon to the United Fuel Gas Company in the usual form, in which she reserved to herself 1-8 of the oil and a certain sum per year for each gas well which might be -drilled thereon. The option was for sale of the fee for the sum of $4,000.00, and the deed completed the option contract. She charged that defendants Lawrence, W. H.
But in our view it is not necessary to consider whether plaintiff is barred by laches. Tt is fundamental that where fraud is asserted as a ground for equitable relief, it must be proven clearly either by direct evidence or by facts and circumstances which impel its conclusion. Mullen v. Searls, 69 W. Va. 790; Deepwater v. Renick, 59 W. Va. 343; Frank v. Zeigler, 46 W. Va. 614; Greer v. O’Brien, 36 W. Va. 277. Wherein can fraud and misrepresentation be imputed to Lawrence? In the only conversation he had with plaintiff he informed her that, in his opinion, she had optioned her property at too small a price. He then did his trading with the owners of the option. They were strangers to him, before that time. The evidence fails to show that Young, his bookkeeper, who carried the .check to her and took her acknowledgment to the deed, made any false or fraudulent representations. The circuit court has found, upon conflicting testimony, that none of the defendants were guilty of practicing fraud upon her in procuring the option and deed, and under the well established rule we will decline to disturb the decree. Ross v. McConnaughy, 85 W. Va. 199, 101 S. E. 443; Baughman v. Hoffman, 90 W. Va. 388, 110 S. E. 829.
Affirmed.