73 W. Va. 503 | W. Va. | 1914
In ejectment, on demurrer by defendants to plaintiff’s evidence, and a conditional verdict of the jury, the court below gave judgment for plaintiff, and that it recover of defendants possession of the 34.7 acres of land sued for. A writ of error to that judgment was awarded here on the petition of the defendant John W. Gray.
On the trial plaintiff undertook to deraign title down through many mesne grants and conveyances, beginning with
This grant refers for its foundation to the survey for Austin Nichols, and some of the questions here presented are the same dealt with in the recent ease of William James’ Sons Co. v. Crouch, 73 W. Va. —, 79 S. E. 815, 817.
The entries and survey on which this Clinton grant was founded are dated respectively, the first entry, for 90,000 acres, March 28, 1795; the second entry, for 40,000 acres, April 28, 1795; the survey, May 28, 1795. This survey, after describing the exterior boundaries the same as in the grant, contains this provision or memorandum: “An allowance of 126,000 acres is made with the calculation of the area of this plat for prior claims entries within the boundary thereof a part of which is 31,356 acres entered for Andrew Reid and John Stuart the 1st day of Nov. 1794 also 9730 acres entered for Thomas Edgar the 4th of March 1795, also 5000 acres entered for Andrew Reid the 20th of March 1795, also 2,000 acres entered in two entries for Wm. Runnick, Wm. Morris, and Robert James November 14, 1794.”
With reference to entries, surveys and grants introduced in evidence and the aid of the oral testimony of surveyors, and other witnesses, plaintiff undertook to'locate within the exterior boundaries of the Clinton grant as the prior or excepted claims referred to therein various tracts in all aggregating 146,321% acres, among them a Thomas Edgar tract (overlap) of 6,764% acres, a Runnick, Morris and James tract of 1,500 acres, and an Andrew Reid tract of 5,000 acres. These three tracts, as will be observed, are of those referred to in the survey for Austin Nichols, on which the Clinton grant rests.
Plaintiff did not undertake to locate the 31,356 acre entry of Reid and Stuart, nor one of the entries supposedly for 500 acres, of Runnick, Morris and James, referred to in said survey. It is insisted by defendants that plaintiff was bound to so locaite this and all excepted boundaries as a condition
To this proposition it is replied that as the exception in the Clinton grant is general, not specific, of 126,000 acres, plaintiff sufficiently complied with the rule of Stockton v. Morris, by locating within the exterior boundaries of that grant prior entries and grants exceeding in the aggregate the acreage preferred. The rule of Stockton v. Morris, supra, is that where there are specific reservations and general reservations in an inclusive grant, if he would recover thereon plaintiff must locate the specific reservations, if any, and also prior claim or claims in quantity sufficient to equal the general reservations, excluding the land of defendant, after which the burden is on defendant to show that his land is .within the reservations of the grant.
At the close of plaintiff’s evidence and before demurring thereto defendants introduced, as the only evidence on their behalf, a certified copy of the entry by Reid and Stuart of November 1, 1794, for 31,356% acres, and then proved by one of the surveyors that the land in controversy would fall within the boundaries of the general description given in that entry.
But plaintiff had already proved that this entry and that of 5,000 acres of March 20th, 1795, made by Andrew Reid, both referred to in the survey covered by the Clinton grant, had not been carried into completed survey until April 27, 1796, and then as combined acreage of 36,356% acres, and as so surveyed and subsequently carried into the grant to Andrew Reid the survey did not cover any of the land in controversy. And it is claimed by plaintiff’s counsel in argument, that in so far as the entry of 31,356% acres as covered by the subsequently combined survey lies within the exterior boundaries of the Clinton survey and grant, it would have the right to add that acreage, if need be, to the aggregate acreage proved by it, as one of the preferred tracts in the Clinton grant. ¥e think plaintiff would have that fight to the extent that the boundaries are defined and as to any portion of the land entered situated within the inclusive survey relied on.
We are also of opinion that as this survey specifically excepts this and certain other boundaries, ánd is referred to in
But how will the application of this rule to the case at bar help defendants’ position? William James’ Sons Co. v. Crouch, and authorities cited therein, hold, with reference to the two entries making up the 36,356% acre survey, that their descriptions, according to the evidence of the surveyors, were susceptible of an interpretation that would include three times the quantity of land called for, and for that reason might be void for uncertainty, under Harper & Weston v. Baugh, 9 Grat. 508. And according to the uncontradicted evidence these entries as so interpreted and surveyed preliminary to the grant to Reid, on March 27, 1797, though within the exterior boundaries of the Clinton grant do not include the land in controversy. We are, therefore, of opinion that plaintiff having so lockted these two entries as surveyed and granted is not affected by the evidence of the original entry, and that it might include in its general description the land sued for, and that it has the right to have added to the total acreage of preferred lands the acreage covered by the survey and grant to Reid.
The next point made is that though it located within the Clinton boundary the 1,500 acre entry of Runnick, Morris 'and James, plaintiff wholly failed to locate the other entry of 500 acres, the residue of the 2,000 acres preferred in the Austin Nichols survey, and that plaintiff must fail for this reason. Relying on William James’ Sons Co. v. Crouch, supra, plaintiff’s counsel reply, that as the exception in the Clinton grant is general, not specific, it has satisfied the rule of Stockton v. Morris, by showing inclusive entries, surveys and grants aggregating more than the preferred boundaries, and that it was not bound to locate the 500 acre Runnick, Morris and James entry specifically preferred in the survey. In the William James’ Sons Co. v. Crouch ease the Austin Nichols survey, though referred to in the grant, was not pro
In this connection we are disposed to hold, and for the same reason, that plaintiff must fail for its failure to also locate the 300 acres, which we think constituted an exception in the deed from Samuel Stocking and wife to Francis Granger, of November 30, 1848. Reference in this deed to this tract
The same rule must be applied also to the deed from Winthrop and others to Bond, of January 5th, 1888. This grant, in its description of the land conveyed, covers the exterior boundaries of a larger tract, but as descriptive of the' land actually conveyed, says “containing by actual survey and estimate twelve thousand six hundred and twenty-five (12,625) acres, exclusive of all prior sales and grants, and also excepting the portion of the Archie B. Stover Improvement that lies within these bounds, according to the survey made by John McVey, surveyor.” Plaintiff did locate the Stover tract; why was it not also' required to locate all prior sales and grants? They were exceptions from the grant as by the very language of the deed the Stover “Improvement” was “also” an exception. The clause in the habendums of the deeds of the commissioner of school lands, involved in Rowland Land Co. v. Barrett, 70 W. Va. 703, 75 S. E. 57, relied on by plaintiff, was “Subject, however, to the rights of occupant claimants according to the provisions of the several acts of the assembly relating thereto.” This clause, as was there held, is not an exception; but a conveyance subject to the prior rights of claimants, distinguishing that case from this, and from Stockton v. Morris, supra.
Another point made for reversal is that the three Rutter and Etting patents, one for 4,160 acres, another for overlap of 62,000 acres, and the third for an overlap of 10,956 acres, previously granted, but surveyed but a few days subsequent to the date of the Austin Nichols survey, and aggregating
•But plaintiff relies on proof of a prior adjudication against John Hawley, one of the defendants; also possession. The adjudication relied on is a decree of the circuit court of Raleigh County, pronounced August 10, 1907, in a suit of the White Stick Coal Co. v. Hawley, at a special term thereof called by the regular judge, the record whereof wa-s introduced by plaintiff as part of its chain of title, perpetuating a prior injunction and restraining Hawley, his agents and employees from cutting, destroying and removing the trees and timbef from the tract of land described in the bill and here sued for, and from removing the timber and saw logs therefrom, as set forth in the bill. This decree was upon default, on bill taken for confessed; but. there was no decree otherwise adjudicating title, nor was there any award of.process for
It is insisted by defendants’ counsel, moreover, that the court was without jurisdiction in equity to pronounce the decree against Hawley, under the rule of Freer v. Davis, 52 W. Va. 1, and that for this reason also the decree is not binding on Hawley. If Hawley had appeared in that case and set up adverse title the court would, under the rule in that case, have been without jurisdiction perhaps to try title or adjudicate the legal rights of the parties.
Lastly, as to the question of possession' relied on by the plaintiff in error. That possession is the alleged possession of one James M. Bailey, of a tract of 75 acres, purchased from Alfred Beeldey, attorney in fact for the Grangers, in 1876. It is claimed that this tract and a tract of 52 acres, purchased
For the foregoing reasons we are of opinion to reverse the judgment below and to enter such judgment here as the circuit court should have entered, adjudging the law on the demurrer to be for the defendants, sustaining the demurrer, and that
Reversed and Entered.