48 W. Va. 374 | W. Va. | 1900
Charles D. Gillespie and M. W. Gillespie appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Tucker County enforcing a vendor’s lien against them in favor of Edward S. Silliman. Their claim of defense is that the plaintiff: conveyed them six acres of valueless land that they did not purchase instead of four acres of valuable land they did purchase, the difference between the two being about one thousand dollars, and they claim the abatement of the purchase money to this extent. The contract shows that defendants purchased from plaintiffs a tract of twenty and fifteen-sixteenths acres, including saw mill race and other buildings and appurtenances at the price of seven thousand five hundred dollars. Defendants allege in their answer “that when they went upon said land to examine it previous to making the purchase, they were shown said lands by the said Bowman, agent for plaintiff, who showed them and represented to them that plaintiff owned certain lands running to said ninth corner of the L. E. and P. B. Goff three hundred and twenty-five acre tract, and pointed out to them lands within plaintiffs’ boundary that are not by said deed (plaintiffs’ deed to defendants) contained therein, by which respondents will lose from three to four acres of, the most valuable part of said survey, which respondents believed was then the land of plaintiff and is still owned by him, and the scheme to shove respondents across Big Black Fork on the south side thereof and compel them to take from three to four acres of worthless laird instead of valuable land within said town, was fraudulent and known to be fraudulent by plaintiff and his agent Bowman at the time the deed was written.” This allegation is controverted by general replication. The relief asked by the defendants is not affirmative, but- negative. The proof utterly fails to sustain this allegation. 0. D. Gillespie testifies that Bowman showed him from his house to the upper end of the neck and said the land “laid down in the bottom by an old fence that run down through where the lumber yard is now. At the chestnut now down.”
“He never told me about any land laying on the south side of Big Black Eork.” This conversation was about a month before the purchase. Bowman testifies: “I described the land to him without going on the land from my office door, and pointed to the foot hill on the south side of the river, and told him as near
The decree is affirmed.
Affirmed.