77 W. Va. 682 | W. Va. | 1916
This suit in equity was brought by the Blue Creek Coal & Land Company, South Penn Oil Company and United Fuel Gas Company, all corporations, plaintiffs, against the Blue Creek Development Company and the Eureka Pipe Line Company, corporations, and W. W, Brinegar and Nannie Brinegar, his wife, defendants, to have judicially determined the right to the oil and gas under a 50 acre tract of land on. Laurel Fork, a tributary to Blue Creek, in Kanawha County. The Blue Creek Development Company is now, and has been for sometime, producing oil from said land, claiming the right to do so under an oil and gas lease executed by W. W. Brinegar and wife to Joseph A. Jones on the 12th of June, 1912, and assigned by him to the Blue Creek Development Company on the 20th of June, 1912. Both the lease and the assignment of it were recorded on June 21, 1912. W. W. Brinegar was originally the fee simple owner of the entire interest in said 50 acre tract. South Penn Oil Company also claims its right from said Brinegar to mine the oil, by
Plaintiffs averred that Joseph A. Jones took his lease from Brinegar and wife with full knowledge, both actual and constructive, of plaintiffs’ title to the oil and gas, and acquired no right whatever, by virtue of his lease, and prayed that his lease and the assigment thereof to the Blue Creek Development Company be cancelled as constituting a cloud upon their title, and that the Blue Creek Development Company be enjoined from producing, removing and carrying away the oil and gas from said 50 acres, and that defendant, Eureka Pipe Line Company, be also enjoined from delivering to the Blue Creek Development Company any of the oil now being produced by it from said land, and for an accounting for the oil and gas produced and removed. The Blue Creek Development Company answered, averring that Joseph A. Jones acquired his lease from Brinegar in good faith, and ivithout knowledge that plaintiffs claimed any interest in the oil and gas, and averring that it purchased the lease from Jones on June 20, 1912, for the sum of $500.00, and paid him in full by issuing to him twenty shares of its capital stock, fully paid up and non-assessable, of the par value of $25.00 per share. Defendant also averred its ownership of several valuable leases, and contracts for the production of oil and gas, including a leasehold with a gas well thereon then producing about 3,500,000 feet of gas per day, which gas it says
The cause was heard on the 22nd of February, 1915, on the pleadings and numerous depositions taken on behalf of both plaintiffs and defendants, and a decree entered, holding plaintiffs not entitled to relief and dismissing the bill as to the South Penn Oil Company and the United Fuel Gas Company, and decreeing the Blue Creek Coal & Land Company entitled to the one-eighth, or royalty interest in the funds in the hands of the Eureka Pipe Line Company. The court specifically determined that the certificate of acknowledgment to the deed from W. W. Brinegar and Nannie Brinegar, his wife, to E. T. Crawford and W. P. Stine, dated December 13, 1901, was not signed by F. N. Carr, the notary public named in the body of said certificate, before the deed was admitted to record on the 26th of December, 1901, and was, therefore, not a recordable paper, and was improperly admitted to record, and did not operate as constructive notice to subsequent purchasers from Brinegar and wife, and that Joseph A. Jones had no notice, either actual or constructive, of the rights of plaintiffs to the oil and gas in said 50 acres oí land. The court also held that the Blue Creek Development Company was a bona fide and complete purchaser of the lease from Jones, without any knowledge, either actual or constructive, of the claim of plaintiffs. From that decree the South Penn Oil Company and the United Fuel Gas Company have appealed.
The deed from Brinegar and wife to Crawford and Stine was admitted to record by the clerk of the county court of Kanawha on the 26th of December, 1901. But the certificate of acknowledgment, purporting to have been made by Fred N. Carr, notary public, as it appears from the deed book, was not signed by him, and the deed was again admitted to record on July 13, 1912, upon the same certificate of acknowledgment, to which the notary’s signature appeared. This second recordation was after the Jones lease was recorded, and gives the Blue Creek Development Company, Jones’ assignee, the superior right, unless Jones had notice, actual or constructive, of plaintiffs’ prior right. There is no evidence that Jones actually knew of the Crawford and Stine deed, or of
Appellants introduced in evidence the original deed, containing the notary’s name signed to his certificate of acknowledgment, and containing the certificate of the clerk of the county court, endorsed thereon, admitting it to record on the 26th of December, 1901, and their counsel insist that the failure of the copy of the deed appearing on the book to show the notary’s signature, was the fault of the clerk, or his copyist, in not transcribing the name into the book, and that the notary’s name was signed to the certificate, before the deed was first admitted to record. The evidence on this point is very conflicting.
The notary himself testified that, in the fall of 1901, he was employed to prepare deeds and take acknowledgments of the grantors therein, for property purchased by Crawford and Stine, on Blue Creek and Falling Rock; that he wrote nearly all the deeds and took the acknowledgments of the various grantors; that he was at Brinegar’s house and took his and his wife’s acknowledgment to a deed made by them to Crawford and Stine a short while before Christmas of that year. He was handed the original deed, which contained his signature at the bottom of the certificate of acknowledgment,
E. W. Staunton, who died long before this suit was instituted, was clerk of the county court of Kanawha county at the time the Brinegar deed was first admitted to record. The testimony of his sister Miss Kate S. Staunton and Miss Helen B. Mahan, employees in his office, was taken to prove that the deed appearing on the record book was a literal copy of the original, as it appeared when it was first admitted to record. Miss Staunton testified that, from 1898 up to 1903, she copied the deeds into the deed book with a typewriter; that she copied into the book just what was written in the deed, whether it was written right or wrong; that if there was a blank or omission in any part of a deed she left a corresponding blank space in the copy on the book and put a line under the space to show that she recognized the mistake or omission; that she copied all the deeds appearing in Deed Book No. 85, which is the book containing the Brinegar deed. Her attention was called to a number of deeds in the book, in which spaces were left and dotted lines made with the typewriter, and she explained that those lines indicated that she recognized an omission in the original. She was shown a deed from P. P. Odell to Crawford and Stine, in which the last line of the notary, F. N. Carr’s certificate of acknowledgment appeared as follows: ‘ ‘ Given under my hand this-day of - 190 — ”, and also the deed in controversy in which the acknowledgment of W. W. Brinegar and wife, purporting to have been taken by the same notary, to which his signature did not appear at the bottom of the certificate, but in place thereof vas a dotted line, and was asked what that dotted line indicated, and she explained that they indicated, that on the original papers there were blanks, and the lines were placed on the book to show that her attention had been especially called to the omission at the time she copied the deed, and that it was not her custom to put a line under the signature when the signature appeared in the original. She
The original deed was exhibited as evidence in the circuit court and is brought up with the record for our inspection and consideration. The notary’s name in the body of the certificate and his signature at the bottom are apparently in the same handwriting, but his signature is evidently written with very much paler ink than any other part of the paper, and apparently with a different pen, the lines being much broader. In view of the facts testified to by Miss Staunton and Miss Mahan, being themselves probative in character, it is highly improbable that they made the mistake. They could hardly have failed to observe the notary’s signature, if it had been there when the deed was first admitted to record. If no dotted line had appeared on the book, where the name should'have been, their testimony would have been entitled to less weight, neither of. them being able to remember the fact of recording this' particular deed. But the appearance of the dotted line, and their explanation óf its use, together with their testimony 'relating to corrections made on the book, of figures and words, to make the copy of the paper conform to the original, presenting indisputable proof of an actual comparison made by them after the deed had been recorded, gives to their testimony very great weight. In fact, we scarcely see how such an omission could have been made otherwise than wilfully. The notary’s name on the original deed is too plainly written to have escaped the notice of the copyist.
The court’s finding on this important' fact is, we think, in accordance with the preponderance of evidence. But even if the evidence could be said to be evenly balanced, we would not feel warranted in disturbing the court’s finding, in view of the rule, so often announced by this court, giving weight to the chancellor’s finding of fact, upon conflicting testimony, which does not clearly preponderate' on one side or the other. Wethered v. Conrad, 73 W. Va. 552; McGraw v. Bower, 62 W. Va. 417; Wolfe v. Bank, 54 W. Va. 689; and Weaver v. Akin, 48 W. Va. 456.
But counsel for appellants insist that the original deed, bearing the clerk’s certificate admitting it to record, and
' This court, speaking hy Judge GeeeN, in State v. Vest, 21 W. Va. 800, discussing the rule respecting the absolute verity of a record, says: “'Whatever therefore on the face of a book of record has been duly authenticated by the signature of the judge, must be held to be an absolute verity, and it cannot be contradicted; and so also any paper actually referred to on the record-book as filed or as constituting a part of the record is to be regarded as a part of the record, and is as much a verity as if it had been spread out at length as a part of the record. But it is only that which was actually on the record-book, when thus authenticated or that is actually contained in some paper so made a part of the record by reference, that is thus held to be an absolute verity. And therefore if after a record is made up and duly authenticated by the signature of the judge, any addition is made to such record fraudulently hy any interlineation made hy another, this false and fraudulent interlineation constitutes in fact no part of the record, and evidence introduced to prove, that such interlineation was falsely and fraudulently made by one not authorized to make the same, is really not an impeachment of the verity of the record, but is simply-proving, that such fraudulent interlineation was really never a part of the record. The absolute verity attributed to a record cannot be used to give sanction to a forgery or to a fraudulent erasure of the record.”
The two cases above cited are followed in Harring v. Lee, 22 W. Va. 621, and the doctrine reiterated. In his opinion in that case, Judge SNYder, at page 672, says: “If a record is interlined or erased by some unauthorized person such alteration constitutes no part of the record and it may be assailed by parol testimony. This is not controverting the absolute verity of the record, but it is simply enquiring what really constitutes the record. If this were not allowed, the absolute verity attributed to a recoi’d could be used to give sanction to a forgery or fraudulent erasure of the record.”
The question here presented does not differ in principle
In Burnett v. Young, 107 Va. 184, it was held in an action of ejectment, that it was permissible to prove that a scroll had been affixed, by way of a seal, to both the original paper and also to the copy on the records in the clerk’s office, after the paper had been duly acknowledged and recorded. The opinion in that case cites authorities from a number of the states, including our own case of Herring v. Lee, supra, supporting the proposition. Evidence in such case does not impeach the record, but is admissible for the purpose of ascertaining what the record really is. If the signature of the notary had been on the original paper when it was first recorded, the record would have been complete and the grantee would no doubt be protected, notwithstanding the recorder
Having alleged that defendant was a purchaser with notice, the burden was on plaintiffs to prove the allegation. They have not done so. Cassiday Fork Boom & Lumber Co. v. Terry, 69 W. Va. 572; and 13 Ency. Dig. Va. & W. Va., 602. There is no proof whatever that either Jones, who took the lease from Brinegar, or G-. N. Hancock, who acted for the Blue Creek Development Company in purchasing his lease, had any actual knowledge- of plaintiffs’ right. On the other hand, defendant has fully proven that it is a complete purchaser of the Jones lease for value.
The deed from W. W. Brinegar and wife to Crawford and Stine, conveying all the minerals in the land, was good as between the parties thereto, whether recorded or not. It passed title to the oil and gas, as well as all other minerals, to the grantees and estops Brinegar to claim the right to the royalty oil; that belongs to the Blue Creek Coal & Land Company, which has the title to the minerals in place. The court below properly so held.
The decree is affirmed.
Affirmed.