150 S.E. 513 | W. Va. | 1929
This is a proceeding by a school commissioner.
Moses Mounts died in 1904 owning a tract of 225 acres in Logan county. His heirs instituted a partiton suit, in which this tract was partitioned in 1905. One of the exterior boundaries of the tract was the Trace Fork of Island Creek. The portion bordering on the stream was divided into seven lots, numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 9. (See copy of partition map.) This litigation grows out of the fact that the courses and the distances in the descriptions of the lots do not coincide with the meanders of the creek, and do not extend entirely to the bank of the creek. It is the contention of the state that the lot lines should be run according to course and distance; that when so done there is a strip of land between the lots and the creek; and that this strip has been off the land books since 1905, and is forfeited to the state for the non-payment of taxes. The heirs of Mounts concur in the contention of the state and ask the right to redeem the strip. Lot No. 9 is the only one involved on this appeal. It was allotted to Brookie Martin, a daughter of Mounts, who conveyed it to Mrs. H. C. Jones in 1906. She and her estate have owned and paid the taxes on it since that time. The lot is described as follows: Beginning at a point on the railroad right of way with same N. 77 1/2° W. 379 feet to corner of lot No. 6, and with same S. 14° E. 186 feet to a stake on the bank of the Trace Fork of Island Creek; N. 82° 50' E. 215 feet; N. 51° E. 199 feet to the beginning, containing 34,848 square feet. The executor of the Jones estate takes the position that there is no vacant land between lot 9 and the creek.
As Island Creek is a non-navigable stream, a call for the bank would ordinarily extend ad filum aquae. Carter v. Ry. Co.,
The language used in describing the creek lines of the other six lots is as follows:
No. 1. "To a stake at Mud Fork of Island Creek and down same with the meanders thereof." (Here follows five calls for magnetic course and distance to corner of lot No. 2.)
No. 2. "To a stake on the bank of the Trace Fork of Island Creek, S. 68° 4' W. 206.6 feet to the place of beginning (corner of lot No. 1).
No. 3. "To a stake on the bank of Island Creek, thence up the creek N. 68° 4' E. 185.3 feet to corner of lot No. 4."
No. 4. "To a stake on the bank of Island Creek N. 68° 4' E. 206.5 feet to corner of lot No. 5."
No. 5. "To a stake on the bank of Island Creek, thence down the creek N. 68° 4' E. 158 feet, N. 78° 1' E. 14 feet to corner of lot No. 6."
No. 6. "To a stake on the bank of the creek, thence down creek binding thereon 362 feet to the place of beginning" (a stake on the creek bank).
As the partition of land is one transaction, the description of the subdivisions "should be construed together".Mitchell v. Smith,
A surviving commissioner, who surveyed the tract and made the partition map, testified that the strip between the lines and the creek was not included in the partition. He produced his field notes of the survey, which accord with the courses and distances given in the lot descriptions. But monuments mentioned in a description of land are given precedence over field notes. Hubbard v. Dusy,
As early as 1838 the New York court, after reviewing the decisions, said: "These cases show, what it is very difficult for the human mind to resist, that the parties never meant to leave a narrow strip between the land and the river, merely because some stake or tree or even all the stakes and trees of the line stand at a slight distance from the river. * * * They are rather intended to indicate or point down to the termini of the water line." Starr v. Child, 20 Wend. 149, 156. It is now an established presumption of law that the grantor of an entire tract does not intend to withhold a narrow strip along an outside line. See Western Co. v. Peytona Co.,
Every exterior corner of the entire seven lots is designated as on the creek bank except the beginning corner of lot 9. Since the creek flows by lot 9, just as by the other lots, no valid reason appears why this corner should not have been designated as the other thirteen exterior corners. The failure to describe it as on the bank of the creek must be treated as an oversight. It is clear from the partition map that the commissioners did not intend to fix the beginning corner of lot 9 at 120 feet from the creek. It is true that the creek was not surveyed and was only "sketched in" on the plat. But the author of the plat says that the relation of the creek to *58 the lot lines as shown on the plat is approximately correct. In the case of Colliery Co. v. Campbell, supra, the commissioner's deed called for certain trees, as an exterior corner, which were well within the boundary being partitioned. But it was held that the call "was plainly contradictory of the general purpose and intent of the conveyance"; and the line was extended to and the corner fixed on the exterior line of the tract. Under the express authority of that decision and under the general authority of the presumption of law above referred to, we hold that the description of the beginning corner of lot 9, which is given in the commissioner's report is contradictory of the purpose of the partition proceedings, and is a mistake; and that the corner is at the place where the thread of Island Creek meets the right of way. Under this view the quadrangle which the lower court held to be forfeited is within lot 9 and is not subject to amercement by the state.
The decree of the circuit court is accordingly reversed, and the bill is dismissed so far as it relates to lot 9.
Reversed and dismissed.