74 W. Va. 327 | W. Va. | 1914
Plaintiffs recovered, in ejectment, the verdict' and judgment of which defendants now complain. The facts sufficiently appear in the discussion of the specific assignments of error, which involve rejection of special pleas, certain rulings on evidence and instructions, and refusal to grant a new trial.
The special pleas tendered by defendants aver the infancy of defendants Cleveland and Grace Snider, and the nonjoin-der of C. S. Parr as their guardian. These the court refused, and to its ruling defendants excepted on the record. Whether the pleas thus tendered and rejected should have been made parts of the record by bill of exceptions, we need not determine. The only issue thus sought to be raised was based on the theory that plaintiffs should have named as defendant the guardian and not the infants represented by him, or, if not him alone, then him and the infants jointly.
Because § 5, ch. 90, Code 1913, requires the occupant to be named as defendant in ejectment, and as under § 7, ch. 82, the guardian holds possession for his wards, it argued he is therefore the real occupant. But, by the first section cited, any person exercising acts of ownership over or claiming title to or interest in the land at the commencement of the action, whether then occupying it or not, “may also be named a defendant in the declaration”. As the declaration avers defendants entered into and unlawfully withhold from plaintiffs possession of the premises, we are unable to perceive in what respect defendants are prejudiced by the court’s refusal to permit the filing of the special pleas, even if otherwise proper.
Infants may be sued in ejectment, as well as adults, whether in possession or not, if they exercise acts of ownership over the land or claim title thereto or an interest therein. However, if they are thus sued, whether jointly with others or by themselves alone, it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to move at the proper time the appointment of a guardian ad litem, by whom they may appear, plead and defend. Campbell v. Hughes, 12 W. Va. 183; Cole v. Pennell, 2 Rand. 174; Alexander v. Davis, 42 W. Va. 465. With this requirement plaintiffs promptly and fully complied. Nor was it essential that
Defendants complain of the admission, over their objection, of certain parts of the testimony of Martin, the surveyor, T. J. Snider, C. S.' Parr and R. T. Lowndes, and of the introduction of. the Sherwood plat. But, as the rulings thereon were not brought to the attention of this court by bills of exception, no duty devolves on us to consider the propriety thereof, under the holdings in Halstead v. Horton, 38 W. Va. 727; Gregory v. Railroad Co., 37 W. Va. 606; State v. Henaghan, 73 W. Va. 706, 81 S. E. 539.
Of the bills of exception, the first makes the evidence as a whole part of the record, the second the instructions,- the third and last the overruling of the motion for a new trial.
Considering the instructions complained of by defendants, we find that by number one “the court instructs the jury that, .in ascertaining the • boundaries of a tract of land described in a grant or deed, course and distance yield to marked trees and other, permanent monuments identifying corners and lines”. While admitting the correctness of the proposition announced when fully warranted by the facts proved, defendants urge lack of applicability to the facts of this case. They claim the rule thereby asserted is not universal, absolute and inexorable, and that it was therefore error to give the instruction, because even the identity of the monuments was uncertain and contested.
Of course, there is no rule of identification universally applicable to the facts of all controversies affecting the subject matter in litigation in any particular form of action. This difficulty appears in Teass v. St. Albans, 38 W. Va. 1, wherein “some of the rules resorted to” in the location of lands are said to be “(1) natural boundaries; (2) artificial marks; (3) adjacent boundaries; (4) course and distance —course controlling distance, or .distance course, according to the circumstances. Neither rule, however, occupies an inflexible position; for when it is plain there is a mistake, an inferior means of location may control a higher”. There
Both parties derive title through Franklin Maxwell. He was the common source. That is admitted. In 1867 he acquired from T. W. McKinley 500 acres of land, in the deed bounded and described as “beginning at a large stone with a dogwood and black oak pointers, thence N 45 E 320 poles to a stake standing S 80 "W 25 feet from a large poplar marked as a pointer; thence S 45 E 250 poles; thence S 45 W 320 poles; thence N 45 W 250 poles to the beginning”.
In 1875 Maxwell conveyed to R. T. Lowndes 538 acres adjoining the McKinley tract on the south and west. The true location of two calls in the Lowndes deed determines the controversy, namely, from a chestnut “S 45 E 28 poles to a rock, black oak and dogwood, McKinley corner, thence with a line of same N 45 E 197 poles to a small beech”. Out of the 538 acres Lowndes in 1898 conveyed to E. J. Stewart 193 acres, adjoining the McKinley 500 acres on the south and west, the description of the two disputed lines being the same in the deed to Lowndes and his deed to Stewart. The deed to Stewart was made pursuant to a title bond dated in 1875, the contents of which do not appear.
After his deed to Lowndes, Franklin Maxwell, in 1880, by an agreement not in the record, sold to T. J. Snider 110 acres adjoining the 193 acres on the south and east. Maxwell having died, his widow and heirs executed the conveyance to Snider in 1893, and therein gave the two disputed calls as S 50 "W to “a black oak, S 45 W 28 poles to a chestnut”; and Snider, in 1897, by the same calls, conveyed the same tract to Parr.
Aside from the question of adverse possession, a question solely for the jury because as to it the evidence is conflicting, the true location of the southwest McKinley corner at the rock called for in the deeds to Lowndes and Stewart is decisive of the present controversy. For all the parties agree and rely upon the existence and established location of both the chestnut and the beech. But defendants attempt to establish the McKinley corner at a point 15 poles west from the large rock which plaintiffs insist is the corner called for in their chain of title. The evidence as to the true location of the two dis
Pursuant to order of survey, Martin ran the exterior bounds of the McKinley tract. Pie located its corners, substantially in accord with the calls in the deed to Maxwell. Along all the lines he found marked trees and pointers. Not only did he locate, for the southwest corner, the rock as claimed by plaintiffs, but also the northwest corner near the poplar, and the beech in the line between them. ’While he regarded the established monuments found as controlling, on the whole the courses and distances on his plat are not materially variant from those in the conveyances under which plaintiffs claim title. The disputed call, N 45 E 320 poles from the rock to the stake, he ran as N 48 E 321 poles, locating with reasonable certainty both the exterior monuments specified. With and assisting him, at the instance of defendants, was their witness Freeman, an experienced surveyor, who states that the Martin plat, followed by the verdict, defined reasonably well the McKinley survey. Freeman practically admits that the large rock then located as the southwest corner corresponded with the monument called for in the Lowndes deed, and was the only rock near thereto answering that description, and consequently that a line therefrom past the beech to the point designated by Martin as the opposite corner would represent truly the northwest line of the McKinley tract.
Confirming the accuracy of the Martin survey, plaintiffs J. L. and L. C. Stewart describe the McKinley corner at the rock, with the dogwood and black oak pointers, and say both their father and Franklin Maxwell in their lifetime treated it as the true location. They and Lowndes testify that, when E. J. Stewart purchased the 193 acre tract in 1875, it was carefully surveyed by Daniel Sherwood, who then identified the rock as the corner, and the beech as well as other marked trees along the line therefrom to the opposite corner near the poplar; and the plat then made by him is introduced in support of their testimony. It was pursuant to this survey that the Lowndes deed was made. It is also shown that still another survey of the disputed line was made by Cortland Sperry in 1876, for defendant’s predecessors in title, and that Sperry also fixed the rock as the McKinley corner.
From this analysis of the testimony touching the location of lines and corners, we can not say instruction number 1 was improper, especially under the authority of State v. King, 64 W. Va. 546, wherein this court held that “mere conflict in the evidence as to identity of monuments does not preclude the application of the rule” that “quantity, courses and distances mentioned in the description of land must yield to identified monuments where there is a conflict”, “ it being the duty of the court or jury, as the case may be, to determine from- the evidence whether the objects in question are the monuments called for”. To the same effect is the holding in Lewis v. Tates, 62 W. Va. 575, wherein the court said: “In locating land from the description in a deed or patent, natural monuments and marked lines must be allowed ordinarily to control courses and distances, if there is a conflict; but, in such case, the evidence must be sufficient to identify with reasonable certainty the monuments in question as the monuments called for in the description”. As in Teass v. St. Albans, supra, so in Matheny v. Allen, 63 W. Va. 443, it is held that as “a general rule in locating boundaries of land resort is to be had first to natural landmarks, next to artificial mon
It is true, as defendants contend, the exact location of a corner common to both traets-was an issue to be determined by the jury; an issue as to which, we have already said, the evidence conflicted. But, as also stated, there were corners as to the proper location of which there was no controversy. The effect of the instruction, therefore, was to advise the jury that, in an effort to ascertain the location of the disputed corner and line, established monuments, natural or artificial, control other calls in a deed in case of a conflict. As thus understood, the court did not err in giving the instruction; especially when it gave for defendants other instructions to the effect that if the jury found the true corner to be at' the black oak root, indicated by J on the plat, its verdict should be for defendants.
Defendants rely for reversal on plaintiffs’ instruction number 7, whereby the jury is directed to find for plaintiffs if they believe from the evidence that the “rock”, at D on the Martin plat, is the true McKinley corner, and is the same rock corner called for in the deed from Lowndes to Stewart for the 193 acres, unless they further find defendants and those under whom they claim have been in adverse possession of the disputed strip for ten years prior to institution of the action. They find vice in it, because, as they contend, if the corner is located as found by Martin, it does not follow as a matter of course that plaintiffs are entitled to recover all the land in dispute. In the deeds from Maxwell to Lowndes and Snider, there are three lines and four corners common to the two tracts thus conveyed, one owned by plaintiffs, the other by defendants. The calls- in plaintiffs’ chain of title from the beech, the beginning corner in the Lowndes deed, are S 45 W to “a rock, black oak and dogwood, McKinley corner”, fhence S 45 W 28 poles to a chestnut, thence N 57 W 21 poles to a chestnut oak on the ridge. Those in defendants’ chain of title are S 50 W to “a black oak”, which by its verdict the jury in effect located at D and not at J on the map as the corner at the “rock, black oak and dogwood”, thence S 45 W 28 poles to a chestnut, N 57 ¥ 20% poles to a chestnut
Finally, defendants vigorously assail plaintiffs’ instruction number 2. While prolix, and, when considered alone, of doubtful propriety, we are of opinion that it did not, when read with defendants’ instructions 6, 11,, 18 and 21, tend to prejudice the defendants. Properly analyzed, it advised the jury that if they found plaintiffs and defendants traced title to a common grantor, a fact admitted, then the deed by which he first divested himself of title to the land in controversy confers the superior title; that, if “plaintiffs’ title to the land in controversy relates back to and connects up with that superior title”, their title is superior to that of defendants; and that, if plaintiffs’ ancestor “entered upon the land described in the declaration under his purchase” from his vendor, the presumption is he held to the extent of the boundaries stated in the deed, but that this presumption may be rebutted by evidence of actual adverse possession of the land in controversy; Defendants argue that by this instruction the court virtually settled the principal question submitted to the jury — whether the land in controversy was in fact the land owned by plaintiffs. But instructions are always to be read as a whole; and defendants’ instructions plainly told the jury not to find for plaintiffs unless they believed from the evidence the land in dispute was embraced within the different conveyances in their chain of title.
An examination leads us to the conclusion that the instructions requested by defendants and refused by the court were, when viewed in the light of the evidence, either .improper because erroneous, or sufficiently covered by those asked and given.
As in our opinion the evidence., though conflicting, was suf-
Finding no error, we affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.