74 W. Va. 237 | W. Va. | 1914
Joel Titehenell complains of a decree in a partition suit, according to each of his brothers, Peter and Silas, a one-third interest in a tract of land, containing 120 acres, and overruling his claim of sole ownership, based on alleged payment of all'the purchase money and title by adverse possession.
The salient facts are as follows: The land was conveyed to the three brothers by C. B. Nine by a deed, dated March 28, 1872, in exchange for a tract, containing 94 acres, conveyed by them to Nine. Joel claims the 94 acre tract, constituting the sole consideration for the conveyance, was paid for by Mm, but, conceding the facts relied upon as showing such payment, the exchange was made before the payment. In other words, the 94 acre tract had been conveyed to Nine and the 120 acre tract to him and his brothers, before he obtained any deed for the former and before he had done the acts by which it is claimed he became entitled to it. Hence, no trust in the 120 acre tract could have resulted to him, and he may not have acquired an equitable title from his brothers by parol purchase or ouster of them as his cotenants. The 94 acre tract was a part of a tract of 390 acres, purchased by Stephen Titehenell and his five sons from John Rhodeheaver, and conveyed to them by deed dated March 28, 1867. A short time after this conveyance, 106 acres of the tract was set apart to Noah Titehenell,-one of the sons. John W. Titehenell verbally sold his interest to his brother Joel. Then a verbal partition was made under which the father, Stephen Titche-nell, took the 94 acre tract and Peter and Silas 50 acres each and Joel 100 acres. In March, 1868, all of these parties except Noa’h, became jointly indebted to Jones & Nutter in the sum of $498.29, and Silas, Peter and Joel executed an agreement by which they gave a lien upon the land, less the 106 acres, set apart to Noah, to secure the payment of it. The exchange of the 94 acres for the 120 acres was made, as has been stated, March 28, 1872. On March 29, 1872, Jones & Nutter recovered a judgment against Joel and Peter for $214.00. The deeds for the 94 acres to Nine and from Nine for the 120 acres were recorded March 30, 1872. In the same
These transactions left no title to the 94 acres in Joel and gave him paper title to one-third of the 120 acre tract. At the date of the satisfaction of the Jones & Nutter debt, Nine was the owner of the 94 acre tract and had' been for two years. Joel, Peter and Silas were the joint owners of the 120 acre tract which had been conveyed in consideration of the 94 acre tract, owned at the time of the conveyance by Joel, Peter, Silas and perhaps others of the Titchenell family, or possibly by Stephen, as it had been set apart to him by the verbal partition. Joel did not acquire the interest of Silas and Peter until long after the exchange made in 1872. It is true the 94 acre tract was encumbered by the Jones & Nutter debt at the date of the exchange and that the exchange of deeds contemplated removal of the encumbrance by the Titchenells. They conveyed with general warranty and covenanted that they had good right to convey and the deed from Nine recited the consideration as $800.00 in land, to be con■veyed by deed with general warranty, “when the deed referred to is established, and the record is acknowledged.” Joel Titchenell claims the title to the 94 acre tract did not pass to Nine by this deed, until the removal of the encumbrance thereon, but it made a present grant, not one in futuro,- and was recorded March 30, 1872, the date of the recordation of the deed from the Titchenells for. the 94 acre tract. Likely
As the 94 acre tract did not, at the date of the exchange, belong to Joel, and he had not paid the purchase money thereof, we perceive no ground upon which the equitable title to the 120 acre tract could have vested in him at the time. A resulting trust arises on the payment of the purchase money at or before the execution of the deed or upon some equitable circumstance existing at the time. No such prior or contemporaneous payment, ’obligation to pay or other equitable circumstance or condition in Joel’s favor existed at the date of the conveyance.
He afterwards paid for the 94 acre tract and may have had a verbal contract or understanding that the 120 acre tract should he or become his in consideration thereof, or he may have had a cause of action at law or in equity against Peter and Silas, arising out of these subsequent transactions; but if he did, equitable title in him to the whole of the 120 acre tract does not necessarily follow. If it was intended or expressly agreed that he should have the two-thirds thereof, conveyed to him by Nine, the arrangement was one of purchase and it is wholly denied and repudiated by the plaintiffs and not clearly proven by the defendant. He only proves circumstances from which an implication of such agreement might arise, but he proves no such express agreement. Though the statute of frauds is not relied upon in the pleadings, there is no admission of an agreement or contract of sale and the defendant does not rely upon one. His principal contentions are acquisition of title by payment of the purchase money, title under a certain deed and contract, not yet referred to herein, and-title by adverse possession. If, however, there was a verbal contract of purchase, it is utterly inoperative as to the interests then held by Peter and Silas, because' they conveyed their interests to their father and mother by a deed dated, August 18, 1874.
Joel claims to have purchased these interests from his parents, but produces as evidence of his purchase only a written instrument, acknowledging the receipt of $100.00 from him, and reciting that they gave him possession of the land on which they resided and the right, title and claim they then had. This instrument bears the signatures and seals ••'of Stephen and Lydia and is witnessed by Noah Titchenell. It is not even a good contract for the purchase of the interest of Lydia Titchenell. Being a married woman, she could part with her title only in the manner prescribed by the statute. The acknowledgment required by law was wanting. Simpson v. Belcher, 61 W. Va. 157; Amick v. Ellis, 53 W. Va. 421; Rosenour v. Rosenour, 47 W. Va. 554; Moore v. Ligon, 30 W. Va. 146.
Though the agreement is void as to her, it was valid as to Stephen and passed at least the equitable title to his life estate, with right of possession. Under it, Joel had right of possession against Lydia Titchenell, the owner of the remainder in fee, wherefore there was-no right of action in her or her heirs, until the death of ’Stephen, which occurred only about four years before this suit was brought. Obviously, therefore Joel did not acquire the title by adverse possession, if the paper can be regarded as color of title. McNeely v. South Penn Oil Co., 52 W. Va. 616; Depue v. Miller, 65 W. Va. 120; Central Land Company v. Laddley, 32 W. Va. 134. Though he was a cotenant, owning in fee one-third of the tract, the result must be the same, for Lydia had no right of possession until the death of Stephen, the life tenant, and could not be ousted. The cotenancy, as regards the freehold in possession, was between Joel and his father, not between h.im, on the one hand, and his father and mother, on the other. The mother, having no immediate right of enjoyment cannot be deemed to have been excluded therefrom by any hostile claim or action by Joel. Lynch v. Brookover, 72 W. Va. 211, 77 S. E. 983.
From these conclusions it follows that Joel Titchenell owns a one-third interest in the land as the grantee of Nine and such additional interest as he has inherited from his mother, along with her other heirs. Both he and the plaintiffs have
For the reasons stated, the decree will be reversed and the cause remanded with leave to amend by making such new parties as are necessary and for further proceedings.
Reversed and Remanded.