131 S.E. 716 | W. Va. | 1926
Plaintiff, the owner, by a grant from one Kemper, of a half undivided interest, and lessee from one Goff of the other half undivided interest, in all the oil and gas under a tract of seventy-five acres of land in Roane County, seeks by the bill to perpetually enjoin the Morley Oil Gas Company, lessee of the Board of Education of Geary District in said county, of three-fourths of an acre lot, a part of the said seventy-five acres, from drilling a well for the production of oil or gas on said lot, and to cancel as a cloud upon plaintiff's title to the oil and gas in the tract so acquired from said Kemper and Goff, the lease from said board of education; and there is also a prayer for general relief.
The bill shows that the board of education acquired its deed from America Hensley and husband August 7, 1903, not recorded until November 16, 1905; that Kemper got his deed from the same grantors March 18, 1904, recorded March 23, 1904; and that Goff got his deed from the Hensleys January 30, 1909, recorded February 8, 1909, and leased the same to plaintiff October 19, 1914, for ten years, extended March 26, 1923, for an additional term of five years. On the presenting of the original bill to the circuit judge August 14, 1923, a preliminary injunction was awarded as prayed for, which, on the defendant's motion to dissolve, heard on bill, amended and supplemental bill, and the joint and several demurrer and answer of the defendant thereto, by an order of the circuit court on September 25, 1925, was dissolved, and from which decree this appeal was awarded.
No issue of fact is presented for our consideration on this appeal, which involves solely the correctness of the ruling of the court below in dissolving the preliminary injunction, for the cause was not then matured for final decree. The only issue of fact presented by the pleadings, if any, is whether the plaintiff is a complete purchaser from Kemper of the half undivided interest in the oil and gas under the seventy-five acres without notice of the rights of defendant under the unrecorded deed to the board of education for the school house lot. In plaintiff's amended and supplemental bill it is *85 admitted that the board of education took possession of its lot in the fall of 1903, and erected thereon a school house, and has continually since then, during the school terms, conducted school therein, and been in the exclusive possession of said school house lot; but it denies that such possession for school purposes was inconsistent with plaintiff's rights and the rights of its predecessor in the oil and gas thereunder, or no notice to it of any rights antagonistic to the rights so acquired by it.
Wherefore it is complained that the decree appealed from is erroneous in three particulars: First, in not adjudging the deed to the board of education to be void as to Kemper and those claiming under him, because unrecorded so as to give notice to him, pursuant to section 5 of chapter 74 of the Code: Second, in not holding, under the showing made, that Kemper was a purchaser for value without notice of the said unrecorded deed to the board of education: Third, in holding that the erection of the school house on the lot constituted notice to Kemper of the claim of title of the board of education thereto.
On the first proposition, of course the statute protects only a purchaser without notice, and the purchaser so protected must be a complete purchaser, one who has no notice of the prior unrecorded deed, or of the rights of the grantee, and who has paid all the purchase money. Doswell v. Buchanan's Ex'ors, 3 Leigh, 365; Welch v. King,
What we have said on the first is a good answer to the second proposition also.
Respecting the third point of error, it is urged by counsel for plaintiff, first, that in as much as the law existing at the time of the deed to the board of education was made, as interpreted in Herold v. Board of Education,
We think, moreover, that the possession of the school house and lot by the board of education was notice to all the world of the rights of the board and of its lease. Perhaps the most recent declaration on the subject is Page v. Pharmacy,
Our conclusion is to affirm the decree.
Affirmed. *87