40 W. Va. 611 | W. Va. | 1895
Maria Ward died seised of a hotel property known as the “Ward House,” in the town of Grafton, leaving a husband and six children. Her husband, George W. Ward occupied the property as tenant by the curtesy from February, 1878, when his wife died, until December, 1880, when he died. Four of his children lived’in the hotel with him, the plaintiff, L. E. Ward, John B. Ward, Mrs. Broyles, and Archibald Ward. Before the father’s death, and for eleven years after-wards, the plaintiff, L. E. Ward, occupied a stable on the property as a livery stable, and after his death Mrs. Broyles and husband occupied 1 he hotel. Mrs. Broyles, by purchase from coparceners at different times after her father’s death, became owner, including her own share, of five-sixths of the property.
L. E. Ward brought this suit in the Circuit Court of Taylor county, alleging thai in 1879 he and several others of the parceners, seeing that the property was badly in need of repair, almost entirely rebuilt and greatly enlarged the hotel, at great expense, he furnishing a large amount of means, labor, and material, of the amount of one thousand five hundred and thirty eight dollars and twenty six cents, and that Archibald F. Ward and Lloyd M. Broyles, for his wife, furnished material and labor, for which amount expended by him he claimed compensation. He further alleged that for several years Broyles and his wife had the possession and use of the hotel property, except the stable, without payment of rent, but had paid taxes, and put some repairs on the property from time to time as needed, and that he, the plaintiff, had occupied the stable without'payment of rent. He prayed that an account of the rent and improvements be taken; the amount due him and others be decreed; that the property be rented or sold to satisfy those charges, and also that the property, not being susceptible of partition, might be sold,
First, let us consider the subject of rent. Are those of the heirs who occupied the property after the end of the father’s estate by the curtesy liable to pay rent, or rather compensation for use and occupation? At common-law neither a joint tenant, tenant in common, nor coparcener, occupying the common property, and thus taking more than his share of the rents and profits, can be made to account to his fellows, unless he' has been appointed bailiff or receiver by his fellows. Each one has right to enter and use the land, and this fact can not be impaired by the fact that others absent themselves or do not claim their right to a common enjoyment. Unless the one in possession denies the right of the others to enter and enjoy the estate, or agrees to pay rent, nothing can be claimed of him. It is presumed that the others consent to his use. He can not call on the others to help him farm or otherwise use the property, and, in case of loss from failure of crops or other cause, he can not call on the others to contribute to the loss. If the others do not wish to occupy the premises with their co-owners, the remedy of partition is at hand, or, if the property be indivisible, the court will sell it, and divide its proceeds. Lomax, Dig. 501, 481; 2 Minor, Inst. 437, 429; Freem. Coten. § 269; note to Early v. Friend, 78 Am. Dec. 665. This is the view stated in Freem. Coten. § 258; Gayle v. Johnston, 80 Ala. 395.
By section 14, chapter 100, Code, it is provided that an action of account may be maintained “by one joint tenant, or
But it will be observed that this statute in terms applies to joint tenants and tenants in common, and does not mention parceners. Does the statute apply by analogy to them? Its letter does not. Joint tenancy, tenancy in common and copar-cenary are the three notable joint estates, and to them alike the common-law rule applied that one cotenant using alone the common property was not liable to account therefor, and the legislature in changing the rule leaves out coparceners, and expressly names joint tenants, and tenants in common. Why do this unless it intended to exclude coparceners from the statute? Could there be a stronger instance of the ap
So, I do not think these parceners could by law demand an .account of use and occupation. But, in addition, all the par-ceners, save one, including the plaintiff, by uniting in the form of a letter signed by all as an agreement, declared that they did not wish the hotel to go into the hands of strangers, and wished Broyles, then in possession, pot to leave it, but to keep it and use it, and insure and paint and repair it, and, after all the improvements contemplated by it had been made, if he thought the heirs were entitled to anything he ■could pay; but if he thought they were not, then pay nothing, leaving it to him, and they would be satisfied. This was April 17, 1884. It spoke no intent to charge back rent, but by plain implication disclaimed it, and disclaimed an intention to charge in future. The suit would not change this. Mrs. Broyles still had right till partition or sale, so slie did not exclude an actual effort at entry and enjoyment by •others. Let the question of liability for use and occupation be settled as it may on general principles of law. This agreement in this case repels a charge.
Next, as to improvements claimed by L. E. Ward. Can he be allowed for them? One joint tenant or tenant in common at common-law could compel others to unite in the expenses of the necessary reparation of a house or mill owned by them, though the rule is limited to three parts of the common prop
It seems to be claimed in the brief of counsel that the letter to L. M. Broyles, written by some of the heirs, justifies a charge by L. E. Ward for improvements. After requesting him not to leave the house, but to stay, it recited what he ought to pay, tm. keep and use the property, have it insured, keep taxes paid, keep the house in good repair; and then said “Go to work and have the house painted and repaired as in your opinion you think it should be; and, after all this improvement, has been made, if you think, after calculating the expenses of the improvements and the taxes, etc., which you may have paid heretofore, that the heirs are entitled to anything, then you can arrange and pay them their proportion; and if you think that nothing is coming to the heirs after paying for painting, etc., (hen we are satisfied.” This did not refer to improvements made by L. E. Ward before the letter, but to future improvements. The word “paid” refers to-taxes. Although it be law that one coparcener can not without consent make permanent improvements, and charge his coparcener or his share with their cost, where the estate-is partible in kind, as a tract of land, how is it in the case of a house or land which is impartible in kind for any reason, so that it has to be sold in order to effect a partition, as was the-case in the present instance? Is there no difference here?' Circumstances alter cases. Is it right for a court of justice to sell the land greatly increased in value by the expenditure of one brother, and put the money into the pocket of another with its eyes shut to the fact that the property brought more, a great deal, by reason of the new house built by one of the-brothers? Ought it not to be ascertained how much the value was enhanced by the improvement, and pay the amount of the enharicement to the one whose means produced it, and!
It is objected that the bill does not charge a request on the part of the cotenants for the improvements. It would be necessary to charge them otherwise than as indicated above, but it is not necessary to so charge them; that is, as a simple increase of value.
It follows from what has been said that, while there could be no claim for use and occupation against Broyles and his wife, yet the decision of the court below is wrong in wholly disallowing all claim for improvement made by the plaintiff ■out of the proceeds of sale, in the manner above stated, which
A reference was made to a commissioner, and bis report charged rents and profits to Mrs. Broyles for tbe hotel, and to the plaintiff for the stable, and charged Mrs. Broyles, as the owner of five-sixths of the property, with five-sixths of the money spent by the plaintiff in improvements. The commissioner made a part of his report a deposition of the plaintiff, and, as the report imports, there was no other oral evidence before him. Taking that deposition alone, it supports the report as to the charge for improvements, as it shows consent on the part of the cotenants. No exception was made within ten days, and the plaintiff contends that the result reached and returned by the commissioner must be taken as correct, and can not be impaired by after exceptions and evidence af-terwards taken, and that the court could not, upon depositions afterwards taken, overturn and reject the result reached by the commissioner, but must confirm or recommit. Ward v. Ward, 21 W. Va. 262. The plaintiff’s deposition must be considered a part of the report — a part of its face. Lynch v. Henry, 25 W. Va., opinion page 424; Kester v. Lyon, 40 W. Va. 161 (20 S.E. Rep. 933.) Itisplainthatif we decide the exception only by the face of the report, including that deposition, we must overrule it, because the deposition sustains the report in the póint of view of fact. But after the report, and we will say after the exception, the defense took depositions. They deny the statement of the plaintiff’s deposition, that the other heirs agreed that the plaintiff make the improvements. The court read them on the hearing. Could they be read to impair the finding of the report in favor of the plaintiff as to the improvements? This may seem at first an immaterial question, since as above stated, the plaintiff ought to be allowed out of the sale an amount equal to the amount of increase of value at the time of sale imparted to the property by the improvements; but a second thought makes it material, in this: that if there was an agreement between the parties that the improvements be made, that would entitle the plaintiff to perhaps a larger recovery, that is, the original cost of im
If we say tliat after a report lias been made a party may go on and take depositions, and have them read, we introduce confusion in practice, install a bad practice, and put a premium upon negligence and delay. A case is referred to a commissioner. He gives notice, and proceeds to execute the order of reference. The parties ought to attend before him. They can be much better heard upon the facts before a commissioner than in court. It is the most important proceeding in the case, save, perhaps, the final hearing; in many cases even more important than that. If the action of the commissioner is unsatisfactory, the party can, within ten days after he has finally announced his conclusion by a completed re; port, except, and, if he does not want more evidence, ask the commissioner to certify the evidence to the court for its review; and if he is surprised at the inferences drawn by the commissioner upon that evidence, and thinks he can strengthen his case by additional evidence, he can except within ten days, and take more evidence, and under proper circumstances, the commissioner will delay returning his report to enable the party to do so, as the statute giving him right to take such evidenece ought to be liberally construed to pro-mole a fair, full hearing; and then the commissioner can report on such evidence, or make an amended report, or send up his original report, the exceptions, and all the evidence, old and new. After all the toil before a commissioner, after he has given his decision, and after the full opportunity for a hearing before him, a negligent litigant ought not to be allowed to reopen the case, often to the inconvenience and surprise of the other party. If so, where the utility of this tedious hearing before that'important auxiliary of the court, the commissioner? It would be an almost meaningless performance. We do not think the Code means such an reopening by giving right to except at the first term after the report. We think such after taken depositions can not be read on the hearing to impair the report, as was done in this case. We think the only office they can perform is to support a motion for a recommital of the report, or to suggest
I have said this much upon this matter of commissioners’ reports because of the importance, in every day’s practice, of proper understanding as to proceedings before commissioners, and the frequent controversies arising upon them. Under these views, it would have been error to overturn the report, based on the theory that the improvements were made with the consent and agreement of the coheirs, but for the fact that the bill and amended bill have no allegation that the coheirs requested such improvements to bei'made or consented thereto. As this was not charged, the finding of the report is error apparent on'its face, and vindicates the action of the court against the argument that only by using the after taken depositions it rejected the finding of the report. Does, it thence follow that the total disallowance of any-thingto the plaintiff is justified- by ¡this omission in the bills? By no means. The bills charged the fact of the improvements, and that the hotel property itself! was not susceptible of partition, and must be sold, and the same decree which, disallowed all compensation for improvements subjected the-property to sale in order to divide its proceeds, and upon those facts the plaintiff was entitled to something on the principle of increased value above stated. Nor ought the court to have confirmed the report and decreed its full finding, because it allowed, not an amount for increased value,, but the account of expenditure by the plaintiff in improvements, and because it charged use and occupation. There-ought to have been a recommittal to ascertain the amount of increased value, viewing the case on those facts. The-court could not make a new statement. If the plaintiff amended his bill by the allegation wanting, he could have claimed the account filed by him, with interest, if he could succeed in sustaining the theory or contention that his co~
Tt is contended that in no view can the plaintiff claim anything at all for the improvements, since they were made in 1S7Í), while the father yet lived, and his estate by the curtesy existed, and the heirs had only an ‘estate in revision, not in possession, and the improvements were made for and by the father. All the children, save two daughters, continued to reside in the home as a family with their father, after the mother’s death, and the existence of this curtesy would not prevent any reversioner, byiagreement with the'others, from making improvements beneficial to the inheritance, and charging the properly with them. Nor- would it debar one from claiminglsuch increase of value in the reversion or inheritance as his improvements imparted. Of course, were it shown that the plaintiff contracted with the father to make them; if the father became his debtor, his sole debtor, for them, and he looked to the father for pay — he could claim nothing from the heirs. I do not consider that Ithe evidence .at present shows such a case as enables us to! say this.
So much of the decree complained of as disallows the claim of the’plaintiff or Lavina Broyles or L. M.Broyles for repairs, improvements, or rents is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in respect thereto,i according to principles above stated, so far as applicable, and further according to principles governing courts of equity in such case.