50 W. Va. 517 | W. Va. | 1901
As will be seen in a-former decision in this ease, 40 W. Va. 611, Maria Ward died seized of a hotel property known as the “Ward House” in Grafton, leaving six children, to whom it descended, and one of the coparceners, L. E. Ward, brought a chancery suit in the circuit court of Taylor County having for its purposes a sale of the property on the ground of its insus-ceptibility of partition, and compensation to him for improvements made upon the property adding to its value. A decree was rendered denjdng all claim by L. E. Ward for improvements, and this court reversed the decree and remanded the case to the circuit court for further proceedings, after holding that Ward should be compensated for his improvements according to the principles stated in said former decision. When the case went back to the circuit court it was referred to a commissioner to report the enhanced value of the property by reason of L. E. Ward’s improvements, and he reported the amount due Ward on account thereof to be one thousand three hundred and eighty-eight dollars and thirty-three cents. While the ease was before the commissioner Mrs. Laverna N. Boyles produced a deed from the plaintiff, L. E. Ward, conveying to her Ms one-sixth undivided interest in the property, and claimed that such conveyance debarred L. E. Ward from any further demand in the case. Afterwards Laverna N. Boyles filed a supplemental answer setting up that deed in bar of all further claim by L. E. Ward in the suit, and the court entered a decree stating that that deed debarred the plaintiff from any relief on account of said improvements, and dismissed the plaintiff’s bill, and L. E. Ward has taken this appeal.
When the supplemental answer of Mrs. Boyles was offered objection was made to it, and the action of the court in allowing the supplemental answer to be filed is assigned as a ground of error. The objection to the answer was simply general, and did not consist of exceptions pointing out the vice of the answer which exception should always be made to an answer as there is ho demurrer to an answer. The better practice is, not to make a general objection, but to make specific exceptions, as stated in Bennett v. Pierce, 45 W. Va. 654; but as there stated our practice is loose in this matter, and a general objection is generally used. Often it will prove in
Is there any other reason why the deed shall not have the operation claimed for it to bar the plaintiff’s demand? It takes away from the plaintiff and passes to Mrs. Boyles the one-sixth interest of L. E. Ward in the real estate itself; but does it take away from said Ward and pass to said Boyles Ward’s demand for improvements? It is claimed that this demand is so inseparably connected with Ward’s estate in the property that this demand claimed for improvements passed as appurtenant to the very estate in the property, as incident to it. We must be able to say, to give the deed that effect, that this money demand is part and parcel of the very realty itself, adhering to it, inhering in it, an appurtenance, so to speak; for it is not mentioned in the deed, that instrument conveying only the one-sixth interest which Ward inherited from his mother, and he inherited no demand for improvements from his mother. It is argued that the deed made no reservation of this demand of money for improvements. Unless it be a part of the realty itself, no reservation was necessary, as that is only necessary
After the court announced its decree the plaintiff asked leave to file an amended bill; but he presented no amended bill so as to let us know what it proposed to introduce into the case and judge of its materiality or relevancy. Besides, the record shows that there was no request to file it until after the court had decided the case; indeed, it shows that the plaintiff consented to
The circuit court has not yet passed on the commissioner’s
The decree is reversed and the case remanded.
Reversed.