Adkins v. Huff

52 S.E. 773, 58 W. Va. 645, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 10
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 773 (Adkins v. Huff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adkins v. Huff, 52 S.E. 773, 58 W. Va. 645, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 10 (W. Va. 1906).

Opinion

Poppenbakgee, Judsb :

David W. Huff complains of a decree of the circuit court of Wayne county, overruling in part his motion to dissolve an injunction, awarded against him on the bill of Milton J. Adkins, and perpetuating the same in so far as it was not dissolved.

The injunction, as perpetuated, inhibits the said David W. Huff and his co-defendant, David E. Huff, from preventing, obstructing or hindering said Adkins and his employes from cutting and removing certain timber on a tract of land, con-, taining forty-three acres, owned by the said David W. Huff. The claim of Adkins to the timber is based upon a reservation in a deed by which he conveyed the land to said Huff. The language of the clause reserving the timber is as follows: “Said first party, M. J. Adkins reserves and still owns all timber down to a railroad tie size excepting poplar forty-two inches and less in circumference 2 ft above the ground which the said David W. Huff is to have for building timber. * * * * And the said M. J. Adkins is to have 34 months from this date to remove said reserve timber off of said land and to have all rights to cut, haul and saw and remove said timber [646]*646and tan bark and to set saw mill in the calf pasture field and to remove same as if it was Ms own land.”

The circumstances and transactions which led up to this litigation wfere as follows: The deed was executed by Adkins November 16, 1900. The consideration was four hundred dollars, of which one hundred was paid' at the date of the deed, and for the residue three one-hundred dollar notes were executed by the grantee, payable, respectively in ten, twenty-two and thirty-four months after the date thereof, and payment thereof was secured by a vendor’s lien. The first and second of these notes were paid as they became due. About three months before the last one became due, David E. Huff, father of the grantee, who had aided his son in negotiating for the land, proposed to Adkins that, with the consent of said David W. Huff, he execute a new deed to him, David E. Huff. Very soon afterwards this was done and the old deed delivered back to Adkins. As to the purpose of this transaction, the parties differ in their pleadings and evidence. Adkins contends that the purpose was to vest the title absolutely in David E. Huff, he having represented himself as having paid all the purchase money that had been paid, and his son as desiring to abandon the purchase. The two Huffs say the intention was merely to give the father security, upon the land, for two hundred and thirty dollars which he had loaned his son to aid in paying for it. David W. Huff admits that he consented to the- execution of the deed for that purpose and both he and is father say the understanding was that it should be an exact copy of the first deed, except that the name of the grantee should be changed and the reservation of the vendor’s lien omitted. The new deed departed, however, from these specifications by altering the date at which the right of Adkins to cut and remove timber should expire. By the first deed- such right would have expired September 16, 1903. This one specified April 1, 1904, as the time limit. In lieu of the vendor’s lien, Adkins took the note of David E. Pluff for the last payment with personal security, and he says this change in the security was the consideration for the extension of time.

In December, 1903, Adkins brought this suit to enjoin David E. Huff and David W. Pluff from interfering with his alleged right to cut and remove timber from the land and [647]*647from hauling away and otherwise molesting the railroad ties which he had made on the land, after September 16, 1903, and the said David W. Huff from prosecuting a civil action against him in a justice’s court for the recovery of damages resulting from alleged wrongful taking of timber. A preliminary injunction was awarded in conformity with the prayer of the bill, but the court, on the hearing, sustained the motion to dissolve so much of the injunction as restrained the prosecution of said civil action, and, being of the opinion that, under the clause in said first deed, reserving to Adkins title to the timber, said Adkins had the absolute title to the timber and not a defeasible title or a mere license to cut and remove the same, perpetuated so much of the injunction as restrained the defendants from molesting him in the exercise of his right to cut and remove it.

The return, to Adkins, of the deed made by him to David W. Huff and the execution of another deed to David E. Huff, containing a clause extending the time for the removal of the timber, did not, in any way, affect the rights of the parties, as fixed, and determined by said first deed. The title still remained in David W. Huff. When land has been conveyed by a deed it cannot be re-conveyed from the grantee to the grantor by a return of the deed or cancellation thereof. It must be re-conveyed by another deed. Jones v. Neals, 2 Pat. & H. 339; Graysons v. Richards, 10 Leigh 57; Seibel v. Rapp, 85 Va. 32; Vaughan v. Moore, 89 Va. 925. At the date of the deed executed to David E. Huff, therefore, Adkins had no title in himself to convey or reserve. Hence, the time limit fixed by the deed to David W. Huff remains unchanged.

If, by the reservation in the deed to David W. Huff, absolute and unconditional title to the timber remained in the appellant, it may be that a court of equity had jurisdiction by injunction to prevent obstruction to his right to enter upon the land, sever the timber and carry it away. It would have been an interest in the land and the owner thereof would have had, by implication, a right of access to it, the only adequate remedy for deprivation of which might have been in equity. This is merely suggested, not decided. But if, by his deed, he retained only a lease for the period of thirty-four months, with the right to cut and remove timber within [648]*648that time, or a conditional title to the timber, a title dependent upon the severance thereof within the period of time limited, or a xiresent title, defeasible by the expiration of the period of time limited without a severance of the timber having been effected, no right of his has been invaded, impaired or interfered with. The authorities are xiractically uniform in holding that an instrument, granting standing timber, and containing a clause, requiring or permitting it to be removed within a sx>ecified time from the date of the grant, gives no absolute and unconditional title to'the x>rox>erty. Some courts hold the right of the grantee to be a license, others a lease, and others a defeasible title to the timber. By the great weight of authority, it is determined that no right or title exists in the grantee after the expiration of the time specified in the deed or contract. Strong v. Eddy, 40 Vt. 547; Judevine v. Goodrich, 35 Vt. 19; Utley v. Lumber Co., 59 Mich. 263; Wasey v. Mahoney, 55 Mich. 194; Haskell v. Ayers, 35 Mich. 89; Haskell v. Ayers, 32 Mich. 93; Kellan v. McKinstry, 69 N. Y. 264; King v. Maryland, 38 Mich. 47; Fletcher v. Livingston, 153 Mass. 388; Reed v. Merrifield, 10 Metc. (51 Mass.) 155; Golden v. Glock, 57 Wis. 118; Larson v. Cook, 85 Wis. 564; Clark v. Guest, 54 O. St. 298; Pease v. Gibson, 6 Me. 81; Weber v. Proctor, 89 Me. 404; Howard v. Lincoln, 13 Me. 122.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 773, 58 W. Va. 645, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-huff-wva-1906.