Alexander v. Andrews

64 S.E.2d 487, 135 W. Va. 403, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 67
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1951
Docket10289
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 64 S.E.2d 487 (Alexander v. Andrews) 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
Alexander v. Andrews, 64 S.E.2d 487, 135 W. Va. 403, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 67 (W. Va. 1951).

Opinion

Fox, President:

This is a suit in equity instituted in the Circuit Court of Ohio County in which the plaintiff seeks to have quieted his alleged title to two certain lots of land, situated in the City of Wheeling, purportedly conveyed to him by Thomas A. Alexander on May 14, 1946, and to remove, as a cloud upon his title, a deed for the same property, executed by • the said Thomas A. Alexander to Sarah R. Alexander, now Andrews, dated May 8, 1946, but not recorded until July 8, 1946. The plaintiff claims this relief by reason of the allegations contained in his bill that he purchased the said real estate for valuable consideration and without notice of the deed to Sarah R. Andrews. The defendants filed an answer and cross-bill, and upon a hearing of the case a decree was entered on October 21, 1949, dismissing plaintiff’s bill, and granting to the defendant, Sarah R. Andrews, the relief prayed for in her cross-bill. At the instance of the plaintiff below, we granted this appeal on May 29, 1950.

In order to fully present the questions involved on this appeal, it is necessary to make the following statement: On June 6, 1939, Katherine B. Alexander, a sister of both the plaintiff and defendant, Sarah R. Andrews, purchased the real estate involved herein. She died intestate and without issue on June 9, 1945, and her estate passed by inheritance to her father arid mother, Thomas A. Alexander and Mary J. Alexander. Mary J. Alexander died testate on April 25, 1946, and devised her interest in said *405 real estate to the plaintiff, Charles B. Alexander. On May 8, 1946, Thomas A. Alexander executed, acknowledged and presumably delivered to Sarah R. Andrews, who was his daughter, a deed for his interest in the real estate, but said deed was not recorded until July 8, 1946. On May 14, 1946, the same Thomas A. Alexander executed,, acknowledged and delivered to the plaintiff, Charles B. Alexander, a deed for his interest in the real estate which he had theretofore conveyed to Sarah R. Andrews, and this second deed was recorded on the same day. The real estate involved has been occupied by Charles B. Alexander, and since the date of his deed his father, Thomas A. Alexander, lived therein until his death in October, 1948.

This suit was instituted in January, 1949, and the bill was filed at the February Rules following. In said bill the facts hereinbefore stated are alleged, and the plaintiff also alleged that on May 14, 1946, when he obtained his deed for said lots, he was without knowledge of the existence of the deed of May 8, 1946, and knew nothing thereof until, about January, 1949, when he received a tax notice on which the name of Sarah R. Andrews appeared, whereupon he made inquiry and learned the true situation. He alleges in his bill, and insists in his testimony, that this was his first intimation that his father had executed a deed for the property which he had conveyed to him on May 14, 1946. On May 5, 1949, Sarah R. Andrews. and Frank Andrews, her husband, filed their answer to the plaintiff’s bill, in which they deny or call for full proof of the pertinent allegations of the plaintiff’s bill; they especially deny that the plaintiff was a bona-fide purchaser for value without notice of the conveyance to Sarah R. Andrews; and then by way of cross-bill set up the conveyance of the said property to Sarah R. Andrews, by deed dated May 8, 1946, and further alleged on information and belief that Thomas A. Alexander, on May 14, 1946, “while under great persuasion, pressure and influence, brought about by the said complainant, Charles B. Alexander, did execute a deed purporting to convey his interest to the said Charles B. *406 Alexander, at a time when both the said Thomas A. Alexander and the said Charles B. Alexander well knew that the said Thomas A. Alexander had no interest in the said property, the said Thomas A. Alexander having theretofore conveyed all his interest to complainant, Sarah R. Andrews, as aforesaid.” The said cross-bill then denies that the plaintiff was a bona-fide purchaser of said property for a valuable consideration and without notice of the deed of May 8, 1946, and avers that the deed from Thomas A. Alexander to Charles B. Alexander constitutes a cloud upon the title of Sarah R. Andrews to said real estate. The prayer of the cross-bill is that the deed of May 14, 1946, to the plaintiff, be set aside and be declared void as a cloud upon the title of Sarah R. Andrews, and that appropriate orders be entered to effect that purpose. In said answer there is an allegation, upon information and belief, that Katherine B. Alexander had by will devised the property here involved to the defendant Sarah R. Andrews, but this allegation is denied by special reply, and no proof was offered in support of the allegation. There was a general replication to the answer, and a special reply to the cross-bill. A hearing in open court was had on the matters involved, beginning October 4, 1949, following which the court, on October 21, 1949, found as follows:

“ (4) That at the time he received the said purported. conveyance of May 14, 1946, the complainant, Charles B. Alexander, had actual knowledge of the fact of the prior conveyance of the same property by the said Thomas A. Alexander to the respondent, Sarah R. Andrews (formerly Sarah R. Alexander), on May 8, 1946;
“(5) That the complainant herein, Charles B. Alexander, did not pay to the said' Thomas A. Alexander a valuable consideration for the purported conveyance of the said one-half undivided interest in the said property attempted by the deed dated May 14, 1946, as aforesaid.”

The court then denied plaintiff the relief prayed for in his bill, and granted to Sarah R. Andrews the relief prayed *407 for in her cross-bill, and decreed that the purported deed from. Thomas A. Alexander to Charles B. Alexander, dated May 14, 1946, be set aside and declared void as a cloud upon the title of Sarah R. Andrews to said property, and that proper notation be placed upon the records in the office of the Clerk of the County Court of Ohio County, to the effect that the said deed had been declared null and void, and that the decree entered be recorded in said clerk’s office.

It is well to state at this time that the validity of the deed from Thomas A. Alexander to Sarah R. Andrews, dated May 8, 1946, as of the date of its execution, is not questioned. It follows, therefore, that if the said deed had been recorded prior to the 14th day of May, 1946, when the plaintiff obtained a deed for the same property, plaintiff would have taken nothing by his deed. When Thomas A. Alexander executed the deed of May 8, 1946, he parted with all of his right title and interest in the property conveyed, and thereafter had no interest therein which he could convey.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 S.E.2d 487, 135 W. Va. 403, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-andrews-wva-1951.