Allegheny Country Farms, Inc. v. Huffman

787 S.E.2d 626, 237 W. Va. 355, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 477
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 2016
DocketNo. 14-1106, No. 15-0189
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 787 S.E.2d 626 (Allegheny Country Farms, Inc. v. Huffman) 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
Allegheny Country Farms, Inc. v. Huffman, 787 S.E.2d 626, 237 W. Va. 355, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 477 (W. Va. 2016).

Opinion

Workman, Justice:

In this consolidated appeal, Petitioner Allegheny Country Farms, Inc. (“Allegheny”), seeks specific performance of two contracts involving real property. Allegheny entered into the first contract with Respondent Ethel Huffman Carper (“Ms. Carper”), wherein she agreed to convey a portion of her property to Allegheny. Before the conveyance was made, however, Ms. Carper sold her property at auction to Respondents Darris and Nuetulia Huffman (“the Huffmans”). The second contract is a document the Huffmans executed at the time they purchased the property at [357]*357auction wherein they agreed to abide by the terms of the first contract.

Allegheny appeals the orders from the Circuit Court of Monroe County granting summary judgment to the Huffmans and dismissing as moot its action against Ms. Carper. Upon review of the parties’ briefs, the appendix record, and oral argument, we find that the determinative issue before this Court is whether the Huffmans are contractually bound to convey a portion of their property to Allegheny. As explained below, we hold that they are. We therefore reverse the circuit court’s order that granted summary judgment to the Huffmans, and remand for the entry of an order granting Allegheny’s motion for summary judgment in Appeal No. 14-1106. Because Allegheny receives the relief it requested in the Huffman litigation, we dismiss as moot its appeal in the companion case, Appeal No. 15-0189,

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The underlying dispute regards two adjacent tracts of land in the Wolf Creek District of Monroe County, West Virginia. The first tract, the “Allegheny tract,” is approximately thirty-four acres and is owned by Allegheny The second tract, the “Huffman tract,” is approximately thirty-three acres and is owned by the Huffmans.

The Huffman tract has been owned by various members of the Huffman family. This property was initially part of a larger fifty-eight-acre parent tract purchased by Alfred Huffman in 1939. Alfred Huffman died testate in 1991 and his four children, Ethel Huffman Carper, Clifford Ray Huffman, Kyle J. Huffman, and Ralph D. Huffman (the “Huffman heirs”), succeeded him in ownership of the tract.1

The consolidated appeal before this Court involves the second and third lawsuits between the parties, detailed below.2

A. Allegheny’s Suit Against The Huffman Tract’s Previous Owners

In June of 2006, Allegheny filed a “Complaint to Establish Boundary Line and for Declaratory Judgment” against the four Huffman heirs. Allegheny contended there was a dispute as to the boundary line separating its tract of land and the Huffman tract. In their Answer, the Huffman heirs generally denied the allegations in the complaint.

Following commencement of this litigation, the Huffman heirs partitioned their farm into four separate tracts in October of 2006, and Ms. Carper received approximately thirty-three acres.3 Ms. Carper decided to sell her property at auction and the auction date was scheduled for November 18, 2006.

Allegheny wanted to acquire a portion of Ms. Carper’s land, specifically, the strip of land between the boundary fence of the two properties and the Huffman Road, Route 7/7. If Allegheny secured this property, it could [358]*358access its land directly from that road.4 On November 14, 2006, Allegheny filed a notice of lis pendens regarding Ms. Carper’s tract.5

On November 16, 2006, two days before Ms. Carper was scheduled to auction her property, Allegheny entered into a contract with Ms. Carper. This document is titled a “Settlement Agreement.” In exchange for Allegheny’s release of the notice of lis pendens, Ms. Carper agreed to designate the boundary line between the Huffman tract and Allegheny’s tract as the “center of W.V[a]. Rt. 7/7—Huffman Road for the entire length of the boundary line , between the subject tracts[.]" Allegheny agreed to pay for the cost of the survey and to pay Ms, Carper $1,000 when she executed a formal “Boundary Line Agreement,” which would have the effect of conveying the strip of land at issue.6 That same day, Allegheny executed a release of the notice of lis pendens.

The Boundary Line Agreement was not prepared before Ms. Carper sold her property at the real estate auction. At the auction held on November IS, 2006, the auctioneer announced that Ms. Carper’s property was subject to “a basic right of refusal” for the Huffman family. The auctioneer also announced that the property was subject to Allegheny’s contract with Ms. Carper and this contract was referenced in the written auction materials.

Respondent Darris Huffman, the grandson of Alfred Huffman, signed a “Bidder’s Registration” form at the auction, which provided in bold type: “Do not bid until you have read and agreed to be bound by the referred Contract and its addendums and the Terms of Bidding located in the Property Information Package.” The cover sheet of the Property Information Package contained the following language: “The property will be offered by the existing boundary (minus any out sales or agreement with [Allegheny] ).”

Darris Huffman and Nuetulia Huffman purchased Ms, Carper’s property at the auction for $62,700. They tendered a $6,000 deposit and signed a “Contract for Sale of Real Property.” The Contract for Sale provided that the deed was subject to “Rights of ways that may be created, any minor out sales or conveyances to or agreements with” Allegheny.

The survey, agreed to by Allegheny and Ms. Carper, was not completed by the date the Huffmans sought to close on the Huffman tract. However, Darris and Nuetulia Huffman signed a contract, titled an “Ac-knowledgement of Boundary Line Agreement,” wherein they acknowledged that the property they agreed to purchase from Ms. Carper was

subject to that certain SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT entered into by and be[359]*359tween Allegheny Country Farms, Inc. a West Vh’ginia- Corporation and Ethel Huffman Carper, dated November 16, 2006, wherein the parties thereto agreed to enter and execute a BOUNDARY LINE AGREEMENT in order to establish a boundary line between the tracts of real estate owned by Allegheny Country Farms, Inc. and Ethel Huffman Carper[.]

Important to our analysis, this contract further provided that

in consideration of the acquiescence of Allegheny Country Farms, Inc. with respect to the closing of the aforesaid transaction between ourselves and Ethel Huffman Carper, [Darris and Nuetulia Huffman] acknowledge that we will execute the BOUNDARY LINE AGREEMENT pursuant to the terms of the aforesaid SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT, at such time as the same is presented to us for execution by Allegheny Country Farms, Inc., after the metes and bounds for the same have been prepared.
A copy of the aforesaid SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT is attached hereto as Exhibit “A”, and is incorporated herewith.

Ms. Carper conveyed her property to the Huffmans by deed on November 30, 2006.

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787 S.E.2d 626, 237 W. Va. 355, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allegheny-country-farms-inc-v-huffman-wva-2016.