Austin v. Brown

17 S.E. 207, 37 W. Va. 634
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 207 (Austin v. Brown) 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
Austin v. Brown, 17 S.E. 207, 37 W. Va. 634 (W. Va. 1893).

Opinion

Holt, Judge :

The plaintiffs brought this suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Mason county on-day of April, 1889, to set aside a deed as void, and remove it as a cloud from their title ; and the Circuit Court by decree of February 18,1891, adjudged the deed in question void and directed it to be set aside and held for naught; and defendants, W. J. Brown and B. IF. Brown, the grantees in the deed, obtained this appeal. The subject-matter of the suit was the making of the following deed:

“Exhibit B.

“This deed, made this 20th day of April, 1878, by and [636]*636between Mary A. Brown, of the first part, and W. J. Brown and B. F. Brown, of the second part, all of Mason county, State of West Virginia, witnesseth that, for and in consideration of the sum of two thousand dollars in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the party of the first part has this day bargained, granted, sold, and conveyed, and by these presents does bargain, grant, sell/ and convoy, unto W. J. Brown and B. F. Brown, a certain piece or parcel of land lying and being on the waters of Thirteen Mile Creek, in Mason county, bounded and described as follows : ‘Beginning at a white oak on a hill near the road, and running S., 31 E., 34 poles, to the creek, and with the meanders of the 13-mile creek, to a poplar stump on the bank of said creek; thence S., 45 E., 48 poles, to a sycamore and maple; thence X., 40 E., leaving the creek, 42 poles, to a small -white oak ; thence X., 22 E., 75 poles, to a white oak stump ; thence E., 69 poles, to a pine on a ridge in the 1,812-acre line, and with said line if., 27 W., 56 poles, to a white oak, to original corner; thence, with other lines of the same, S., 30 W., 26 poles, to a small black oak ; thence S., 70 W., 28 poles, to a white oak; thence if., 27 W., 139 poles, to a stone; thence S., 36 W., 100 poles, to a white oak; thence S., 65 W., 84 poles, to the place of beginning — -containing one hundred and eighty acres, more or less;’to have and to hold the same unto W. J. Brown and B. F. Brown, their heirs and assigns forever; and the said W. J. Brown and B. F. Brown covenant to and with Mary A. Brown that she, as their mother, and that Xclson Browm, as the father of W. J. Brown and B. F. Brown' shall have frill and absolute control of the said premises during their natural lifetime, and that otherwise the said Mary A. Brown will warrant and defend generally the property hereby conveyed.

“In witness whereof, the said party of the first --has hereunto set her hand and seal,-day and date above written.

her

“Mary A. X BROWN.

mark

“State of West Virginia, Mason county. I, D. O. Forbs, a notary public in and for the county and state aforesaid, [637]*637do certify tliat Mary A. Brown, whose name is signed to the writing above, bearing date of April 20, 1878, personally appeared before me, and acknowledged the same.

“Given under my hand, in Mason county, this 20th day of April, 1878.

“I). 0. Forms, Notary Public.

“West Virginia, Mason County Court clerk’s office, July 29th, 1879. The foregoing deed was this day presented in said office, and, with the certificate thereon, is admitted to record.

“Teste: J. P. B. B. Smith, Clerk.'

“A copy. Teste : J. P. R. B. Smith, Clerk.”

The grantor, -Mary A. Brown, was a married woman then living with her husband, Nelson Brown, and the mother of the grautees, W. J. Brown and B. F. Brown. This paper, purporting to be a deed, dated April 20, 1878, was not executed by the husband, who was then living with his wife. The latter part of section 3, c. 66, Code 1868, which controls the case, reads as follows : “(Provided) that no married woman, unless she be living separate and apart from her husband, shall sell or convey her real estate unless her husband consent thereto by joining in the deed or other writing by which the same is sold or conveyed.” For this reason this writing was wholly ineffectual to divest Mary A. Brown of her ownership of the land, and was not sufficient to pass.any interest therein, legal or equitable, to her two sons, the grantees. The title therefore remained in Mary A. Brown until her death, on the-day of-, 1884, when it descended to her eight children and heirs at law, of whom the plaintiffs are two, subject to the life estate of her husband, Nelson Brown.

The defendants, the two sons, W. J. Brown and B. F. Brown, file their separate answers, in which among other things, they allege and charge that the said deed was made and executed to them in good faith, and that they paid her the entire purchase-money set out in said deed, and took possession of all of said land, under and by virtue of said deed and paper writing, claiming the same as their own, on the 20th day of April, 1878, and have had open and notorious adverse possession of said land ever since; have [638]*638bad uninterrupted, honest, adverse possession of the same for more than ten years before the bringing of this suit, under a claim and color of title that they and each of them believed to be good; and have so held the same ever since, improving the said land by clearing thirty acres of it, fencing the whole of said land, and building a valuable barn upon the same, putting out about two hundred and fifty fruit trees, and resetting all the fences, cultivating and working the same openly and notoriously, and claiming the same as their own ever since they received said deed or paper-writing, and therefore rely upon the statute of limitations as a defence to this suit, and rely upon and plead the same in bar of the plaintiffs’ suit.

The defendant Nelson Brown'filed his answer, admitting the truth of the allegations of plaintiffs’ bill; that he was the husband of the decedent, Mai’y A Brown; was her lawful husband, living with her at the time of the pretended execution of said deed; and that he is entitled to curtesy in said land. The color or claim of title, as the foundation of an adverse possession, shows the nature and extent of the plaintiffs’ claim. Mullan’s Adm’r v. Carper, supra p. 216 (16 S. E. Rep. 527); Wright v. Mattison, 18 How. 50.

The deed of April 20,.1878, from the mother, Mary A. Brown, to her two sons, W. J. Brown and B. E. Brown, shows on its face the nature of their claim; that it was not and could not be adverse to Mary A. Brown, the grantor, nor to Nelson Brown, the father, who is still living and a party defendant; for if they (the grantors) claim under this “paper-writing,” as showing the extent of their claim and of their possession, it also shows the nature and character of their claim, and that their possession was not adverse to their mother, Mary A. Brown, who attempted to make the deed, nor to their father, Nelson Brown, for the deed itself provides that Nelson Brown, as the father of "W. J. Brown and B. E. Brown, shall have full and absolute control of the said premises during his natural lifetime. This is the paper they accepted, and now set up as their color or claim of title, and as the basis of adverse possession. Under this deed from their mother, their exclusive right of ownership and control was not to begin until after the death of the father.

[639]*639Whether such a claim could under any circumstances have ripened into a perfect title it is not necessary to discuss.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 207, 37 W. Va. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-brown-wva-1893.