Berry v. O'Dell

7 S.E.2d 340, 122 W. Va. 58, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 14
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1940
Docket8997
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 S.E.2d 340 (Berry v. O'Dell) 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
Berry v. O'Dell, 7 S.E.2d 340, 122 W. Va. 58, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 14 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinions

*59 Fox, Judge:

Mamie Berry, who claims to be the owner of the minerals in tracts of 61.60 acres and 44.70 acres of land situated in Kanawha County, instituted her suit seeking to set aside certain deeds for the said minerals, as a cloud upon her title. Demurrers to her bill were sustained with leave to amend, and she electing not to amend, the bill was dismissed, and the cause comes to us on appeal.

On the 23rd day of February, 1915, Martha J. Dawson and her husband conveyed to M. C. Berry and Mamie Berry three tracts or parcels of land, containing 31% acres, 61.60 acres, and 44.70 acres. This conveyance was made subject to a deed of about the same date, by which the Dawsons conveyed to J. E. Parsons 26 acres, reserving the mineral rights therein. On January 18, 1926, the Berrys conveyed to The Kanawha National Bank, Trustee, the said three tracts of land and an additional tract, to secure to the Virginian Joint Stock Land Bank the payment of a loan of $1,000.00. Default was made in the payment of this loan, and on the 26th day of October, 1935, the said lands were sold by The Charleston National Bank, a successor trustee, and, according to the contention of the appellees herein, were purchased by the Virginian Joint Stock Land Bank at the price of $1,150.00. This controversy arises out of what actually was sold by the trustee and purchased by the Land Bank, and the dispute particularly arises out of certain language in the notice of sale, and statements allegedly made at the time of the sale by the person who conducted the same. ■

The notice of sale is in regular form, and specifies the several tracts of land which were to be offered for sale. Following this, the notice contains this language:

“There will be excepted from the sale hereunder all of the mineral rights and the Berry right-of-way heretofore conveyed and reserved;”

The bill alleges that the appellant sent her husband, M. C. Berry, together with her two brothers-in-law, to at *60 tend said sale, and that on the occasion of the sale the person who conducted the same “read the said notice in a loud voice and then stated publicly that he was selling no minerals underlying said tracts of land, but was offering for sale the surface thereof only”, and that after said statement the successful bid was made and accepted. On the same date The Charleston National Bank, Trustee, conveyed the four tracts of land to the Virginian Joint Stock Land Bank, without any special reservation of the minerals in the two tracts of 61.60 and 44.70 acres above mentioned, although the deed was executed subject to reservations theretofore made. On April 7, 1936, the Land Bank conveyed all the property acquired by it under said deed to W. H. O’Dell, who, on July 6, 1937, leased the tracts of 61.60 and 44.70 acres for oil and gas purposes to the Mullins Gas Company, describing the same as 10614 acres, and later contracts were entered into between the Gas Company and said O’Dell, dealing with the oil and gas in said lands, and there was a conveyance of an interest therein. On the other side of the controversy, it appears from the record that bn December 10, 1935, M. C. Berry and Mamie Berry conveyed to Georgie M. Berry all the “petroleum oil, natural gas, lime stone coal and all other minerals” underlying the two tracts of 61.60 and 44.70 acres mentioned above, and, on January 6, 1936, Georgie M. Berry and her husband conveyed said minerals to Mamie Berry, the appellant herein, who now claims to be the sole owner thereof.

The bill sets up the conveyances above detailed and avers that no minerals were sold by the trustee; that the trustee was not authorized to make conveyance thereof to the Land Bank; that the Land Bank acquired no title thereto under the reputed conveyance and, therefore, could convey none to O’Dell; that O’Dell took title to said land with notice of appellant’s claim because of the execution and recordation of the two deeds above mentioned by which title to the oil and gas became vested in the appellant and, therefore, was not an innocent purchaser, for value. The appellant also avers that she *61 did not have notice of conveyance of the said minerals to the Land Bank until long after its conveyance to O’Dell, and that she did not have knowledge of the lease made by O’Dell to the Mullins Gas Company until August, 1938, some two months prior to the institution of this suit.

The Mullins Gas Company and W. H. O’Dell filed their joint demurrer to the plaintiff’s bill upon the following grounds: (1) that they were innocent purchasers for value, of the property involved; (2) that the recordation of the deeds to appellant and her predecessor did not constitute notice of any hostile claim to the property involved; and (3) that it appears from the face of the bill of complaint that the plaintiff therein was guilty of laches. The trustee filed its demurrer on the ground that the person conducting the sale could not, by verbal outcry or otherwise, change the quantum of what was being offered for sale from that stated and described in the notice of sale. Each of the said demurrers was sustained by the court.

On account of the nature of this case and the extent of its development, the question which we can properly decide is a narrow one. It is this: Do the allegations of the bill, which include the provision in the notice of sale above quoted, and the allegation with respect to the statement made by the party conducting the sale, make a prima facie case in favor of the appellant? We are of the opinion that they do make such a case when considered together. The contention that the trustee did not have power through verbal statements. made at the time of the sale to make a sale different from that advertised in the notice of sale has much to commend it, and is sustained in principle by the case of Vandever v. Baker, 13 Pa. St. (1 Harris) 121. But this rule, we think, presupposes a clear and unambiguous notice of sale. It would be dangerous to permit oral testimony as to verbal representations made by a trustee to control, where in conflict with the plain terms of a written notice of sale, based on the deed of trust, and to set aside a sale on *62 testimony as to such statements. But the situation may be different where the sale notice in question does not clearly state the land to be sold, or the interest to be sold, or, as in this case, what is to be excepted therefrom. If the sale notice is in fact ambiguous, then, like any other paper, resort may be had to the circumstances under which the paper was prepared or acted upon. In this case, while it may plausibly be contended that the language of the sale notice heretofore quoted, means that only such minerals were excepted as had been theretofore reserved or conveyed, it cannot be said that the construction of the notice is absolutely free from doubt, and there is such ambiguity as in our opinion justifies consideration of testimony as to the construction placed upon the language used in the notice by the party acting thereunder. The bill alleges, in effect, that the trustee did construe the language in question, when he said that only the surface of the land offered was being sold.

We do not at this time pass upon the legal effect of the language used in the notice of sale.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 340, 122 W. Va. 58, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-odell-wva-1940.