Beverlin v. Casto

57 S.E. 411, 62 W. Va. 158, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 25
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 S.E. 411 (Beverlin v. Casto) 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
Beverlin v. Casto, 57 S.E. 411, 62 W. Va. 158, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 25 (W. Va. 1907).

Opinions

POFEENBARGER, JUDGE:

P. E. Beverlin, widow of Granville Beverlin, obtained a decree of the circuit court of Jackson county, against E. S. Casto, adjudging her to be the owner of an estate for life in a tract of land, containing J'T acres, three foods and 29 poles, which had been conveyed by her husband and herself to their son, W. A. Beverlin, by deed dated June 2, 1897, and which the said W. A. Beverlin had granted to Casto by his deed, dated the lYtli day of March,' 1902. The bill and decree thereon are based upon the following clause in said deed of June 2, 1896: “The parties of the first part do hereby reserve a life time dower and support of one the above land set jovnt in this deed.” In her original bill, the plaintiff claimed, under this clause, a life estate in one-third of the land and prayed for partition. But in án amended and supplemental bill she asserted claim to a life estate in the whole tract, together with the right to recover rents, issues and profits of the land from the lYth day of March, 1902. After the court had overruled his demurrers to the original and amended bills, the defendant answered, denying title in the plaintiff to any estate whatever in any portion of the land, and set forth the following facts for grounds of estoppel as to any right or interest which she might have in respect to said land under and by virtue of said reservation clause: Granville Beverlin, the husband of the plaintiff, had been a surety along with J. M. Stone, S. W. Stone, G. W. Sayre, Jr., and Warren Miller on the bond of P. M. Stone as deputy sheriff under I. M. Adams, the sheriff of Jackson county. Said P. M. Stone having defaulted, Adams had recovered two judgments against all of the sureties except Granville Beverlin, who had died prior to the institution of the actions in which they were recovered. Beverlin had also conveyed all of his real estate, in separate tracts, to his four children, W. A. Beverlin, Delia Posey, Purlina Good and Emerson H. Beverlin. The answer alleges all of these deeds were made with intent to hinder, defraud and delay the creditors of the grantor and especially the said Adams and [160]*160Beverlin’s co-sureties. Sometime after the recovery of the two judgements, the sureties against whom they were'taken, made a demand upon the grantees of Beverlin for contribution and it was agreed that they should pay $500.00, of which sum $160.00 was to be paid by W. A. Beverlin. To this agreement, the bill alleges W. A. Beverlin, P. E. Beverlin, the widow and plaintiff in these bills, and the defendant Casto were made parties, and the agreement is alleged to have been part and parcel of the contract of purchase between Casto and W. A. Beverlin. The purchase price of the land was $500.00 and Casto paid $160.00 on account thereof to the sureties or Adams and the balance to W. A. Beverlin, and thereby satisfied the demand of the sureties against that tract of land, as well as his obligation for purchase money. It is further averred that the plaintiff, by reason of said compromise and adjustment, saved to herself and to her infant son, Emerson H. Beverlin, the tract of 74 acres, one rood and 13 poles, which had been so conveyed to him and on which she had resided with her said son. Es-toppel by acquiescence for the period of more than three years is also relied upon. An additional ground is set up in the averment that the plaintiff had advised and encouraged her son, W. A. Beverlin, in the prosecution of an action of ejectment against' S. M. Shamblin and the heir of J. E. O’Brien for the recovery of said tract of land, contrary to his conveyance thereof to said Shamblin and J. E. O’Brien, made while he was an infant. The answer does not pray any affirmative relief, but it was treated by the plaintiff as an answer in the nature of a cross bill, and so much of it as sets up matter of estoppel was demurred to, and the court sustained the demurrer and struck out that portion of the answer, together with the exhibits therewith filed, consisting of copies.of the deeds executed by Granville Beverlin and his wife, to Purlina Good, Emerson H. Beverlin and Delia Posey, and copies of the declaration and final order in the action of ejectment.

That portion of the decree which is relied upon as appeal-able reads as follows: “And.the Court, construing the deed which is filed with plaintiff’s said original and supplemental bills marked exhibit ‘A, ’ is of opinion that the plaintiff is entitled, thereunder, to a life estate in and to the tract of 77 [161]*161acre's, 3 roods and 29 poles of land, described in said' bill and amended and supplemental bill, and by metes and bounds described in said exhibit ‘A,’ therewith filed, and that said plaintiff, P. E. Beverlin, do take and hold said land for and during her natural life, all of which is by the court accordingly so adjudged, ordered and decreed.” Following this is an order of reference to a commissioner to ascertain and report the rents, issues and profits of the land from the TTth day of March, 1902, and the amount of taxes paid on it and the value of all the permanent improvements made thereon since the date of said deed.

Anticipating the possibility of a doubt as to whether the decree is appealable, counsel for the appellant insist in their brief that it is sufficiently broad to cover all the issues raised as well as to settle and determine the principles of the cause. The lack of any adjudication as to the rents, issues and profits is obvious, and the rule, allowing an appeal from a decree as one adjudicating the principles of a cause, requires a settlement of all the issues. There is no decree for rents, issues and profits. An intention to decree for them is evinced by the reference for their ascertainment, but the expression of a mere intention to render a decree does not amount to an adjudication. Hill v. Cronan, 56 W. Va. 174; Ross v. Armstrong, 54 W. Va. 16. If it be true that the recovery of rents, issues and profits is incidental or sequential, necessarily and directly resulting from the adjudication of title in the plaintiff, and amounts to' no more than mere execution of the decree as to title, the want of a decree therefor is immaterial. Whether this view of counsel is tenable, we do not .consume time in determining, since the decree is appealable-as one changing the title to real estate. The seventh clause of section 4038 of the Code of 1906 allows an appeal “in any case in chancery wherein there is a decree * * * requiring real estate to be sold or the possession or title of the property to be changed. ” One of the two matters put in issue by the bill and answer is the title to a freehold estate' in the land. The defendant is in possession claiming the fee simple title and the plaintiff sets up in her bill title to a life estate therein. The court, by its decree, has determined, adjudged, ordered and decreed that she is entitled to it and. that she do take and hold said land for and during her natural life,

[162]*162The action of the court in overruling the demurrer tp the original and amended bills is assigned as error, and the argument to sustain this position is predicated upon the adequacy of the remedy at law, whether the measure of relief to the plaintiff be the recovery of one-third of the land as claimed in the original bill, or the whole thereof as claimed in the amended bill. In either case, ejectment would lie and be an appropriate and adequate remedy, but the bill contains a prayer for general relief, and would afford any other relief, not obtainable in a court of law, to which the plaintiff may be entitled. Hence the proposition that ejectment lies for the recovery of the land does not fully respond to the issue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 S.E. 411, 62 W. Va. 158, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beverlin-v-casto-wva-1907.