Bodkin v. Arnold

30 S.E. 154, 45 W. Va. 90, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 71
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 154 (Bodkin v. Arnold) 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
Bodkin v. Arnold, 30 S.E. 154, 45 W. Va. 90, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 71 (W. Va. 1898).

Opinion

Dent, Judge:

On the 23d day of September, 1890, a jury rendered a verdict in favor of George Bodkin and John P. Bodkin, plaintiffs, in an action of ejectment instituted in the circuit court of Braxton County, against George J. Arnold, defendant. On his motion the circuit court set aside the verdict, and awarded the defendant a new trial. Plaintiffs obtained a writ of error to this Court. The following is a statement of the case and the errors assigned adopted from the petition:

“On the 8th day of September, 1824, Daniel Stringer secured a patent on two thousand acres of land in what was then Lewis County, now Braxton County. On September 25, 1828, he conveyed this land to Camden & Porter, trustees, to secure certain debts. On December 1, 1834, Camden, trustee, sold this land to Samuel Merchant, and conveyed it to him on the 9th day of November, 1839. Merchant appointed Camden his agent, and as such agent, [92]*92on the 13th day of April, 1843, Camden leased the land to Andrew Boggs, Sr., for three years. Other leases were made under this Merchant title, one to Thomas Roby, and it is insisted one was made to David Alkire, in 1849, or 1850, from Camden, as agent for Merchant. While in possession of said land as Merchant’s tenant, the said David Alkire, without notice of attornment to his landlord, on July 2, 1854, entered 786 acres of this 2,000-acre tract as vacant land. Survey was made October 11, 1855, by him, and on July 1, 1856, he obtained a patent for this 786 acres, and continued to reside on it, he and his sons and son-in-law, until about 1859, when he conveyed, by deed dated December 5, 1859, said 786 acres to Andrew Boggs, Jr., but, knowing that such title was defective, Boggs, Jr., did not have his Alkire deed recorded, and in the fall of 1860, took from Camden, agent for Merchant, a lease for the whole 2,000-acre tract, which included this 786 acres, for a period of two years, and remained in possession under said lease until the 6th day of September, 1865, when he attempted to convey the 786 acres under the Alkire patent to petitioner George Bodkin and N. G. Mundy in exchange for a tract of 725 acres in Upshur County, which they by written contract agreed to convey to him, and petitioner George Bodkin was put in possession, of the 786-acre tract in Braxton. Shortly after, Camden, as agent for Merchant, demanded of petitioner George Bodkin to quit the possession of said' land or become Merchant’s tenant. Petitioner George Bodkin refused to surrender, and thereupon suit was instituted in ejectment in the United States district court of the state by Merchant, a nonresident, to recover such possession. After notice was served, petitioner George Bodkin and said N. G. Mundy, in the spring of 1870, met Boggs, Jr., on this land in Braxton, called his attention to the suit of Merchant’s, and asked him to defend the same. This he absolutely refused to do, admitting that his title to the land was not good, and that the Merchant title was the better one, and he advised petitioner George Bodkin and Mundy to make the best compromise they could with Camden, agent for Merchant, characterizng his own title as ‘not worth a damn,’ and it was thereupon ag-reed that the exchange of [93]*93this 786 acres for the 725 acres in Upshur should be rescinded, and that petitioner George Bodkin should give to Boggs, Jr., a horse valued at $105 to pay him his expenses in moving to and from said 725-acre tract in Upshur. He did move off, and petitioner George Bodkin did give him the horse. The defense of the ejectment in the. federal court was abandoned, and the said N. G. Mundy, on behalf of himself and the petitioner George Bodkin, his father-in-law, purchased and took conveyance on October 20, 1870, of this tract of 786 acres, from Camden, attorney in fact for Merchant. In the deed to Bodkin and Mundy from Boggs, Jr., for the 786 acres of land, Boggs, Jr., reserved a lien on it to idemnify him for any liens against or defects of title to the 725 acres gotten by him in the exchange. In the spring of 1876, William H. Boggs secured from Boggs, Jr., some kind of an assignment by parol contract of this lien, and in February, 1881, suit was instituted in chancery in the name of said William H. Boggs against petitioner George Bodkin and M. G. Mundy, and the administrator, widow, and heirs of Boggs, Jr., to compel said Bodkin and Mundy to have said contract, by their election, whereby said excliang-e of lands was made, either rescinded or specifically performed on their part; and in the bill and three amended bills filed in the cause the facts are set forth in minute detail, substantially as given above. In the meantime, the said N. G. Mundy, by deed dated June 9, 1877, had conveyed to petitioner's, George Bodkin and John P. Bodkin; jointly, his half interest in the land, and said petitioners answered said bills in said chancery cause, setting forth the verbal rescission of the contract of the exchange with Boggs, Jr., and the purchase by them afterwards, of the Merchant title, and that they were holding under said Merchant title; and insisting that, inasmuch as the contract had long since been rescinded, it could not be specifically enforced, and that the bills should be dismissed. On May 3, 1887, a decree was entered in the circuit court of Braxton County in said chancery cause, which adjudged that the plaintiff William H. Boggs therein was entitled to a rescission of the contract of exchange made by his father, Boggs, Jr., and Bodkin and Mundy, and to a cancellation of the deed made by said [94]*94Boggs, Jr., to them, and further giving-a writ of possession to him against petitioners for the possession of the 786 acres, and awarding costs against them in favor of the said plaintiff. But to this decree this express reservation is made: ‘But it is provided that this decree shall not prejudice the right of the said defendants Bodkin to assert or maintain their right and title, if any they have, to the 786 acres of land aforesaid, derived by them or either of them from or under Samuel Merchant, in any suit or proceeding in which it may be involved.’ From this decree an appeal was taken by petitioners to this Court, and on the 27th day of June, 1889, it was affirmed. See Boggs v. Bodkin, 32 W. Va., 566, (9. S. E. 891). Under and by virtue of the express reservation in said degree permitting petitioners to assert their right under the Merchant title, which had been purchased by them, they, as soon as deprived of possession under said decree, instituted this action of ejectment against the defendant George J. Arnold, to whom it had been conveyed by the said William H. Boggs almost immediately after the decision of this Court wa^s rendered, and Edward Watson, his tenant. Petitio&^ts’ declaration was filed at the August term, 1890. A motion was made to quash the notice by the defendant at the same term. Issue was made by plea in vacation; again, on the 24th of November, 1890, in court; and also on the 7th day of January, 1892, in court. On said last day a jury was impaneled, to which the evidence was submitted, and a partial argument of the case was made by counsel, and various instructions were asked by petitioners; but the court, having reached the conclusion that petitioners’ right under said Merchant title was adjudicated, notwithstanding said reservation by the decree in said chancery cause, cut short the argument of counsel, refused to give any of the instructions asked by petitioners, and gave an instruction for the defendant substantially directing the jury to find for the defendant because of said adjudication aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 154, 45 W. Va. 90, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bodkin-v-arnold-wva-1898.