Bumpus v. Ohio Cities Gas Co.

103 S.E. 62, 86 W. Va. 227, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 100
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 S.E. 62 (Bumpus v. Ohio Cities Gas Co.) 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
Bumpus v. Ohio Cities Gas Co., 103 S.E. 62, 86 W. Va. 227, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 100 (W. Va. 1920).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge :

The controversy here involved is between the Board of Education of Sherman District, Boone County, lessor, and G. J. Bumpus, its lessee, on the one hand, and the Ohio . Cities Gas Company, a corporation, grantee of Jas. A. Holley and Samuel Stephenson, and other defendants, on the other hand, as to the rights of the respective parties to the oil and gas under a certain school house lot on Joe’s Creek, in Boone County, alleged by the plaintiffs to contain one acre of ground, a part of the larger tract which was granted by Holly and Stephenson and others to defendant the Ohio Cities Gas Company.

The alleged rights of the board of education as lessor and of Bumpus, its lessee, according to the bill, are predicated on two rather inconsistent theories of title: First, title in fee simple, alleged to have been acquired by open, adverse, notorious and exclusive possession thereof by a valuable school house built thereon and occupied therewith for fifteen years next prior to the institution of this suit, described by metes and bounds and known as “School House Lot Ho. 8”: Second, under a. contract [229]*229with the defendants Holley and Stephenson, alleged in the bill substantially as 'follows: that about fifteen years ago said board of education told said Holley and Stephenson that they desired to purchase said lot on which to build a school house to be used for school purposes, and contracted therefor with them, who ■ under said contract agreed to convey the same to- said board of education by an apt and'proper deed as soon as the same should be laid off and designated; that after it was so located and designated Holley and Stephenson delivered to said board possession of the said lot, on which it then caused a valuable school house to be erected, and at which time said board of education took possession of said lot, and has continued to have open, adverse, notorious and exclusive possession thereof continuously ever since that time until now, "and the same is still being used for school purposes, and has been owned and claimed as the property of the said board of education; but that Holley and Stephenson had never executed and delivered to the board of education any deed for the property, though they often promised so to do.

The bill alleges the making and execution by the board of education to Bumpus of a lease for oil and gas purposes, on May 6, 1919, and another lease to- him, for reasons alleged but not material, on June 7, 1919, who thereafter entered on said lot for the purpose of drilling and exploring the same for oil and gas according to said lease; interference by the defendant the Ohio Cities Gas Company with him by threats of violence etc., their obstruction of the road leading to said lot, and other interruptions by said defendants of the rights of plaintiffs under the terms of said lease; and the prayer of the bill is that defendants and each of them, their servants and employees, and all persons claiming by or under them, might be restrained, enjoined and •inhibited from interfering with plaintiffs as alleged in the drilling and exploring of said school house lot according to the terms and provisions of said lease, and for general relief. There is no special prayer for specific execution of the alleged contract with Holley and Stephenson. An amended and supplemental bill was filed by plaintiffs, not relating to the merits of the case, but simply to the description of the lot, the subject of the controversy.

[230]*230'On June 17th, on presentation, of the bill with exhibits and affidavits, the circuit court awarded plaintiffs a temporary injunction against defendants substantially as prayed for.

Subsequently, at July rules 1919, defendants appeared and filed their joint and several demurrers to the bill, and later, at September rules 1919, they also filed their joint and separate answers thereto, in which they deny the acquisition by said board of education of right and title to said lot by adverse possession. They admit that about the time of the alleged contract for said lot with said Holley and Stephenson, one of the members of the said board of education approached said Stephenson, representing that the said board of education desired to erect thereon a temporary building for temporary school purposes for a period of one or two years, to accommodate the children of some transient residents in that vicinity engaged in the timber business, at which time said Stephenson signified his willingness to allow said building to be erected upon said lot, for such temporary purposes, and at which time said Stephenson further promised that he would give said board of education a deed for the surface of a half acre when located by proper metes and bounds, and that subsequently when presented with a deed by one Bruce White, secretary of said board of education, prepared by him, namely on December 16, 1903, he wrote said White as follows: “I have your favor of the 10th inst. at hand and noted. In reply will say that I will make deed to.the Board of Education for a school house, which I promised them. I did not agree ten give them an acre of ground surface, as one-half acre is as much as I will give them, and that will be sufficient., I will not malee the deed until I have it located by proper metes and bounds.” The deed so submitted is not in the record, and the only written evidence of the agreement is the letter just referred to. Thereafter nothing appears to have been done to complete or perfect tne title to said lot, unless adverse possession has done so.

Admitting some and denying other allegations of the bill, not now material to notice, the answer sets forth other matters as a basis for affirmative relief against plaintiffs. And thereon on September 13, 1919, the circuit court awarded defendants an [231]*231injunction against plaintiffs, restraining and inhibiting them from further drilling upon the land in controversy.

By the final decree appealed from, the court dissolved the injunction theretofore awarded plaintiffs, on their bill, and perpetuated tire injunction awarded defendants on their cross-bill answer. This is the decree now complained of by appellants.

If, as the bill alleges, the board of education entered upon the lot in controversy pursuant to a contract with Holley and Stephenson and thereafter erected thereon a school house, and never acquired from said Holley and Stephenson any deed for said lot, by all authority their entry and possession was not-adverse and hostile, but solely and exclusively under Holley and Stephenson; and such possession could never ripen into good title by adverse possession except after the requisite period from such time as said board may have given notice to'the owners of the repudiation of their title and the setting up of an adverse and hostile claim. James Sons Co. v. Hutchinson, 79 W. Va. 389, 402 and cases cited; Hudson, v. Putney, 14 W. Va. 561; Clark v. Beard, 69 W. Va. 313; Custer v. Hall, 71 W. Va. 119.

The bill alleges-no such incipient adverse possession. It alleges no notice to defendants of intention to hold adversely, and there is nothing in the fact that the board of education built a school house on the lot and occupied the same for a- longer period that would be requisite by possession and -hostile title to acquire good title against them and all the world,- for the entry was under and servient to the title of defendants.

- True, the bill alleges adverse possession, but it as truly alleges entry and possession under Holley and Stephenson, under contract for a deed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 62, 86 W. Va. 227, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bumpus-v-ohio-cities-gas-co-wva-1920.