Camden v. West Branch Lumber Co.

53 S.E. 409, 59 W. Va. 148, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 96
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 53 S.E. 409 (Camden v. West Branch Lumber 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
Camden v. West Branch Lumber Co., 53 S.E. 409, 59 W. Va. 148, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 96 (W. Va. 1906).

Opinion

POFFENBARGER, JUDGE:

The West Branch Lumber Company, a corporation, complains of a judgment rendered against it in an action of unlawful entry and detainer, instituted by J. N. Camden, in the circuit court of Braxton county, by which judgment, possession of a tract of land containing two hundred acres, claimed by said corporation, was given to said Camden. The errors assigned relate to instructions given and evidence excluded.

The plaintiff below, defendant in error, derived his title from Andrew Perrine, who obtained a grant for said two hundred acres of land from the Commonwealth of Virginia on the second day of April, 1855. Perrine then owned a tract of seventy-five acres granted to Mifflin Hines in 1819, and conveyed to his ancestor, Lewis Perrine, by deed dated September 1, 1837, a boundary line of which touched, at one point, said tract of two hundred acres. Camden introduced the patent for the two hundred acres issued to Andrew Per-rine; a deed executed by A. S. Knight, Virginia Knight, [150]*150W. K. Perrine and others, heirs of Andrew, Perrine, dated January 17, 1887, conveying to J. Sv Hyer and-A. C. Dyer said.tract of two hundred acres; a deed from J. S. Hyer and wife and. A. C. Dyer, and wife, dated July 18, 1890, conveying said two hundred acres to J. N. Camden; a deed from Lewis Perrine and wife, dated September 1, 1837, conveying said seventy-five acre tract tó Andrew Perrine; a deed from George McElwain and Andrew Perrine, dated January 10, 1843, conveying to Andrew Perrine sixty-one acres of land, a part of a tract, containing one hundred and sixteen acres.

The defendant below derived its claim of title as follows: A grant of a tract of five thousand acres made by the Commonwealth of Virginia, on the 13th day of April, 1786, to Samuel Young; sale and conveyance of said tract, as delinquent and forfeited land, under proceedings had in the circuit court of Braxton county in 1841, by the Commissioner of Delinquent and Forfeited Lands, to Gideon D. Camden, by deed bearing date April 13, 1842; a deed from said Camden to Francis Albright, .dated April 15, 1842, a deed from Norman D. Squires, recorder of Braxton county, William L. J. Corley and Morgan H. Morrison to Henry Brocker-hoff and others, dated September 9, 1870; a deed from William L. J. Corley, clerk of the county court of Braxton county, to A. N. Ervin, dated January 3, 1879; a deed from A. N. Ervin and wife to Margaret C. Brockerhoff, dated September 6, 1879; a deed from Andrew Brockerhoff and others to the West Branch Lumber Company, dated December 20, 1889. All of the above mentioned deeds refer to the land by them conveyed as the land patented by Samuel Young and evidence was introduced on the trial tending to prove that the two hundred acre tract of land in controversy lies within the five thousand acre tract granted to Samuel Young in 1786, and was not excepted therefrom.

Plaintiff below proved that Andrew Perrine had resided for many years on said seventy-five acre tract of land at the time he obtained the patent for said two hundred acre tract: but did not then take and hold actual possession of the latter tract. He never at any time resided on it, but kept the taxes on it paid and cleared a small space on one corner of it. A clearing made on the seventy-five acre tract extended slightly over [151]*151on to said two hundred acre tract. When this was done, does not appear, but it must have been prior to 1890, as it was done by Andrew Perrine, who died before that time. Nothing in' the evidence indicates whether this occupancy continued for any length of time. Soon ’after ' Camden purchased the land he sold the timber on a part of it to B. H.' Camden and H. P. Camden, who, about 1892 or 1893, took off of it the timber purchased by them, and, while these tim-bering oxDerations were in progress, some houses were built on the land for use in connection with them. Near that date, the West Virginia and Pittsburg Railroad was built through said tract, and a number of persons, employed in- the construction of the road, settled at various points on the land along its line. After the completion of the timber operations and the construction of the railroad, some of the people, who had come there as employes, remained upon the land; and whose tenants they were, and who had possession of the houses and small cleared lots after these operations ceased, were controverted matters in the trial. The only evidence tending to show any occupation of the land prior to the cutting of the timber and the building of the railroad is that of J acob A. Hosey, who says he built a house on it for Hudson Knight, a son-in-law of' Andrew Perrine, before the war, but never completed it and it was never occupied. This man built some of the houses for the railroad company or its contractors. Elizabeth Mowery moved in the old house built by Hosey before the war, when B. H. and H. P. Camden were taking the timber from the land, and she says B. PI. Camden told her she could stay there as long as she wanted to, and furnished lumber to put a floor in the house. She further says she put out fruit trees which still remain on the place; that she kept the property for four'years, and that A. W. Corley, agent for J. N. Camden, told her to come there and stay as long as she wanted to. At another place about a quarter of a mile distant from the house which Mrs. Mowery occupied, a Mrs. Treanno was residing in a house on the land in controversy at the time this action was conm menced, claiming to be a tenant of J. N. Camden. She also went on the property while the timber operations were in progress, with the consent of B. H. Camden, as an employe of the Camdens, or one of their contractors. She then oc-[152]*152eupied a small house near the one occupied by the Camden laborers and contractors, and, after they left, moved into the house which they vacated. A. W. Corley testified that she was there in July, 1892, with his consent, as tenant of Camden. Her name was then Mrs. Hicks, and some time after-wards Mose Treanno married her, and moved into the house with her. Around this house there was a small piece of cleared land under fence, containing five or six acres. Mrs. Treanno exhibited in connection with her testimony some letters from J. N. Camden to her showing that they recognized each other as landlord and tenant, respectively-. The letter of earliest date was written in 1901, but she claims to have had some older that had been destroyed.

A. W. Corley testified that he, as agent of J. N. Camden, gave permission to one Chapman, who had a contract for grading some part of the railroad, to erect shanties and such other houses on the land as might be needed for the accommodation of his employes in that work.

The defendant introduced in evidence a number of leases executed by Brockerhofi; and others, claiming the title, held by the defendant company. These are as follows: One executed by M. C. Brockerhofi to Moses Treanno, dated the-day of June, 1895; one exeuted by said Brockerhofi to Jesse Hosey, bearing date Junel, 1895; one executed by said Brock-erhoff to Elben and Clarke Cogar, bearing date December 25, 1897; another executed by the West Branch Lumber Company to J. H. Spencer, dated May 9, 1900; another by the West Branch Lumber Company to John Paulhamus & Son, dated January 1, 1900; another by Paulhamus & Son to E. W. Carpenter, dated February 15, 1901. Jesse Hosey testified that he had moved into a house, belonging to Chapman, the railroad contractor, in 1893; that neither Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 S.E. 409, 59 W. Va. 148, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camden-v-west-branch-lumber-co-wva-1906.