Campbell v. Lynch

106 S.E. 869, 88 W. Va. 209, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 72
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1921
DocketCase No. 4091; Case No. 4108; Case No. 4156
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 106 S.E. 869 (Campbell v. Lynch) 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
Campbell v. Lynch, 106 S.E. 869, 88 W. Va. 209, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 72 (W. Va. 1921).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

The appeal by Campbell and others, plaintiffs, in Case No. 4091, is from the decree below of January 23, 1920, which for the second time dismissed their bill and denied them any relief. "When this case was formerly before us on plaintiffs’ appeal, in November, 1917, (81 W. Va. 374), we reversed the decree of the circuit court sustaining defendants’ demurrer to their bill, and remanded the cause to the circuit court for further^ proceedings to be had therein in accordance with the opinion and mandate thereto certified.

The appeal in Case No. 4108,. by the defendants Lucy J. Lynch, James McC. Lewis, Fannie M. Simpson, Mary Lewis Good, and Enos Johnson, administrator of the estate of Mary M. Lewis, is from the decree of May 27, 1919, entered in the said cause, which settled the rights of the parties in accordance with the rules and principles of our former decree, and referred the cause to a commissioner to state and settle the accounts between the parties to the suit in accordance therewith.

The appeal in Case No. 4156 by W. 0. Abney and others, heirs and personal representatives of the estate of F. W. Abney, deceased, from the decree of January 23, 1920, which dismissed plaintiffs’ bill, refused to confirm the report of [212]*212the commissioner, and denied them the right to withdraw their original answer and file their new answer then tendered and offered to be filed.

In addition to these several appeals there are cross-errors assigned on behalf of John Edward Lewis, by H. C. Ferguson, his counsel, which will be hereafter adverted to and disposed of.

Unless avoided or affected by issues presented by the answers, the former decision here, though by a divided court, must be regarded as the law of this case. Formerly the case was presented upon the bill and the exhibits therewith, and the demurrer of the defendants thereto sustained by the lower court, but which we overruled, and remanded the cause. Our opinion on the former hearing will disclose that the questions then presented were, what is the true construction 'of the two leases for oil and gas executed by Edward Lewis and Mary M. Lewis, his wife, in April 1900, and what the effect on the rights of the parties to the oil and gas of the subsequent decree dividing and partitioning the lands covered by said leases between the heirs at law of the said Edward Lewis, then deceased, referred to in the bill, and the subsequent conduct of the partitioners in relation thereto, and in relation to the subsequent development of oil and gas on the lands allotted the partitioners 1

Unless a good defense was presented by the answers of the defendants filed on the remand to the circuit court, the decree pronounced on May 27, 1919, should be adhered to and executed; and that of January 23, 1920, again dismissing the bill, should be reversed upon the appeal and assignments of error therein by the appellants Campbell and others ■in Case No. 4091, and of W. 0. Abney and others in Case No. 4156.

That the court below was bound, as we are now bound on this appeal, by whatever was decided upon the former appeal as the law of this case, is not an open question in this state, unless for want of parties or for other error in the decree it must be reversed. Seabright v. Seabright, 33 W. Va. 152; Mason v. Harper’s Ferry Bridge Co., 20 W. Va. 223; Wick v. Dawson, 48 W. Va. 469; Pennington v. Gillas[213]*213pie, 66 W. Va. 642. And this is the law in most jurisdictions, state and federal. Campbell’s Ex’ors v. Campbell’s Ex’ors, 22 Gratt. 649; Bank of Old Dominion v. McVeigh, 29 Gratt. 546. For a full note on the subject with reference to many decisions, see City of Hastings v. Foxworthy, 45 Neb. 676, 34 L. R. A. 321.

The issues sought to be presented by the answers of Lucy J. Lynch and others, defendants, were: First, that in the suit for partition and assignment of dower brought by Lucy J. Lynch v. Mary M. Lewis et al., widow and heirs of Edward Lewis, deceased, referred to and pleaded in the bill, the court, having jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties, had by the decree of partition therein pronounced on April 2, 1907, finally adjudicated beyond recall the rights of the parties in interest in the land partitioned and in the oil and gas therein; and said decree was pleaded in estoppel of the claims of the plaintiffs to any of the oil and gas produced by the lessee in said leases not found under and produced from the particular lot allotted to them in said partition: second, that the plaintiffs W. C. Campbell and his children, then adults, had agreed with the widow and other heirs of said Edward Lewis, at the time of said partition, that the person to whom each purpart was assigned should be and was entitled in fee to the oil and gas underlying the same, and that W. C. Campbell and his children had acquiesced in such decree and agreement, for nearly seven years, until the situation of the parties had changed, and until they had concluded that the two parcels of land allotted to them would not prove as valuable for oil and gas as anticipated at the time of said partition: third, that early in 1907, John E. Lewis, F. W. Abney and W. C. Campbell, by written notice to the South Penn Oil Company, Mary M. Lewis and others, protested that they owned the oil and gas under the lands allotted to them, and that John E. Lewis and said Abney had, under the claim that they owned the oil and gas under the tract assigned to them, brought suit against the South Penn Oil Company and others to cancel the lease thereon as a cloud on their title, thereby estopping themselves from asserting any interest in the oil and gas under the purparts as[214]*214signed to others: fourth, that after the completion of the gas well assigned to John E. Lewis and F. W. Abney, the gas rental of $200.00 per year was paid to and received by said Abney, and that the plaintiff W. C. Campbell, after said partition and for more than three years after the drilling of the well on the purparts assigned to the other partitioned, had accepted the rentals accrued to him under the said leases: fifth, that upon the drilling of the wells on each purpart on which oil and gas were found the lessee had recognized the partition of said land including the oil and gas and treated such allottee as the owner in fee of the oil and gas in and under the parcels allotted to them, and thereby had agreed to the subdivision of the original leases into seven, and of all which said Campbell and his children had notice, and had acquiesced therein for at least six years, and until they supposed that said partition had turned out to their disadvantage.

After the filing of the foregoing answers, the administrator of Mary M. Lewis and others filed supplemental answers, in which they set up that in the event the decrees in the partition suit were not held binding and efficacious to partition the oil and gas, that the said Mary M. Lewis and her personal representatives under the terms of the leases were entitled to one-half of the oil and gas royalties absolutely and to her dower or distributive share as widow in the other half so long as she should live. To these supplemental answers the plaintiffs excepted, on the ground that if respondents were entitled to such relief, they were so entitled under the original answers and not by reason of anything alleged in their supplemental answers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 S.E. 869, 88 W. Va. 209, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-lynch-wva-1921.