Carter v. Reserve Gas Co.

100 S.E. 738, 84 W. Va. 741, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 97
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 738 (Carter v. Reserve 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
Carter v. Reserve Gas Co., 100 S.E. 738, 84 W. Va. 741, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 97 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

POEFENBARGER, JUDGE;

The decree appealed from in this cause was made and entered in a suit brought by Russell V. Carter and wife, for cancellation of an oil and gas lease on a tract of land described as containing 100 acres, more or less, executed to the defendant, the Reserve Gas Company, by H. W. Carter and others, March 30, 1909, and for an accounting for the gas taken from said tract of land by the lessee. That company filed an answer in which it denied the plaintiff’s alleged claim of title to the tract of land, beyond an estate therein for the life of Harrison W. Carter, one of its lessors, and avers title in itself, Harrison W. Carter, Sarah J. Carter, wife of Harrison, and Cynthia Morrison, to an estate in the remainder in fee simple therein, as to the oil and gas. The [743]*743answer also sets np a lease of the land for oil and gas purposes to the respondent, executed by the plaintiffs themselves.. This answer and the original and three amended and sup-, plemental bills, with their exhibits, developed a state of facts, under which the court entered a decree dismissing all of the-bills, but retaining the cross-bills of Harrison W. Carter and the Reserve Gas Company, for treatment as original bills-, and further procedure thereon.

Geo. F. Carter, grandfather of Russell V. Carter, father-of Harrison W. Carter, and the grandfather of the other defendants, except the Reserve Gas Company and the wife of' Harrison W. Carter, reposing more confidence in the business: capacity of two of his sons than was due them, executed three deeds in each of which he provided for a life estate- and a remainder in fee. Deeming himself to have re-acquired what he conveyed by the first, he executed the second;, and, supposing himself to have re-acquired what was convey-e d by it, he executed a third under which the plaintiffs claim.. The theories of the defense are that he never re-acquired the-remainders created by the first deed, and, that if he did, the-one created by the second never came back to him. By the first-deed, dated, April 5, 1856, he and his wife conveyed the land to George J. Carter and Harrison W. Carter, his sons, ini this way: “To have and To Hold the lands as long as they the said parties of the second part shall live with a remainder to their heirs forever, and in case of the death of either of the said parties of the second part, said land shall be vested in the other of said parties during his life, with remainder as aforesaid. ’ ’ A part of the consideration for this conveyance was the agreement of the grantees to pay to Til-ton T. Carter, the youngest son of the grantor, $600.00, on his attaining the age of twenty-one years, if he should live to that age. In case of his death under that age, they were relieved from this obligation. The deed also reserved to the grantor and his wife a life estate in the land. Tilton T. Carter having attained the age of twenty-one years, and George J. Carter having left the state, without payment of any portion of the $600.00, the grantor instituted a suit in equity against George J. Carter, in which such proceedings were had that [744]*744the latter’s interest in the land was sold, and conveyed to George F. Carter by a special commissioner, March 18, 1871. Harrison W. Carter reconveyed to his father all the right, title and interest he had in the land, by a deed dated, March 24, 1871. About two years-later, March 28, 1873, George F. Carter, believing himself to be the owner of the land, convey'ed it to Harrison "W. Carter, in consideration of $1.00 and the covenant of the grantee comfortably to maintain and support the grantor and his wife, on the land, during their lives, and upon condition that he should do so. The clause imposing this condition and defining the estate granted reads as follows: “It being expressly understood that this conveyance is made by the party of the first part to the party of the second part on the conditions aforesaid, and that the said part y ■of the second part is not to sell or dispose of the said pro;perty, but is to hold the same for the purpose aforesaid; And to be held and enjoyed by said party, of the second part, ■during his life, and at his death to descend to his heirs. 'The said party of the first part in consideration of the said party of the second part performing the conditions aforesaid grants” etc. By a deed dated, July 17, 1873, Harrison ~W. Carter reconveyed the land to George F. Carter, reciting as the occasion and consideration thereof, dissatisfaction ■of the parties with the arrangement provided for by the deed of March 28, 1873, and their mutual desire to revoke and •annul that deed. About six months .thereafter, January 7, 1874, George F. Carter conveyed the land to Tilton T. Carter for his life, with a remainder in fee to his son, if he should have one, and, if not, to his daughters, for and in consideration of $2,000.00, $1,500.00 of which had been paid and the residue of which was represented by two promissory notes for $250.00 ■ each. The grantor reserved to himself a life estate in the land and provided for a gift over to John and Arthur Sullivan, in the event of the death of Tilton T. .Carter without issue.

Treating the provision of the deed of April 5, 1856, for the heirs of George J. Carter and H. W. Carter as remainders in fee to them, counsel for the appellees insist that the re-conveyances to George F. Carter, one by the special commis[745]*745sioner in tbe chancery cause and the other by Harrison W. Carter, carried back to him only the estates for life created by that deed; that his subsequent conveyance to Harrison W. Carter passed nothing more than a life estate; that Harrison W. Carter’s conveyance to George F. carried only a life estate; that George F.’s deed to Tilton T. Carter conveyed ■only estates for the lives of George J. and Harrison, the latter of whom is still living. George J. Carter died, leaving one son, Arthur B. Carter, who by a deed dated, September 15, 1909, granted all of his right, title and interest in the land to Harrison W. Carter, Sarah J. Carter and Cynthia Morrison, wife and daughter, respectively, of Harrison. The claim is that by this deed they acquired the remainder in fee .in one moiety of the land, and that title to the remainder in fee in the other is vested in Cynthia Morrison and L. H. 'Carter, the only children of Harrison W. Carter, one-half of which, being one-fourth of the entire tract, was conveyed ■as to the oil and gas, to the .Reserve Gas Company by L. H. Garter, by a deed dated, June 5,1909.

Neither questioning nor denying the use of the word ■“heirs” in its technical sense, in the deed of 1856, counsel for all parties virtually agree that the words making provisions for heirs therein, are, by the common law, words of limitation, and that the deed would vest in the grantees fee simple estates in the land. As to this, the authorities are clear, however. 2 Min. Inst. 2nd Ed. 343; 2' Wash. Real Prop. 649; Fearne’s Rem. 30, 33. The controversy, as regards the effect of this deed, arises over the interpretation of the statute, sec. 11 of ch. 71 of the Code, modifying or ■abolishing the famous common law proposition, known as the Rule in Shelley’s Case, the application of which would have produced this result. For the appellant, it is insisted that the statute is not broad enough in its terms to take this provision out of the operation of that rule.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 738, 84 W. Va. 741, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-reserve-gas-co-wva-1919.