Central Land Co. v. Laidley

3 L.R.A. 826, 9 S.E. 61, 32 W. Va. 134, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 58
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 3 L.R.A. 826 (Central Land Co. v. Laidley) 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
Central Land Co. v. Laidley, 3 L.R.A. 826, 9 S.E. 61, 32 W. Va. 134, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 58 (W. Va. 1889).

Opinion

BraNNON, Judge:

By deed dated 18th August, 1865, Rebecca J. Everett conveyed to Sarah H. G. Pennybacker then a married woman 240 acres of land now within the city of Huntington. By a deed dated 25th February, 1870, Sarah H. G. Pennybacker and her husband, John M., united in a deed purporting to convey said land to O. P. Huntington; and by deed dated 16th October, 1871, Huntington conveyed it to the Central Land Company. Huntington took possession, and after him the Central Land Company, and it laid off a largo part of said land into lots, streets and alleys, sold many lots, and buildings have been erected thereon. Mrs. Penny backer’s husband died 5th May, 1881, and she by deed dated 26th January, 1882, conveyed said land to John B. Laidley, who had full notice of said deed to Huntington when he took his conveyance. .In March, 1882, Laidley brought an aetiou of ejectment against the Central Land Company and others to recover [136]*136this land, and on its trial there were a verdict and judgment for defendants. Upon a writ of error to said judgment it Avas reversed, and the action of ejectment was remanded for re-trial to the Circuit Court of Cabell county, where it is now pending.

On the decision by this court .of the writ of error, as will be seen from the case of Laidley v. Land Co., 30 W. Va. 505, (4 S. E. Rep. 705,) the said deed from Mrs. Pennybacker and her husband to Huntington Avas held void because of defect of the certificate of the privy examination and acknowledgment of Mrs. Pennybacker.

Pénding said writ of error, the Central Land Company brought a chancery suit against Laidley and others, alleging the facts above stated; and further that Laidley procured his deed from Mrs. Pennybacker by misrepresenting to her, that she Avas conveying a dower only, and paid her only $500.00 for it, whereas Huntington had paid $11,000.00 and the land was worth at date of Laidley’s deed $30,000.00; and that it had sold divers lots to the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company and others, Avliohad built railroad tracks and houses thereon, and relying on adverse possession from the date of the deed to Huntington; and that Laidley when he took his deed had full knowledge of the deed from Pennybacker to Huntington, and from Huntington to the land company, and of the sales of said lots. Said Land Company further alleged, that in 1872 Mrs. Pennybacker brought a chancery suit against her husband and others, in which she stated, that she had on payment to her of $11,000.00 consideration conveyed the land to Huntington, that it Avas her separate estate, and that her husband had agreed to invest the money in other land for her, but' had wrongfully invested it in his own name in two farms, and Avhich farms she sought to have declared her separate estate and conveyed to her; and that a decree had been rendered in said suit declaring her entitled to one of those farms, — the Noel farms — by reason of the investment therein of money arising from said sale of her land to Huntington; that she and her husband had made a deed to one Parsons, duly acknowledged, conveying one acre, Avhich in the deed to Huntington she had reserved, and that in the deed to said Parsons she recognized the'Hunting[137]*137ton deed in describing the- one acre by the language, “and more particularly described in a deed of the party of the first part to C. P. Huntington.”

The bill contended, that by reason of said deeds and the plaintiff’s claim and possession of said land and the claim of Mrs. Pennybaeker through said chancery suit and decree therein, recognizing said sale to Huntington and obtaining the benefit of its proceeds, and her recognition of the conveyance to Huntington in her deed to Parsons, and the knowledge on the part of Laidley of all the rights of all these parties, when he took his deed, the said land company bad good title, which was beclouded and disquieted by Laidley’s claim and action of ejectment.

It appeared, that Mrs. Pennybaeker had later suffered losses and was insolvent, and her husband’s estate likewise, and not good for the warranty in said deed.

The bill claimed, that Laidley held under his conveyance from Mrs. Pennybaeker as trustee for the Land Company and others owning parcels of the land under it; and.it prayed that he be required fo convey said lands to them, and be-enjoined from prosecuting said action of ejectment and other actions, which Laidley had instituted' against vendees of said company; or, if such relief could not be had, that Laidley be required to refund the $11,000.00, which Huntington had paid Mrs. Pennybaeker for the land, and that the land be charged with it.

Laidley filed an answer maintaining, that by the deed from Pennybaeker and wife John M. Pennybaeker passed only a life-estate to Huntington, as the deed from Everett to Mrs. Pennybaeker invested him with a life-estate and her with a remainder in fee: and that Mrs."Pennybaeker by the deed to Huntington did not convey her estate to him, and denying that she received the $11,000.00 consideration from Huntington, and averring that her husband received and squandered it. He denies, that he represented to her, that she had only a dower, and avers told her her deed to Huntington was void, and she could recover a.fee-simple. He denies all right of the plaintiff, and contends that he (Laid-ley) is not to be deemed a trustee holding the title for the com[138]*138pany, and in all respects relies on his title, and resists at length the entire claim of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff filed an amended and supplemental hill setting up the sales of other parcels of land to other parties, and stating that since the filing of the original hill said writ of error had been determined, reversing said judgment in ejectment, and granting a new trial, and alleging again substantially the facts stated in the original bill, claiming that the plaintiff had superior equity, while Laidley held the legal title, and praying the same relief as was prayed for in the original bill.

Laidley answered contesting the plaintiff’s case from first to last, alleging that the deed to Huntington had been held void by the Supreme Court, asserting his title and insisting that the plaintiff’s title was void.

Mrs. Pennybacker filed demurrers to both bills, assigning various grounds. Laidley also filed demurrers to both bills, specifying various grounds. Yoluminous depositions were taken by both sides. On the hearing the bills were dismissed ; and plaintiff took the appeal, which we now decide.

This is a very important cause involving the right to a large part of the growing city of Huntington. The deed from Pennybacker and wife to Huntington has been held by this court void as to the fee because of defects in the certificate of the examination and acknowledgment of Mrs. Pennybacker. We must in deciding this cause start on our road with that fact settled, and follow the logical, legal sequences, lead where they may. A line of decisons by this court holds, that a married woman’s deed with such defective certificate is not merely voidable but utterly void ah initio. Ho power can now change this rule but that of the legislature. This paper, though it has the form and semblance of a deed, is no deed in law as to Mrs. Pennybacker and as to her passed no title whatever, — not a shadow of title either legal or equitable — to Huntington; and in the language of the Maryland court in Johns v. Reardon, 11 Md. 465, is to be dealt with, as though Mrs. Pennj’backer were no party to it.

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Bluebook (online)
3 L.R.A. 826, 9 S.E. 61, 32 W. Va. 134, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-land-co-v-laidley-wva-1889.