Cooper v. Upton

64 S.E. 527, 65 W. Va. 401, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 59
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 S.E. 527 (Cooper v. Upton) 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
Cooper v. Upton, 64 S.E. 527, 65 W. Va. 401, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 59 (W. Va. 1909).

Opinion

Wiieiams, Judge:

This case is reported in 60 W. Va. 648, and will be found therein' stated.

Counsel for appellee in their supplemental petition for rehearing assigned eight reasons why a rehearing should be had, and the former decree of this Court reversed, and the decree of the lower court affirmed. These will be noted in their order.

First. This assignment refers only to the oral argument made in this Court by counsel for appellant which counsel for appellee says was done in violation of an understanding between them that the case was to be submitted on briefs alone. It does not go to the merits of the controversy.

Second. It is insisted that this Court should not have held that the sale of the land was made by Moore to Lee, trustee for Davis, on the 8th day of April, 1902.' If the sale was not made on this day, there is no evidence that it was made on any other particular day. A certified copy of the contract entered into by J. K. Moore, as agent for E. Mi Upton, and Arthur Lee, trustee, bears date on April 8, 1902. It is signed by J. K Moore, agent, and is acknowledged by him before a notary [402]*402public in the City of Washington on the 34th day of April, 1903, and was recorded in Webster county on May 8, 1903. The copy in the record is an attested copy by the clerk of the county court. It is presumed to have been executed on the day of its date, and the record furnishes no evidence to overcome this presumption. The day of its date rather than the day of its acknowledgment will be taken as the actual date' of execution. Ferguson v. Bond, 39 W. Va. 651. According to ap-pellee’s contention it must have been executed before the 19th, because on that day he says he learned of the sale; and if executed on any day before the acknowledgment, why not on the 8th ? There is no evidence of any other date. Moore embodies the following language in the contract of sale: “My authority for signing this agreement of sale, is letters and a telegram from E. M. Upton, dated Rochester, 1ST. Y., April 7, 1903, addressed to me and which reads as follows: 'Close deal at thirteen dollars net to us, if five thousand dollars is deposited in some bank as trustee.’ ”

It is insisted that the agreement of May 16, 1903, does not refer to the sale on the 8th of April. But we can hardly see how this omission to mention the date of the sale would be evidence of the date. It neither proves, nor disproves, that the sale was on April 8th. It does not bear on the point. The agreement of May 16, 1903, was entered into between E. M. Upton, who held the legal title to the lands, and five others who were interested as owners with him, for the purpose of ratifying the sale which had been made by Upton to Lee as trustee of Senry G. Davis. It recites that the sale had been made “with the concurrence and assent of all of the owners of th'e land, with the exception of John T. McGraw;” and seems to have been made for the purpose of showing his assent to the sale ■which he had theretofore objected to, he being one of the owners. It does not refer to the sale to Lee by any date. This agreement simply ratifies a sale made by Upton to Lee, trustee; and there is no contention that Upton made more than one sale to him. The plaintiff says that he was in Washington, D. C., on the 19th of April, 1903, and learned from Arthur Lee that he represented Senator Davis and S. B. Elkins in the purchase of West Virginia lands, and that they had just bought the “Upton Lands.” He also says, “A little later Henry G. Davis [403]*403came into the room and stated ‘We have just bought the Upton lands/ ” He further states that later on the same day he was at the residence of Senator Elkins and that “he stated to me in so many words that he and Senator Davis had bought the Upton lands.” Suppose this testimony were admissible, it certainly would not disprove the fact that the sale was made on April 8, 1902.

Third. It is claimed by counsel for appellee that the record makes out a partnership, or joint interest, between Davis and Elkins at the time of the purchase. This fact he saj^s is not sufficiently denied in the answer, and is therefore virtually admitted. But we find the answer to contain the following denial: “But he denies that Stephen B. Elkins and Henry G-. Davis were jointly beneficiaries, or that said Elkins was in any manner interested with the said D¡avis, or any other person participated with him as a sole cestui que trust or that said Davis and Elkins were business partners.” And in another part of his answer he avers that Davis bought the land for himself and that “prior to the purchase there was no understanding or agreement between the said Davis and Elkins respecting said lands.” A denial of the allegation that Elkins was interested with Davis in the purchase could scarcely be framed in more explicit and unequivocal terms.

Upton states in ¡his deposition that the land was sold through Moore who was acting for him and his associates. Senator Davis in his deposition says that Lee negotiated the purchase for him, and that he bought the lands for him (Davis); that during the negotiation no one was interested with him. He further says that, while he had never been on the lands, he had known of them for some fifteen years prior to that time; and that at the time of the purchase Senator Elkins had nothing to do with the sale or the purchase, but that he afterwards became interested in it. Mr. Lee testifies that Ms attention was called to these lands by a letter from Mr. Moore, received early in the year 1902, and that ¡he then opened negotiations with Mr. Moore which resulted in the purchase of the tract by Senator Davis at $13.00 an acre; that if Senator ElHns had any interest in it he did not know of it. Mr. John T. McG-raw testifies that “Senator Davis knew these lands well,” and had talked to Mm several times about them. The evidence proves that [404]*404Diavis and Elkins were jointly interested in large bodies of lairds in West Virginia, and in large business enterprises, and from this we are asked to infer that they were jointly interested in the purchase of the Upton land. But the record shows that each of them is either the sole owner of, or is interested in, large bodies of land and enterprises in West Virginia, in which the other has no interest whatever.

' The declarations of Lee, Davis and Elkins made to plaintiff on the 19th day of April, 1902, even if admissible testimony, are not necessarily inconsistent with the fact that Davis bought the lands on his own account. The evidence does not show when Senator Elkins acquired' an interest; but' the positive statement of Senator Davis proves that it was after he had bought of Upton.

Before plaintiff can recover he must prove that his correspondence and conversations with Senator Elkins were instrumental in bringing about the sale. The burden is on him to prove all facts material to his case. This important fact cannot be established by vague and uncertain inferences. Any inference that Elkins was jointly interested in the purchase, which might arise from the fact that he is shown to have, subsequently, an interest in the land, and from the further fact that Elkins and Davis were jointly interested in other large bodies of land, is certainly rebutted and overcome by the direct, positive and unequivocal testimony of Senator Davis to the contrary. Furthermore, Senator Elkins, if plaintiff’s contention be true, was a very materiál witness in his behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.E. 527, 65 W. Va. 401, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-upton-wva-1909.