Crislip v. Cain

19 W. Va. 438, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 11
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by108 cases

This text of 19 W. Va. 438 (Crislip v. Cain) 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
Crislip v. Cain, 19 W. Va. 438, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 11 (W. Va. 1882).

Opinion

Green, J udge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

The first question presented by the record is : Had the court below jurisdiction to render any decree on this rule against Rezin Cain, on March 20, 1880? The record shows, that Sarah A. Crislip, the plaintiff in this cause, had died prior to March 18, 1880, for on that day her death was suggested, as appears from an order made in the proceedings on this rule upon that day. This order says, that “on motion of the defendants, who are entitled to the proceeds of the sale of said tract of land, it is ordered, that A. Cain, who is appointed a special commissioner for that purpose, do collect said bonds for said purchase-money, and the proceedings under said rule against Rezin Cain shall proceed in the name of A. Cain, special commissioner.” Two days afterwards the decree complained of was entered without first reviving the cause in the name of the representative of Sarah A. Crislip, deceased; and appellant’s counsel insists, that the court had no jurisdiction to render any decree in the proceedings on this rule, until the original cause was revived, the sole plaintiff in it having died. Of course the court had no authority to render any decree in the original cause on its merits, until the cause was revived, such as a decree determining what portion of the fund was coming to each of the parties to the suit and distributing the same or ordering it to be invested. But is not such a decree distinguishable from a decree not in the original cause but upon the proceedings on this rule against Rezin Cain ? The proceedings on this rule had been revived and were ordered to proceed in the name of A. Cain, special commissioner, as plaintiff, in lieu of Sarah A. Crislip, deceased. Did not this revival suffice to give the court jurisdiction to enter the decree in the proceeding on this rule, [458]*458which it did enter on March 25, 1880? It seems to me the court did have jurisdiction to so act.

There is a distinction between the action of the court in the cause, which the court has no right to take, unless all the parties are before it, and the action of the court beyond the cause. If any of the parties to the suit have died, the cause must be revived, before the court can take any action in the cause. By action of the court beyond the cause I mean those measures, which are necessary for the execution of -a decree, which has been pronounced, and which are properly to be regarded as adopted not in but beyond the cause as founded on the decree itself without respect to the relief, to which the party was primarily entitled upon the merits of the ease. This kind of action beyond the cause may be had either before a final decree, as in this case, or after a final decree. This distinction is pointed out by Judge Baldwin in the case of Cocke v. Gilpin, 1 Rob. 28, and has been recognized as a correct distinction by this court heretofore. Whether this distinction was correctly applied in the case of Cocke v. Gilpin may be questioned; but the correctness of the distinction itself cannot, we think, be questioned. And when the court is proceeding to enforce the payment of the purchase-money by rule on a purchaser of land sold under its decree, a proceeding which is in this sense beyond the cause, such proceeding would not be suspended by the death of a party to the original cause, but a decree on this rule could be entered after such death. The party, to whom the purchaser had given his bond, might by the order of the court bring a suit on it at law or institute a suit in equity to.enforce the vendor’s lien, in which suits the parties to the original cause, in which the land was sold, would not be parties, nor are they properly parties to the proceedings on a rule against the purchaser; and therefore the death of any of them would not suspend the proceedings on this rule.

The next question, which we will consider, is, whether the circuit court did right in its decree of March 20, 1880, in confirming so much of the commissioner’s report, as showed the amount due from the purchaser, Rezin Cain, without considering his exception to this report. This exception alleged in general terms, that he had not been allowed all the credits, [459]*459which the evidence showed he was entitled to. This court has decided, that exceptions to commissioners reports partake of the nature of special demurrers; and if the report is erroneous, the party complaining of the report or excepting thereto must point out the error in his exception with reasonable certainty, so as to direct the mind of the court to it. When he does so, the parts not excepted to are admitted to be correct, not only as regards the principles, but as relates to the evidence, on which they are based. McCarty et al. v. Chalfant et al., 14 W. Va. 531; Chapman v. The Pittsburgh & Steubenville Railroad Co., 18 W. Va. 184. The exception in this case amounted to nothing more than a personal allegation, that the commissioner’s report was erroneous in the amount, which it found due from Rezin Cain on his purchase. It did not pretend to point out any specific credits, to which the ex-ceptant Rezin Cain was entitled, or which by the evidence ought to have been allowed him, but which was not allowed in this report. Nor does it complain, that the commissioner erred in the principle he adopted of allowing the amounts or credits, which had been admitted by the opposite party instead of specifying each separate payment as a credit, which the evidence showed or tended to show had been paid. The court therefore did not err in disregarding this exception and confirming the commissioner’s report in this respect.

The next enquiry is: Did the court err to the prejudice of the appellant in setting aside so much of its previous order, as directed the establishment by the commissioner of the lines of the Riddle farm and the ascertaining of the deficiency in said tract and the number of acres in the said tract, which the purchaser, Cain, had been entitled to get possession of, and the value of the same ? And first it is unimportant if the evidence shows, that the purchaser was entitled to no abatement because of such deficiency or because of there being any land within the description in his deed, of which he never had possession. In such case it is immaterial, whether the court set aside this portion of the order of reference, or whether it sustained the plaintiff’s exceptions to the report and allowed the purchaser, R. Cain, no abatement either for deficiency, or because he had never got pbssession of and could not get possession of certain land claimed to be within the boundaries [460]*460set out in the deed. The. same result would have followed either course. In considering therefore these questions I will take into consideration all the evidence which is in the record, whether it was introduced before or after the reference.

First. Is the purchaser, Cain, entitled to any abatement, because a portion of the land is in the possession of the heirs of Allan Crislip and John M. Grier according to the allegations of his answer to the rule ? The replication to this answer by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
19 W. Va. 438, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crislip-v-cain-wva-1882.