Dell Coal Co. v. County Court of Boone County

178 S.E. 621, 115 W. Va. 568, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 114
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1934
Docket7624
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 178 S.E. 621 (Dell Coal Co. v. County Court of Boone County) 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
Dell Coal Co. v. County Court of Boone County, 178 S.E. 621, 115 W. Va. 568, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 114 (W. Va. 1934).

Opinion

*569 Kenna, Judge:

Dell Coal Company brought this action of trespass on the case in the circuit court of Boone County.' From a judgment of nil capiat entered upon a directed verdict in favor of the defendant, the County Court of Boone County, the plaintiff below, Dell Coal Company, prosecutes this writ or error.

A demurrer having been sustained to the original declaration, an amended declaration was filed in which the Dell Coal Company sets up that it was the owner of all the mineral coal above the level of the mouth of Rock Creek in Boone County within a tract of 149 acres conveyed to Dell Coal' Company by deed dated July 3, 1923, from F. -L. Thomas, trustee, and J. M. Hopkins; that in connection with the conveyance to it, it received from its grantors comprehensive mining rights, rights of way, etc., upon the surface of the tract of 149 acres; that in the exercise of ■ the rights so granted and preparatory to undertaking the removal from the tract of 149 acres of the coal granted to it, it entered upon the surface, and there erected a tipple, headhouse, drumhouse, track, mo-torhouse, railway sidetracks, dwellings, etc.; that in 1930, the' state road commission notified the county court of Boone County that it had projected a state route from Madison in Boone County to Hamlin in Lincoln County, and that it would require fights of way therefor to be procured by the county court, the state road commission filing'its maps and profiles, indicating the location of the road through Boone County, and showing that the projected road passed over Rock Creek' near the mouth of said creek, and passed through and upon the tract of land, the surface rights in which were owned by the plaintiff; that in the construction of the said road, the state road commission entered upon the property and destroyed certain parts of it, such as the tipple and tenement houses, and encroached upon that part of the tract of 149 acres as to which the Dell* Coal Company had undertaken to exercise its surface rights incidental to the mining of its *570 coal, all to the damage of Dell Coal Company in the amount of $45,000.00. A demurrer was overruled to the 'amended declaration and the plaintiff’s .proof thereon 'was taken.

The learned trial judge struck out the evidence of plaintiff because, as recited in the order, plaintiff had not shown by its evidence title or color of title to the property and rights claimed by it; that the plaintiff had failed to show complete title to the property alleged to have been destroyed by the construction of state route No. 3 in Boone County; and that the plaintiff had not shown that the said road was constructed by the State of West Virginia. Thus it appears that the question before us relates entirely to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s evidence.

The proof is in extremely unsatisfactory form and was not developed in an orderly manner, due, perhaps, to the fact that the learned trial judge and plaintiff’s counsel seem to have labored at cross purposes.

It appears that in 1925, after having acquired the coal and surface rights for its operation, the Dell Coal Company caused its tipples and other improvements to be placed upon the property. If it mined at all, it was for an extremely brief period, the testimony showing that almost immediately, owing to a decline in the market prices of coal, it suspended its mining operations and has not since resumed them. There is, however, proof tending to show that.from time to time, after suspending its mining operations, it was in the actual occupancy of the premises through tenants living in the dwellings that it had constructed. This evidently was not the case at the time of trial, and it does not appear at exactly what times the houses were rented. It is not denied, however, that Dell Coal Company put the buildings on .the property, exercised rights of ownership over them, and claimed them against the world.

Plaintiff showed its muniments of title going back to a deed dated July 1, 1873, from H. M. Radcliff .and wife to John Hill. The instruments subsequent to the latter deed all refer back to it.for description. There is, however, *571 a gap in the chain of title as shown following the deed of 1881 from John Hill to Henry H. Hopkins. G. J. Hill was placed upon the stand by the plaintiff and testified that he was a son of John Hill, grantee in the deed from Radcliff and wife. This witness was examined concerning the description in that deed, and testified that he had lived upon the tract of land for thirty years and was familiar with the corners and lines thereof, further stating that the corners established on the ground were those of the deed and that the description in the deed was correct. Immediately following the testimony of this witness, Mr. Ed. Haywood, President of the Dell Coal Company and its principal stockholder, was placed upon the stand and testified that the Dell Coal Company owned the rights in question in the tract of land, the boundaries of which had been identified by the witness, and at an entirely disconnected part of the record, this same witness testified to the damage done by the encroachment of state route No. 3. C. E. Krebs, a civil engineer who had actually inspected, and had been upon, the property in question at the point of the encroachment, also testified to this encroachment, its consequences and the resultant damages.

Mr. Krebs had made a survey of the Hopkins tract (property in question), and, based on that survey, had prepared a plat showing its boundaries and had shown on the plat the relative location of the state road. All of the testimony of Mr. Krebs, including the map, was excluded upon the defendant’s objection, seemingly because nowhere in the proof was his survey connected up with the actual corners and landmarks on the ground itself. In this ruling, doubtless, the trial court was right in so far as plaintiff’s claim was based upon paper title. But as to plaintiff’s right to damages to its buildings, the exclusion of the map showing the location of the state road was prejudicial.

The defendant below evidently took the view that the ownership spoken of in the statute authorizing actions of this nature (See Carden v. County Court of Nicholas *572 County, 110 W. Va. 195, 157 S. E. 411; Acts of the Legislature of 1923, Ch. 6, Secs. 31 and 138) is such as to require of the plaintiff a showing of actual title, or at least possession under color of title, before a recovery can be had. Thé learned trial judge evidently agreed with this view. In our opinion, it represents a too rigid .constrüction -of the statute. It might be applicable where the only claim is for permanent injury to the land itself, but we think that there is more than that kind of right involved in this case. Without losing sight of the fact that this recovery is sought under the statute, we, of course, must bear in mind that, though the action of trespass is now abolished in West Virginia, private property cannot be taken even for public use without just compensation and due process of law. If the statute did not give a recovery in a proper case, we would have to turn elsewhere to permit it as against those responsible.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.E. 621, 115 W. Va. 568, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dell-coal-co-v-county-court-of-boone-county-wva-1934.