Dickel v. Smith

24 S.E. 564, 42 W. Va. 126, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 58
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 564 (Dickel v. Smith) 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
Dickel v. Smith, 24 S.E. 564, 42 W. Va. 126, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 58 (W. Va. 1896).

Opinion

Nent, Judge:

Hubert 3?. Nickel, committee of NeliaNoer, appeals to this Court from a decree of the Circuit Court of Wood county, rendered on the 23d day of February, 1894, in a chancery case therein pending, wherein said committee was plaintiff and W. H. Smith, Jr., et al. were defendants. This is the second appeal in this cause. See 38 W. Va. 635 (18 S. E. 721). On the former appeal the titLe of W. H. Smith, J r. to the property in controversy was held to be void, and he to be trustee thereof for the benefit of the lunatic, Mrs. Noer; and the cause was remanded to be further proceeded in according to such opinion and the rules of law and equity.

After the cause was remanded the plaintiff’proceeded by action of ejectment to oust the defendant Smith, and then, in the chancery suit, to compel him to account for the rents and profits. The circuit court referred the matter to a commissioner, and on the coming in of his report entered the following decree, now here complained of, to wit: “And now, at this day, to wit, at a circuit court continued and held for Wood county, at the court-house thereof, on August 3, 1895, this cause came on again to be heard upon the bill and upon all former orders, decrees, and proceedings, and upon all papers, heretofore read herein, and upon the report of C. M. Enright, special commissioner, heretofore filed, and upon the exceptions of the defendant W. II. Smith, Jr., thereto, and upon a copy of the judgment in ejectment in the case of Hubert Nickel, committee aforesaid, against the said W. H. Smith, Jr., and M. L. and M. A. Jones, which is by agreement of the parties made a part of the record of this cause, and was argued by counsel, on consideration whereof the court is of opinion that the three several exceptions of the defendant W. H. Smith, Jr., except as hereinafter decreed, are not well taken. It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said exceptions, and each of [128]*128them, except in so far as herein, decreed, be, and the same are, overruled. And the court doth find and doth adjudge, order, and decree that the net annual value of the real estate in the will and proceedings mentioned from August 2, 1882; the date when the said W. H. Smith, Jr., obtained possession thereof, to the time when the improvements were made thereon by him, in June, 1888, was seventy six dollars, and that the net annual value thereof from the time said improvements were made, not taking into consideration the increased value resulting from said improvements, to March 10, 1890, the date of the death of the life tenant, Anton Doer, was seventy six dollars, and that the aggregate annual value from said 10th day of March, 1890, to the Sd day of March, 1894, the date of the judgment in ejectment aforesaid, including interest to this date, is the sum of three hundred and fifty four dollars and four cents. The court being of the opinion, and doth now adjudge, order, and decree that the said "W. H. Smith, Jr., is not liable to account to the said complainant for the increased annual value of said property resulting from the improvement made by said Smith, to wit, the sum of two hundred dollars per annum, as found by said Commissioner Enright. The court doth further find and doth adjudge, order, and decree that the value of the improvements or repairs made by the said W. H. Smith, Jr., in June, 1888, while he was occupying the said property as life tenant, was as of the date of the death of said Anton Doer the sum of one thousand two hundred and forty eight dollars; and in consideration whereof the courtis of the opinion, and doth further adjudge, order, and decree, that the said W. H. Smith, Jr., is not liable to account to the said complainant for the annual value of said property at the rate of two hundred dollars per annum, but is liable to account to him therefor at the rate of seventy six dollars per annum, but that he is entitled to offset the value of said improvements against the said sum of three hundred and fifty four dollars and four cents, the aggregate sum aforesaid; but the court is of opinion, and doth adjudge, order, and decree, that the said Smith is not entited to be reimbursed, nor to have a decree against the complainant nor the estate of said Delia Doer, for the excess of said improve[129]*129ments over said aggregate sum of three hundred and fifty four dollars and four cents.” A large part of the decree is omitted as having nothing to do with the questions presented by this appeal.

The plaintiff relies on the following errors:

“First. The coui’t erred in decreeing that the defendant,W. H. Smith, Jr., is not liable to account to your petitioner for the full net annual value of the property in the bill mentioned to wit, two hundred dollars pier annum, since the 10th day, March, 1890, the date of the death of Anton Doer, the life tenant, to the date of the judgment in ejectment against said Smith, to wit, the 3d day of March, 1894, with interest. Second. The court erred in decreeing that the defendant Smith was only liable to account to your petitioner for the rents and profits at the rate of seventy six dollars per annum, and not at the rate of two hundred dollars per an-num. Third. The court erred in decreeing that the said"W. H. Smith, Jr.,was entitled to set off against the rents and profits of said property the value of the alleged improvements by him while he occupied said property as life tenant, which accrued to yourpetitioner after the death of Anton Doer, and after demand for the possession of the property by your petitioner, and after the suit in ejectment was brought against him.”

The defendant Smith assigns as error that he- was not allowed, as against the property, the full amount of the improvements put thereon by him. The commissioner’s report and the evidence returned therewith by reasons of the exceptions takeu thereto show the facts to be as follows: That six years after Smith became the purchaser of the property at the commissioner’s sale some time in the year 1888 he improved the property to the amount of one thous- and three hundred dollars, and enhanced its value to that extent; that prior thereto the rents of the property amounting to about one hundred dollars per annum were not more than sufficient to keep the property in repair, and pay the taxes thereon; that, after the improvements were made, the net rents of the property after the payment of taxes and repairs amounted to two hundred dollars; that he continued to hold the property until July 10, 1894, when he was ousted therefrom by the ejectment suit.

[130]*130. This Court plainly indicated in its former decision that Smith, having purchased in good faith, under void decrees, he should beheld to be a trustee of the property for the insane woman; and remanded the case, that the circuit court might treat him as such, and require him to account accordingly. He was not to be treated as a tort feasor, a wrongdoer, or a trespasser against whom all the mere fictions of law were to be enforced, but justly and equitably, according to the actual facts and the truth as they should be established by the evidence. Such being the determination of the Court, right or wrong, it is res adjudicóla, so far as this case is concerned, and is no longer an open question, and the counsel should have governed themselves in accordance therewith in the circuit court.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 564, 42 W. Va. 126, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickel-v-smith-wva-1896.