Dudley v. Browning

90 S.E. 878, 79 W. Va. 331, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 46
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 878 (Dudley v. Browning) 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
Dudley v. Browning, 90 S.E. 878, 79 W. Va. 331, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 46 (W. Va. 1916).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge :

The decree complained of dismissed, as for want of equity, a bill filed by vendors of land, holding a vendor’s lien thereon, and having for its purpose enlargement of an alleged equitable title into a clear legal one for better security of the debt and removal of cloud from the title of the vendees, in view of possible liability on covenants of warranty.

Two tracts of land containing, respectively, 52 acres and 322 acres, the former known as Lot No. 2 and the latter, as Lot No. 5, in a partition agreement entered into by the heirs .of Boyd W. Mullins, for division of a tract of land containing about 1,700 acres, inherited from their father, constitute the real subject matter of the suit. These two parcels formed a part of a large area of over 3,200 acres, purchased in smaller tracts and consolidated by the plaintiffs or their predecessors in title, and later sold to the Spruce Fork Company, a corporation, for the sum of $230,000.00, of which $70,000.00 was paid in cash, and for the residue of which, deferred in payments, a vendor’s lien was retained. The Spruce Fork Co. later conveyed the property to the Boone County Coal Corporation.

The plaintiffs having parted with whatever title they had to the land, either legal or equitable, and having no interest therein other than their lien thereon for purchase money, and [334]*334being under no obligation respecting the same other than that imposed by their covenants of warranty, their claim of right to maintain the suit is vigorously challenged. If the allegations of the bill are true, they were owners of the equitable title, at least, before they disposed of their interests in the land. The suit seems to have been instituted before they parted with their alleged titles, but the present bill, filed after their conveyance to the Spruce Fork Co., was necessitated by the destruction of the bill originally filed, in a fire which destroyed the court house of Logan County. The present bill was filed as a substitute for the one destroyed, by way of restoration of the record so lost.

Strictly and technically, a bill to remove a cloud is maintainable only by the owner of a good legal title in possession of the land. The owner of an equitable title may sue for the cancellation of instruments that becloud and obstruct his right and for procurement of the" legal title, but his bill is not strictly a bill to remove a cloud from title, for, in law, he has no title on which a cloud can rest. Jurisdiction in the two classes of cases named is so elementary and so frequently exercised that authority for it need not be cited. The case presented by this bill belongs to neither class. It is one of first impression in this state. Though we have no authority in the decisions of this court, bearing directly upon the question thus raised, Jackson v. Kittle, 34 W. Va. 207, declares the right of a grantor obligated by a covenant of warranty, to enjoin the perfection of an adverse title which would becloud the title conveyed by him, or work a breach of his cov-enent of warranty. In the same case, it was declared, however, that, as a general rule, a party cannot maintain a suit to remove a cloud, or a bill, quia timet, who has no other interest than the fact that he has conveyed the property with a covenant of general warranty. For the contrary of this latter proposition, considerable authority is found in other jurisdictions. It has frequently been held that one who has sold and warranted title to realty may maintain judicial proceedings to remove a cloud on such title or to prevent a cloud thereon. Jackson Milling Co. v. Scott, 130 Wis. 267; Ely v. Wilcox, 26 Wis. 91; Pier v. Fond Du Lac Co., 53 Wis. 421; [335]*335City of Hartford v. Chipman, 21 Conn. 488; In re Phillips, 60 N. Y., 16; Sutliff v. Smith, 58 Kan. 559; Styer v. Sprague, 63 Minn., 414; Begole v. Hershey, 86 Mich., 130.

In some] if not all, of these eases, purchase money delayed in payment or withheld, on account of a defect or cloud, was an element or factor exerting a strongly persuasive influence upon the courts. By way of argument to sustain -equity jurisdiction for relief under the circumstances presented by this record, but not by way of decision, it may be •said that the weight of authority seems to favor the right of .a warrantor to maintain a bill to clear the title he has bound himself to maintain and defend, even though he has no •direct interest in the'land. Ownership of a lien on the land is not title, but it. is a right respecting the land. It is a ligament or tie between the debt and the title, which enables the holder to control, have dominion over and power of disposition respecting, the very title itself. His lien is a highly valuable interest or right and the title to the land constitutes its basis or foundation. Right and power to clear and perfect the title, if accorded and recognized by a court of equity, constitute a means of perfecting’and protecting the lien. If such power does not exist, a vastly important right, lien security upon real estate, is left without adequate remedies for its protection and enforcement. The power of a court of equity, in a suit to enforce liens by sale of the lien subject, to clear away, by cancellation, mere clouds upon the title, to the end that the subject may be sold for an adequate price, in the interest of both the debtor and the creditor, cannot be doubted. To say the '•creditor, for the betterment and strengthening of his security, may have the same thing done, without enforcement of his lien, ■falls within the equity, scope and utility of the principle or rule stated, and gives the remedy under circumstances which make it equally beneficial to both parties. The creditor may not desire enforcement of his lien and continuance thereof may be both desirable and beneficial on the paid of the debt- or. In-other words, it may be to the interest of both, to have the lien continue and the debt remain unpaid for a number of years. Indeed, the debt may have been made to run over n-[336]*336long period of years, as a matter of investment on the part of the creditor, and reasonable necessity or expediency on the part of the debtor. To deny the remedy for protection of the title, except in a suit to enforce the lien, might defeat the purposes of both parties and break up a mutually advantageous arrangement. These considerations and others impel us to the conclusion that the holder of a lien upon land may maintain a suit in equity to dissipate clouds from the title thereof.

The primary purposes declared by the bill are: (1),. specific performance of a written agreement of partition of the land, made by the heirs of B. W. Mullins, deceased, and dated, February 12, 1880, by execution and delivery of proper deeds conveying their respective interests or lots to the plaintiffs, the Spruce Fork Company or the Boone County Coal Corporation, as to the court may seem proper, upon the assumption of equitable ownership of all of the several interests in the plaintiffs by conveyances thereof, in the absence of a severance of the common ownership of the legal title by mutual conveyances among the heirs; (2), execution of a decree made and entered, July 4, 1887, in a chancery suit brought by the administrator of the estate of B. W. Mullins against his heirs, to subject the real estate of which he died siezed and possessed, to the payment of his debts, by the appointment of a commissioner to convey to the plaintiffs, Spruce Fork Co.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 878, 79 W. Va. 331, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudley-v-browning-wva-1916.