Dunbar v. Dunbar

68 S.E. 120, 67 W. Va. 518, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 52
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 120 (Dunbar v. Dunbar) 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
Dunbar v. Dunbar, 68 S.E. 120, 67 W. Va. 518, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 52 (W. Va. 1910).

Opinion

BraNNON, Judge:

W. S. Dunbar and wife conveyed to D. S. Courtney, E. T. Crawford and IV. L. Ashby, 1st, all the right, title and interest formerly belonging to John Cook and Mary A. Cook in lands of which Lemuel Jarrell, Sr., died seized, which interest was pur-[519]*519ehqsed by W. S. Dunbar at a sale under a decree, and 2nd, all the right, title and interest of said Dunbar and wife in the land of Lemuel Jarrell, deceased. This deed contained a covenant of general warranty and a covenant for further assurance, and reserved a lien for deferred purchase money. Lemuel Jarrell died seized of ten tracts of land in Raleigh county. W. S. Dunbar brought a chancery suit to enforce against the realty conveyed by him by that deed to Courtney, Crawford and Ashby the lien for purchase money reserved in the deed. Courtney, Crawford and Ashby defended the suit by an answer setting up that by various conveyances from other parties-they had become owners of all the shares or interests in the various tracts of land of which Lemuel J arrell died seized, and that af-terwards W. S. Dunbar claimed that.said purchasers had not acquired all such interests, and that he still owned the Cook interest, and that in order-to get rid of this claim of W. S. Dunbar they purchased of him the said Cook interest and all the interests of Dunbar in said Jarrell land. And said answer further states in effect that two interests had been conveyed by heirs of Jarrell to H. A. Dunbar, and that the deeds being defective those two heirs had made second conveyances of those interests to W. S. Dunbar, thus making conflicting claims to those'interests between H. A. Dunbar and W. S. Dunbar. The answer further stated that EL A. Dunbar had conveyed to Michael Lilly and Isabella Lilly a boundary of 250 acres of said land and to William EL Jarrell by one deed 16-| acres and by another deed 62 acres. The answer further alleged that II. A. Dunoar was in possession of and claiming some 700 acres or 800 acres of the J arrell land. EIow claiming is not stated. The answer further stated that Michael Lilly and C. N. Dunbar had entered .on the land books in their names 18 acres and 104 poles of said land, and that C. N. Dunbar had entered on the land books 11 acres and 5 poles, such entries importing a claim- of title, but how the answer does not certify. The answer further stated that by deed Stephen Williams had conveyed to Henry A. Williams 60 to 70 acres of the land and had fenced a portion of it and was in possession thereof; and that W. H. Jarrell was claiming another part of the land containing about 80 acres, and that C. P. Stover somehow claimed 30 acres of the said land, and alleged further [520]*520that said adverse claimants were in possession. After this answer was filed W. S. Dunbar filed an amended bill maiang such adverse claimants, H. A. Dunbar, Michael S. Lilly, Isabella Lilly, W. II. Jarrell, C. N. Dunbar, Henry A. Williams, Stephen Williams, Jack Williams, Daniel Williams and C. P. Stover, party defendants, and assailing their titles and claims as bad and asking that their rights be adjudicated, amj. that their deeds be canceled and set aside as a cloud upon the titles of the land, and that they be required to surrender possession to Courtney, Crawford and Ashby. These adverse claimants, the said new parties, did not appear and the amended bill was taken for confessed against them. They did not answer the answer of Courtney, Crawford and Ashby. Courtney, Crawford and Ashby answered the amended bill asserting their own title to be good and alleging that the title or right or claim of H. A. Dunbar and other adverse claimants above named were bad and added that Jack Williams and Daniel Wiliams and Henry A. Williams were also asserting title to a portion of the land; and this answer alleged that their titles were worthless and asked that the rights of all such claimants be adjudicated, and if found valid that there might be reduction of the purchase money. A decree was made of sweeping character declaring that the title of Courtney, Crawford and Ashby to all the said ten tracts of land of which Lemuel Jarrell died seized was superior and paramount to any claim, or title of said adverse claimants, H. A. Dunbar, Michael and Isabella Lilty, William H. Jarrell, C. N. Dunbar and C. P. Stover, and setting aside the deeds from H. A. Dunbar to W. II. Jarrell and the deed from H. A. Dunbar to Michael S. Lilly and Isabella Lilly, and awarding Courtney, Crawford and Ashby a writ of possession against such claimants, and decreeing that Courtney, Crawford and Ashby pay W. S. Dunbar the purchase money for which the lien was reserved in the deed from W. S. Dunbar to said purchasers, and subjecting the land to sale therefor. Afterwards H. A. Dunbar, Michael S. Lilly, Isabella Lilly and W. II. Jarrell filed a bill of review assigning errors of- law in the said decree, and praying that the same be reversed. Courtney, Crawford and Ashby entered a demurrer to the said bill of review, and a decree was pronounced sustaining said demurrer and dismissing the bill of review, from which [521]*521decree Ií. A. Dunbar, Michael S. Lilly, Isabella Lilly and W. II. Jarrell appeal.

The first point presented for our consideration is, that the demurrer to the bill of review was well taken because it was filed more than two years after the decree, which decree was rendered 22nd December, 1905, and that the bill of review is barred by limitation. This contention is rested on the theory that though the Code until chapter 40, Acts of 1909, inducing the limitation for a bill of review from three to one year, allowed a period of three years, yet that three years limitation was reduced to two by the Act changing the limitation upon an appeal from five to two years, the argument being that the statute reducing the limitation for an appeal to two years by implication changed the limit of a bill of review from three to two years; in other words, though the section of the Code allowing three years for a bill of review was not expressly repealed, yet it was so impliedly repealed, and no bill of review could be entertained, even beiore the Act of 1909, after two years. To sustain this view we would have to overthrow Dunfee v. Childs, 45 W. Va. 157, holding that notwithstanding the period of an appeal was two years, a bill of review could be entertained within three years. We are asked to reconsider and overthrow that ease. We decline to reconsider that subject, not only on the principle of stare decisis, but also because there can now be but few cases in which the matter can be material, as time will so.on bar bills of review to decrees anterior to the Act of 1909 fixing the limit for bills of review at one year. The matter then is of little importance except in this case and perhaps a few others. Besides said chapter 40 gives three years as to decrees prior to its passage.

Coming to the merits of the case, we find that the original cause was a suit brought by W. S. Dunbar against Courtney, Crawford and Ashby purely .and only to enforce the lien for purchase money reserved in the deed from Dunbar to Courtney, Crawford and Ashby. We find that parties- claiming adverse titles to much of the land mentioned above are brought into this suit and their rights adjudicated, and their titles annulled, and their deeds canceled, and title to all the land declared to be in Courtney, Crawford and Ashby paramount to the claim of other co-defendants. A plain error consits in the fact that in [522]*522a suit between grantor and.

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Related

Cunningham v. McCormick
127 S.E. 909 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1925)
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89 S.E. 148 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 120, 67 W. Va. 518, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbar-v-dunbar-wva-1910.