Eagle Land Co. v. Ferrell

125 S.E. 589, 97 W. Va. 608, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 237
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 589 (Eagle Land Co. v. Ferrell) 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
Eagle Land Co. v. Ferrell, 125 S.E. 589, 97 W. Va. 608, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 237 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

The avowed object of the bill was to remove as a cloud on plaintiff s title to a tract of 14 aeres and 38 poles of land on Clear Fork of Coal River, in Raleigh County, the claim of the defendant Ferrell to five acres, described in the report of the surveyor Wilson, who executed the order of survey filed in the cause, as follows: “Beginning at a stake on a cliff, on north side of Clear Fork, thence S. 30° 15' E. 240.7 feet to a spruce pine on bank of Clear Fork, a corner to the tract of land conveyed to Sylvester Ferrell by Douglas B. Gordon, and others, March 22; 1901, thence with a line of said Gordon tract S. 76° 35' E. 1327.9 feet to an old fording place in Clear Fork; thence leaving the said Gordon tract 67° 35' E. 209 feet to a large poplar stump on south side of Clear Creek, a corner to Thomas Levisay and Rutter and Etting Tracts. Thence N. 75° 01' 1662 feet to the beginning.”

This tract was undoubtedly a part of the plaintiff’s tract, originally of 2,700 acres known as the Galigo tract or survey, which adjoins on the south a tract of ten acres reserved in the deed from Douglas and Basil Gordon to Ackerman and Voegle, trustees, and others, of April 4, 1900, through whom *610 plaintiff acquired title to the larger tract. And the bill alleges, and the record shows, that the ten acres so reserved was, on March 22, 1901, sold and conveyed by the Gordons to Sylvester Ferrell; and the fact that the larger and the smaller tract so reserved and conveyed adjoin each other can not be controverted; and the deed to said Ferrell so identifies the said ten acre tract. It describes it as bounded by a straight line running from the pine near Clear Fork to Coal River; thence S. E. 76 poles to the pond of the creek above Ferrell’s house; thence with the meanders of the Clear Fork of Coal River, and as being within the Galigo survey, and the same land on which Ferrell then resided.

After so acquiring the ten acres, Sylvester Ferrell, the defendant and his wife joining therein, by deed of October 9, 1916, conveyed the ten acres and a small tract of one and one-half acres some distance from the first tract, also a part of the original Galigo survey, to John L. Dickinson, who, on October 16, 1916, conveyed both tracts to the Eagle Land Company, the plaintiff. So that by these deeds the plaintiff acquired title to the several tracts referred to, all located within the boundary of the original Galigo survey.

The bill alleges that prior to the date of his deed to said Dickinson for the two small tracts, namely, on September 7, 1916, Sylvester Ferrell had executed an option to him, and of which the said Winifred Ferrell, the co-grantee in his deed, had notice.

And the bill alleges, and the evidence we think shows, that on or about the date of the deed to Dickinson the said Sylvester and Winifred Ferrell entered into a conspiracy to defraud the Eagle Land Company of the tract of 14 acres and 38 poles adjoining on the north the said ten acre tract, which tract along with the ten acre tract to the south of it was held by said Sylvester Ferrell under lease, originally from Dickinson and later from plaintiff; that in furtherance of said scheme Sylvester Ferrell, on October 9, 1916, the date of his deed to Dickinson, executed to his son, Winifred, a deed for said 14 acres and 38 poles, who on December 3, 1917, reconveyed the same to Sylvester, his father, and who, on April 12, 1919, reconveyed it to said Winifred, the defendant; and they are the three deeds so exchanged between father and son that the *611 bill seeks to remove as clouds on plaintiff’s title to tbe land described. The défendant denies knowledge of the option of his father to Dickinson, which for description refers to adjoining lands and calls for 20 acres, more or less, but the bill alleges, and the proof shows clearly, that the option covers the land in controversy, or a greater part of it.

The real defense to the bill relates solely to the five acres, which by description is for the most part wholly within the 14 acres and 38 poles. No part of these five acres, according to the description, is within the boundary of the ten acres, but practically all of it, except small triangular pieces at the western and eastern ends thereof, is within the boundary of the 14 acres and 38 poles. The defendant claims the part of the five acres within the boundary of the tract described in the three deeds beclouding plaintiff’s title; and his claim to this is based on color of title and his alleged adverse possession, alleged by him to have extended over a period of twenty-eight years, and payment of taxes thereon for ten years or more prior to the institution’of the present suit.

The decree-below adjudged'the plaintiff not entitled to the relief prayed for, and dismissed his bill without reservations; and the plaintiff has appealed. As the answer disclaims all the land covered by the three deeds except the five acres, the plaintiff was certainly entitled to a decree removing those deeds as clouds on the residue of the 14 acres and 38 poles. The plaintiff showed possession of the land by tenants, at least that portion of the 14 acres and 38 poles not including the five acres claimed by defendant. In Bonafede v. Feed & Storage Co., 81 W. Va. 313, 315, a suit to remove cloud, it was decided that one in possession may maintain a suit in equity to set asido a deed which constitutes a cloud on his title, and that if the allegation respecting title and possession be true, he is clearly entitled in a court of equity to have the deeds of which he complains set aside so far as' they include any part of his land. And in Perdue v. Ballengee, 87 W. Va. 618, we held that equity has jurisdiction, at the suit of the owner, to remove as- clouds upon his title a deed purporting to convey an interest therein, even though the same may be entirely ineffectual for that purpose. In this case the deed in question purported to con *612 vey only an easement in a road for the benefit of an adjoining tract, and we held that the plaintiff was not so far ousted of possession by the use of the road as to preclude a suit to remove as a eloud the deed conveying the same.

If the ground of the decision below was that the plaintiff had a remedy at law, the court should not have disposed of the case on its merits without reserving to plaintiff his right to prosecute such an action, which was not done. That the plaintiff was in possession of the larger tract by tenants was not shown by the production of the leases, which it was proved were in writing; but the fact of possession, not the terms or land covered by them, may be proved as an independent fact. A competent witness for plaintiff swore that a tenant of plaintiff occupied the Sylvester Ferrell ten acres, and he undertook to say that that lease included all the mountain side above the ten acres and the few acres claimed by defendant; but as the lease in writing was not produced, we can not consider the evidence as to the boundary covered by the lease.

As the deeds in question are on record in Raleigh County, and defendant disclaims all the land outside the five acres, equity alone has jurisdiction to remove them as clouds on the title of the plaintiff to any part of his land covered thereby. Gilbert v. McCreary, 87 W. Va. 56; 1 Pomeroy Eq. Jur., sec. 279.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 589, 97 W. Va. 608, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-land-co-v-ferrell-wva-1924.