Eagle Land Co. v. Jarrell

119 S.E. 556, 94 W. Va. 564, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 182
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 119 S.E. 556 (Eagle Land Co. v. Jarrell) 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. Jarrell, 119 S.E. 556, 94 W. Va. 564, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 182 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

Miller, President:

We are called upon in this suit for the partition of land, to reverse for alleged errors therein several decrees of the circuit court pronounced therein because prejudicial to the rights of the four defendants and appellants, namely, James C. Jarrell, Zella Jarrell, Boyd C. Jarrell, and Anderson Jar-rell. The first two named were made defendants to the original bill, filed Uune 6, 1921; the last two, being sons of the first •two, were brought in and made defendants by an amended bill filed November —, 1921, after commissioners to partition the property had been appointed and had made their report, and which had been excepted to by the defendant James C. Jarrell alone.

At the time the order appointing the commissioners was made, on August 24, 1921, the defendants to the original bill had not answered, and as to them the bill stood taken for confessed. The commissioners reported September 22, 1921, that in their opinion it was not practicable or possible to .divide the land sought to have partitioned, with due regard to quantity, quality and value, for the reason that a part of the property had improvements thereon, and that part of it was bottom land and the remainder hill land. They further reported "that in their judgment the only equitable way said property could be divided was by a sale and division of the proceeds; and finally they reported their appraisement of the property at $5,000.00. On this report James C. Jarrell indorsed three exceptions, namely: (a) that the land was susceptible of partition, either for building purposes or for truck farms; (b) that he had had no notice of the time and place the commissioners would go upon the land to make their investigation as to whether the same was susceptible of partition; and (c) that he had had no notice of the filing of said report until long after it had been made and filed.

Before these exceptions were considered or passed upon the plaintiff had presented and filed its amended bill, and the [567]*567guardian ad litem for Boyd C. Jarrell, an infant, appointed December 6, 1921, had answered, and the defendant James C. Jarrell had on December 10, 1921, filed his answer and cross-bill to the original and amended bills of complaint. In the original bill plaintiff had charged as grounds for relief, that it was advised and believed that the land owned jointly by it and the defendants was susceptible of partition among the parties, but that if it could not be so divided, it desired that the land be sold and the proceeds be divided among the parties according to their respective rights, one-third thereof to plaintiff, and two-thirds thereof to the said ¡James C. Jar-rell. And the bill further alleged that should said property not be divisible in kind,'plaintiff believed and there stated, that the interest of the parties entitled thereto would be promoted by a sale of the whole of the same which might remain after the right of way was taken by the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company in condemnation proceedings. In its amended bill, which made the original a part thereof, plaintiff referred to the report of the commissioners theretofore filed, and alleged that they had reported that said land not susceptible of partition in kind “and that the only-equitable way said property can be divided is by sale and division of the proceeds.” The prayer of this bill is the same as that of the original, and for general relief.

The answer of the guardian ad litem for the infant defendant Boyd C. Jarrell is a formal one, simply alleging infancy and tender years, .and praying that the court by reason thereof would not allow any decree which would prejudice his interest.

In the answer and cross-bill of the defendant James C. Jarrell, he denies that the two tracts of land, the one of five acres conveyed by him to the said infant defendant, and the tract of one-half acre more or less conveyed by him to said Anderson Jarrell, were any part of the tract of twenty acres sought to have partitioned, but that they and each of them laid wholly outside of said tract of twenty acres and within the boundary of an adjoining tract owned by him, and that they were never any part of the twenty acres. And referring to the report of the commissioners appointed to divide said land, respondent denied that it was not susceptible of par[568]*568tition, but that on the contrary, it was susceptible of partR tion, especially for truck farming purposes; that it was rich and productive, and the whole thereof could be cultivated; and that it was situated between two coal mines, and was susceptible of being laid off into building lots, and being so situated between coal mines, good markets for the produce from truck farms would be furnished. Respondent alleged furthermore that he did not want his two-thirds interest in the land sold, but desired that it be laid off and divided in kind according to quantity and quality, as equity requires; that he owned adjoining land valuable for farming purposes; and that if the twenty acres should be sold, he would be deprived of ingress and egress to and from his other land.

By way of matter for the cross-relief prayed for, respondent alleged that on March 21, 1919, which time it will be observed was nearly two years before the filing of the original bill, he and the plaintiff company entered into a written contract, whereby plaintiff agreed that if Jarrell would convey to the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company a right of way •of sixty feet through said land, plaintiff would convey its one-third interest in said land to him, a copy of which contract purported to be, but was not' filed with the answer; that he had always been willing and was still willing to convey said right of way, subsequently condemned by it, to said company, whenever the' plaintiff would convey its one-third interest in said land to him; that in said condemnation proceeding there was awarded to plaintiff and others $1,500.00 as damages, of which $1,000.00 would belong to this respondent, and that he was then ready and willing to direct the general receiver of the court to pay to plaintiff the said $1,000.00, and that if there had been paid out any of said money under the order of the court by reason of any suit against him and others, he was now ready and willing to make good all such payments to the omount of $1,000.00, if found by the commissioner to be a just compensation for the land taken for railroad purposes; and he prayed for specific execution of said contract; and his further prayer 'was that the report of the commissioners respecting the partition of said land be set aside, and that plaintiff be required to make, execute and deliver to him an apt and proper deed for its one-third interest in said land, [569]*569upon Ms making and delivering a proper deed to said railway-company for said right of way.

On the same day the answer and cross-bill was tendered, the canse was brought on to be heard on the report of said commissioners appointed to partition the land with the exceptions endorsed thereon by said Jarrell, and the order of the court then entered shows that said answer and cross-bill was ordered to be filed, and that plaintiff demurred thereto and replied generally to so much thereof as might be taken and treated as an answer to its bills; and the'court took time to consider said demurrer and the exceptions of said Jarrell to the report of the commissioners.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.E. 556, 94 W. Va. 564, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-land-co-v-jarrell-wva-1923.