Fulton v. Johnson

24 W. Va. 95, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 44
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 W. Va. 95 (Fulton v. Johnson) 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
Fulton v. Johnson, 24 W. Va. 95, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 44 (W. Va. 1884).

Opinion

Green, Judge:

The first error assigned in the argument of the counsel for the plaintiff in error is, that the husbands of the female plaintiffs, who were heirs of James ITiett, deceased, were necessary parties to this suit; and they not having been made parties, the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover.. The plaintiffs under the declaration claim the tract of laud in controversy jointly against the defendant; and they cannot recover, unless [105]*105they show, that they had a joint right to the possession, which, the evidence discloses, they did not have at the time of the commencement of the action, as the husbands of the female plaintiffs had a present right to tlie possession of the property and were not made parties. J. J. Fulton for instance was not made a party plaintiff, yet he had a present right to the possession of the property in common with the other plaintiffs, if any of them had such, because he was the husband of Virginia Fulton, one of the plaintiff's.

Numerous authorities are referred to by counsel to sustain this position; but there is no necessity to look beyond the express provisions of our statute-law to determine, who should have been plaintiffs in this action. Section 4 of chapter 90 of the Code of West Virginia p. 518 provides: “No person shall bring such action, unless he has at the time of commencing it a subsisting interest in the premises claimed and a right to recover the same, or to recover the possession thereof, or some share, interest or portion thereof.” Section 23 of said chapter p. 520 provides: “If the jury be of opinion for the plaintiffs, or my oj them, the verdict shall be for the plaintiffs or such of them as appear to have a right to the possession of the premises or any part thereof.” It is obvious therefore, that though the plaintiffs claim in the declaration the tract of land jointly against the defendant, and the evidence shows that they are not all entitled to the possession jointly, yet a verdict and judgment may be rendered for such as appear to have a right to the possession of the tract or any part thereof. It is equally obvious, that while more may be joined in the declaration as plaintiffs than arc shown by the evidence to have any interest in the land claimed without vitiating the suit, so some of the parties entitled to the joint possession of the land claimed may be omitted iu the declaration without vitiating the suit. For section 25 of said chapter p. 520, 521 provides: “When the right of the plaintiff is proved to all the premises claimed, the verdict shall be for the premises generally, as specified iu the declaration; but if it be proved to only a part or share of the premises, the verdict shall specify such part particularly as the same is proved.” So that a declaration may claim the whole of the premises iu fee, and yet the verdict and judg[106]*106ment may be for an undivided moiety, though the party owning the other undivided moiety was not made a co-plaintiff as he might have been.

In this case all the parties plaintiff were just those who upon the evidence ought to have been plaintiffs; and no one else would have been properly parties plaintiff. It is true that if either fewer or more persons had been made parties plaintiff, it would not have been a fatal error; but it would have necessitated a special verdict designating who were entitled to recover and the part they were entitled to recover, while it would have been of no possible advantage but a simple embarassment in the prosecution of the suit. It was claimed by the plaintiffs, that they were all the heirs of James Iliett; that at the time of his' death he owned this land in fee simple and was entitled to the possession of it; and that on his death it descended to all the plaintiffs, male and female, and that therefore they were entitled to the possession of the land against the defendant, Joshua Johnson, who unlawfully held possession of the same; and this was proven by the evidence. The evidence also showed that none but the plaintiffs in this action had any subsisting interest in the premises claimed or any right to recover the same, or to recover the possession thereof. The earliest period, ■when their ancestor Janies Iliett had any claim to this land, was May 6, 1879; and he died between that and December 30, 1882, when this suit was instituted. This land, if he had a good claim to it, descended to all his heirs. Borne of them were females and married; and it is claimed, that their husbands had an interest in and a present right to the possession of this land and ought to have been joined with their wives and the other heirs as co-plaintiffs. But it is obvious, that their husbands “had no subsisting interest in the premises or any right to recover the same or to recover the possession thereof or any share, interest, or portion thereof;” and therefore they ought not to have been made co-plaintiffs. Section 3 of chap. 66 of the Code of W. Va., p. 448, provides: “Any married woman may take by inheritance from any person other than her husband and hold for her sole and separate use real property and any interest therein.” The premises claimed in this action, if the. plain[107]*107tiffs have any right thereto, descended to them irom their ancestor, James Hiett, who died after this Code went into effect; and therefore the female heirs of James Hiett inherited their interest in the tract of land claimed as their sole and separate property; and of course their husbands had no soi’t of interest in the land claimed iu this action nor any right to the possession thereof; and they were therefore very properly not made co-plaintiffs in the action.

The next error in this case, as claimed by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, is that upon the death of Virginia Fulton, one of the female plaintiffs, being suggested her surviving husband, J. J. Fulton, ought to have been made a party plaintiff, because he became tenant by courtesy in her interest; and they assert that seizin in fact, actual possession by the wife in her lifetime, was not necessary to make him tenant by courtesy. They refer to no authority to sustain this position except section 15 of chapter 65 of the Code of West Virginia, page 445. Now this section of our Code has been interpreted by this Court. In Winkler v. Winkler’s Ex’or 18 W. Va. 455, this Court decided: “Section 15 of chapter 65 of the Code of 1868, as amended by section 2 of chapter 207 of the Acts of 1872-8 which provides: ‘If a married woman die seized of an estate of inheritance in lands, her husband shall he tenant, by the courtesy in the same’ does not dispense with any of the four -common law requisites of courtesy: marriage, seizin of the wife, issue born alive' and death of the wife, but is only declaratory of the common law. The only real question of doubt in that case was whether the statute did not dispense with issue born alive. After mature deliberation this Court decided it did not. Much more obviously it does not dispense with seizin of the wife. Nor does it in any manner change the character of this seizin. It is, as this Court decided, merely declaratory of the common law. And by the common law, as admitted by all, the seizin of the wife, necessary to give the husband a right after her death to courtesy, was a seizin not in law but a seizin in fact, that is, possession of the land by the wife.

In this case the proof shows, that none of the female plaintiffs, who were married, ever had any possession of this [108]*108tract of land; but that from the tipie their claim to it-arose by the death of their ancestor, James Hiett, the defendant Joshua Johnson held

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 W. Va. 95, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-johnson-wva-1884.