Goad v. Walker

80 S.E. 873, 73 W. Va. 431, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 2
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 S.E. 873 (Goad v. Walker) 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
Goad v. Walker, 80 S.E. 873, 73 W. Va. 431, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 2 (W. Va. 1914).

Opinion

Williams, Judge:

To a judgment in favor of defendants in an action of unlawful detainer, plaintiff obtained this writ of error. The action is to recover possession of a small triangular lot of' bottom land lying on Elk River, south of the mouth of a creek called Waters Defeat. Plaintiff claims the right to [434]*434possession on two grounds, viz.: (1) That he has title to the land and, therefore, right to possession: and (2) that defendants went upon the land as his tenants, and are estopped by virtue of the relation of landlord and tenant to deny his tille. Both claims are disputed by defendants. No one has had actual possession of the small lot of land until defendants went upon it about two years before this suit was brought. Plaintiff claims it is a part of a larger tract of 172 acres owned by him bordering on Elk River. The large tract is triangular in shape, having its base along Elk River and its apex on the mountan eastward from the river. His claim is that the southeastern boundary line, forming one leg of the triangle, runs from a hickory and two dogwoods on the mountain to a white oak which stood near the bank of the river below the mouth of Waters Defeat, but which has since been cut down. The line thus run includes the lot, possession of which is in controversy. Plaintiff does not pretend to have a good paper title, but attempted to prove color of title and actual, visible, exclusive and continuous possession of a part of the tract thereunder, for a period of more than ten years. But the court excluded some of his deeds as not constituting sufficient evidence of color of title. Defendants offered no proof of title whatever.

Plaintiff makes fourteen assignments of error. His first relates to the exclusion of three deeds, attested copies of which were offered as evidence, viz.: (1) Deed from James M. Corley, deputy sheriff, to John B. Williams, dated November 26, 1848; (2) deed from John B. Williams to Benjamin Butler, dated August 14, 1854; and (3) deed from Benjamin Butler to Jeremiah Butler, dated November 1, 1859. The Corley deed was admitted to record in Braxton county upon Corley’s acknowledgment taken by the clerk of the county court who used the initial letters Í£C. B. C.” after his signature to designate his official character. The certificate is headed as follows: “Braxton County Court Clerk’s Office, December 4th 1848.” Counsel for defendants insist that the attested copy was properly rejected for the following reasons: (a) because 'the deputy sheriff was not authorized to execute the deed in his own name, and that it is therefore void; (b) because the cértificate of acknowledgment does not show the state in which [435]*435it was taken; and (e) because the initial letters, “C. B. C.” do not sufficiently designate the official character of the person who took the acknowledgment. As to the first objection: It is immaterial whether the deputy sheriff had authority to make the deed or not; the instrument had the form of a deed, and purported to convey land, and was offered simply to prove color of title. If there was no other objection to it, it should have been admitted as evidence of color of title. Any writing which purports to convey land, though void for any reason, is good as color of title, if it defines boundaries. Swann v. Thayer, 36 W. Va. 46; Mullan’s Admr. v. Carper, 37 W. Va. 215; Robinson v. Lowe, 50 W. Va. 75. It is, therefore, unnecessary to decide, and we do not say, whether the deputy sheriff had power to convey. If the objections to the acknowledgment are well taken, it follows that the deed was not a recordable paper, and therefore an attested copy of it could not be used as evidence. Clark v. Perdue, 40 W. Va. 300; Cobb v. Dunlevie, 63 W. Va. 398. But we think the acknowledgment was good, for reasons to be later given when we come to pass upon similar objections made to the acknowledgment of the deed from Benjamin Butler to Jeremiah Butler, which we think was improperly rejected. The initial letters “C. B. 0.” sufficiently designated.the official character of John P. Byrne, the clerk, and stood for the words, “Clerk of Braxton County.” The caption of the certificate shows that the acknowledgment was taken in that office, and that indicates clearly the meaning of the initial letters. 1 A. & E. E. L. 531; 1 A. & E. E. L. & P., 891; and Worley v. Adams, (Va.) 69 S. E. 929.

But it appears that the boundaries of the land, as given in the deed, do not include the small lot in controversy. The line which plaintiff contends includes the lot is therein described as running from a hickory and two dogwoods, thence “S. 60 W. 225 poles to the river, at the mouth of Waters Defeat.” No other object is called for as marking the corner; and a line from the hickory to the mouth of Waters Defeat does not include the lot, which lies wholly south of Waters Defeat. It was, therefore, not error to exclude the deed.

The metes and bounds of the 172 acres are also given in [436]*436the Williams deed. But, as therein given, they do not coincide with those given in the Corley deed. The boundaries described in the two deeds begin at the same corner, but they run around the tract of land in opposite directions. In the Williams deed théy begin at three beeches on the bank of Elk River and run down the river with its meanders, the last line, down the river, calling for “S. 11 W. 80 poles crossing Waters Defeat.” It does not say how far, and calls for no natural or artificial object to mark the corner, not even a stake. Continuing thence, the next line is, “N. 54 E. 203 poles to a hickory and two dogwoods on top of hill.” This corner is clearly established by proof; and the testimony of the surveyor, P. H. Butler, proves that a line from this corner to the white oak stump, in the small bottom, below the mouth of Waters Defeat, claimed by plaintiff as a corner, has a bearing of S. 58 W. It is thus piade clearly to appear, that reversing the call and running on the degree called for in the Williams deed, to-wit, S. 54 W., the line would include the land in controversy, and even more; for the line would strike Elk River some distance below the white oak stump. But the Williams deed was not admitted as evidence for any purpose, because the acknowledgment was held to' be defective, and the deed not a recordable instrument, so as to permit a certified copy to be used as evidence in place of the original, under the statute. The acknowledgment reads as follows: “Nicholas County, to-wit:-

This day John B. Williams, appeared before me in in the aforesaid County and acknowledged the above deed, to be' his act and deed, and desired me to certify the- said acknowledgment to the clerk of Braxton County, so the said deed may duly recorded.

Given under my hand this 6th day of March, 1855.

M. TRIPLETT, J. P.”

The form of acknowledgment prescribed by the statute of Virginia, in 1855, was not materially different from the form required by our statute at the present' time. The- form then prescribed, (Sec. 3, Ch. 121 Code Va. 1849), contained the words, “whose name is signed to the writing above.” Those words, or words of similar import,-are essential for the purpose of identifying the person making the acknowledgment [437]*437with the person who executed the deed. The certificate should show that the officer making it knew the person acknowledging the writing to be the same person who signed it. The words quoted from the statute were intended to perform that office. Code 1849, Ch. 121, Sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 S.E. 873, 73 W. Va. 431, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goad-v-walker-wva-1914.