Gwynn v. Schwartz

9 S.E. 880, 32 W. Va. 487, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 96
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 880 (Gwynn v. Schwartz) 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
Gwynn v. Schwartz, 9 S.E. 880, 32 W. Va. 487, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 96 (W. Va. 1889).

Opinion

Green, Judge :

The only question in this case is whether the court below [494]*494in its judgment rendered on February 20,1886, erred in setting aside the verdict of the jury in favor of the defendant as contrary to the law and the evidence, and in awardinganew trial. A writ of error may be granted to such judgment, without reference to the final judgment in the case, and even without waiting for the new trial to be had. See Code 1887, c. 135, § 1, par. 9. A bill of exceptions was taken by the defendant to this action of the court, and in it the court certified all the evidence. The only question in controversy before the jury was the true location of the division-line between a tract of land owned by the plaintiff and a tract owned by the defendant, the plaintiff complaining, that the defendant had encroached on his tract of land by taking possession of about twenty acres, which he insisted, if the division-line between them was correctly located, was a part of his tract. The question in controversy was therefore much more a question of fact than of law. It has always been regarded in Virginia and in this state as a delicate matter for a court to interfere with the verdict of a jury on a question of fact. The jury is the judge of the weight and credit to be attached to the evidence; and it is only in cases of manifest abuse or plain departure from right and justice, that the court can interfere with the finding of a jury in such matters by granting a new trial. See Ross v. Gill, 1 Wash. (Va.) 88; Mcowell’s Ex’r v. Crawford, 11 Gratt. 377; State v. Hurst, 11 W. Va. 75; State v. Thompson, 21 W. Va. 756; Black v. Thomas, Id. 712; Blosser v. Harshbarger, 21 Gratt. 216; Grayson’s Case, 6 Gratt. 712; Sheff v. City of Huntington, 16 W. Va. 307.

These cases show that the verdict of the jury ought not to be interferred with, and a new trial awarded, when the evidence is contradictory, and when most favorably considered in support of the.verdict of the jury it does not appear, that the verdict was plainly not warranted by the facts proven. I have stated • however the facts in this case, as shown by the record. Does it plainly appear from these facts proven, that the verdict of the jury in favor of the defendant was unwarranted by these facts ?

The jury in finding a verdict for the defendant must have regarded it as a fair inference from the facts proven that, [495]*495the line run. and marked by Rollins in 1870 was the division-line between the tracts of the plaintiff and the defendant. If this were an inference which can be drawn from the facts proven, then the verdict of the jury could not be properly set aside by this court. The counsel' for the plaintff claims, that this Rollins line already run and marked as the division-line between these two tracts could not have been the true division-line because the true divison-line according to the deeds was a line running east and west, ¿nd parallel with the base line, but the line run by Rollins 1870 varied from a parallel with the base line by 2 deg., 15 min., which in the length of the division-line would make a-variation of fourteen poles. Then, again, this division-line as run by Rollins would make the width of the defendant’s tract 109 poles instead of 106 poles, as called for by the deeds. The land contained in the defendant’s tract, if this Rollins division-line be regarded as- the true line, would be 250 acres instead of about 200 called for in the deeds, and lost by this Rollins line, which though well marked is far from a straight line, as called for by the deeds; on the contrary some of the marked trees along this Rollins line are nearly twenty yards from where they would be, if the line had been; run straight; and, lastly, this Rollins division-line was not run by Daniel C. Sayre, when on August 8, 1856, he conveyed to his grandchildren, under whom the parties to this suit claim, these two tracts of land, but some fourteen years after these two deeds were made, and it was then aline run at the instance of a party, under whom defendant claims. This is true; bpt it was proven, that, before these two’ deeds, under which the plaintiff and defendant respectively' claim,- made August, 8, 1856, the common grantor, Daniel C. Sayre, had actually marked several trees on this division-line, as afterwards run by Rollins, as trees, which should be on the division-line between the two .tracts he was going to convey to his grand-chrildreu ; and, when Rollins years afterwards ran this division-line, he was guided in running, it by a plat of these two tracts furnished by Daniel O. Sayre, the . common grantor of each of them originally, on which plat these trees were marked along the division-line between the two. [496]*496tracts; and, this being the ease, the jury might have regarded the division-line as in part run prior to the making of the two deeds by Daniel C. Sayre in 1856, and not altogether by Rollins in 1870 for the fifst time.

We will now consider the objections, which are urged by the plaintiff’s counsel against this line as run by Rollins being regarded as the division-line between the tracts of the plaintiff'and of the defendant; and first as to the departure of this line in course and distance from the division-line as called for by the deeds. The variation in course is 2 deg., 15 min., and the Rollins line exceeds in the length the division called for in the deeds not less than fifty three poles. In the description of lands or question of boundaries the'rule is settled in Virginia and in this State, that natural lines and reputed boundaries will control mere courses and mere courses and distances or mistaken description in surveys and conveyances. See Dogan v. Seekright, 4 Hen. & M. 125; Coles v. Wooding, 2 Pat. & H. 189; Baker v. Seekright, 1 Hen. & M. 177; Smith v. Davis, 4 Gratt. 50; Adams v. Alkire, 20 W. Va. 486. See, also, Cherry v. Slade’s Adm’r, 8 Murph. 82.

If then this Rollins division-line be proven to be the marked division-line between the tracts of the plaintiff and defendant, it must be held to be the true line though it differs in its courses and distances from the division-line called for in the deeds. It is a crooked line, portions -of it being nearly twenty yards from where it would be if’it were a straight line between its extremities. See Cowen v. Fauntleroy, 2 Bibb 261.

We have less difficulty in disregarding to a considerable extent the courses aud distances of this division-line as named in the deed, because it is apparent, that, as stated in the deed, the distance as well as the course was to a considerable extent a surmise and can not be relied upon. Thus in the deed from Daniel C. Sayre to David Vanmetre dated August 8, 1856, the length of this division-line is stated to be 300 poles; but in a deed of the same date from Daniel O. Sayre to Joshua McCullough, under which the defendant claims, this division by all the deeds is the middle of Little Mill creek, and the other terminus is the closing line of the 7,000 acre tract. How the survey made in this case under the order of [497]

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 880, 32 W. Va. 487, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gwynn-v-schwartz-wva-1889.