Hansford v. Chesapeake Coal Co.

22 W. Va. 70, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 40
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 22 W. Va. 70 (Hansford v. Chesapeake Coal Co.) 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
Hansford v. Chesapeake Coal Co., 22 W. Va. 70, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 40 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

SNYDER, Judge:

The appellants complain of and assign as error the action [75]*75of the court iu dismissing their cross-bill and rejecting their bill oi review. They insist that under the authority of Benson v. Humphreys, 75 Va. 196, they were entitled to compensation for the excess of sixty-eight acres of land at the price of twenty dollars per acre.

Before proceeding to consider these alleged errors, it is necessary to refer to a preliminary question presented by the record, and that is, was this a proper case for a cross-bill or for relief between co-defendants ?

“A cross-bill should be confined to the matters stated in the original bill, and should not introduce new and-distinct matter not embraced therein; and, if it does so, no decree can be founded upon those matters, for as to them it is an original bill.” 2 Barb. Chy. Pr. 130; 14 W. Va. 678.

The province and only legitimate use of a cross-bill is to aid in the defence of the original suit, and the matter of it cannot be more extensive than the defence to the original bill. It may, perhaps, set up additional facts as constituting part ot the same defence relative to the same subject-matter. Biit it must relate exclusively to the subject-matter of the original bill and things connected therewith. Foreign matter cannot be introduced unless it has arisen after the filing of the original bill. 2 Bob. Pr. (old ed.) 313. “But where it departs entirely from the object of the bill and introduces new matter in nowise connected therewith and does not establish a good defence, then such cross-bill deserves no other answer than a demurrer.” May v. Armstrong, 3 J. J. Marsh. 261.

In Ruffner, Donally & Co. v. Hewitt, Kircheval & Co.,.it is stated that, “It is the settled law of this Court, that a decree between co-defendants can only be based upon the pleadings and proofs between the complainant and defendants; and that where a case is made out between defendants, by evidence arising from the pleadings and proofs between the complainant and defendants, a court of equity should render a decree between the co-defendants.” 14 W. Va. 741; Vance v. Evans, 11 Id. 342.

“Where the equities between the defendants do not arise out of the pleadings and proofs between the plaintiff and defendants, there can be no decree between co-defendants.” Blair v. Thompson, 11 Gratt. 441; 14 W. Ya. 741.

[76]*76There cannot be a decree betwen co-defendants where there is no decree in favor of the>plaintiff. Ould v. Myers, 23 Graft. 383.

In the case before us¿ it appears from what has been already stated that, so far as the transcript of the record filed in this Court discloses, the principle and evidently the sole purpose of the original bill was to enforce a vendor’s lien on land other than th e aforesaid four hundred acre survey in favor of the plaintiff against certain defendants other than the appellants and, as incidental to the relief' thus sought, a controversy arose in the .suit as to the true boundaries between the land subject to said lien and the said four hundred acre survey which had been sold and conveyed by appellants, by deed with general warranty, to their co-defendants, Andrew Johnson and others; that the subject-matter of that bill, so far as it concerned or sought relief against appellants, the plaintiffs in the cross-hill, and Johnson and others their vendors and the only defendants to the cross-bill against whom any relief is asked, related exclusively to the question of the boundary of said four hundred acre survey, and on this question the interests of the plaintiffs and the real defendants in the cross-bill were identical and in that regard there was no controversy between them, nor was there any other so far as the transcript discloses. It does, however, appear that the controversy as to said boundary was by a decree in the cause decided in favor of the defendants and the plaintiff in the original bill was denied any relief against either the appellants the plaintiffs in the cross-bill or Johnson and others the real defendants in the cross-bill. And it was only after that controversy had been determined by a decree in the cause that the appellants were in a position to allege that there was an excess of sixty-eight acres in the four hundred acre survey; for, if the plaintiff in the original suit had succeeded in establishing the division line claimed by him the excess would have been much less and, perhaps, there would have been instead of an excess, a 'deficiency in said survey. From these facts it follows of necessity that, under the authorities before stated, this was not a case in which a cross-hill could have been properly filed, nor in which there could be a decree between co-defendants — certainly not between the ap[77]*77pellants and tbcir co-defendants, Jobnson and others — and that the court should have sustained the demurrer to the appellant’s cross-bill. The said bill introduced new and distinct matter not embraced in the original bill. In fact, its whole object was to obtain relief upon facts and issues not in the remotest degree referred to or involved in'the original suit. Tt was an entire departure from the. purpose and scope of the original bill and in no manner constituted, nor was it intended to be, a defence to any part of said suit.

Nor was this a proper suit for relief between co-defendants; because no equities arose between them out of the pleadings and proofs between the plaintiff and defendants; and for the further reason that as against the appellants and their co-de-teimlants, Johnson and others, no relief whatever was granted the plaintiff, and consequently no equities could -have arisen between them and no decree could be entered inter sese against or in favor of either. It seems to me, therefore, that the court did not err in dismissing the appellant’s, cross-bill.

But, as it is barely possible though not at all probable, that, owing to the unsatisfactory and fragmentary condition of the record as exhibited iby the transcript before us, we may not have apprehended the ease as it was presented by the whole record in the court below, it may be proper and more satisfactory not to rest our decision upon this ground. Conceding then that the cause was one proper fora cross-bill, or that the one filed as such may be treated as an original bill, were the appellants, upon the case made by them in their pleadings and proofs, entitled to relief?

The decisions of Virginia and of this State as well as many-others, relative to the principles upon which relief will be granted or denied by a court of equity in cases of deficiency or excess of quantity in contracts for the sale of lands, are ably reviewed in the exhaustive opinion of this Court delivered by Judge Green in Crislip v. Cain, 19 W. Va. 438, and the principles deduced from said decisions carefully stated. These principles are now properly regarded as the 'settled law of this State on the subject, and such parts thereof as apply to the case at bar may be concisely stated as follows:

1. 'Where a vendor by his deed, for an entire sum, conveys a tract of land by metes and bounds, stating therein the [78]*78quantity at a definite number of acres, this on its face is a sale not by the acre, but in gross and -prima facie without any implied warranty of the quantify. Anderson v. Snyder, 21 W. Va. 632.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
22 W. Va. 70, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansford-v-chesapeake-coal-co-wva-1883.