Harman v. Lambert

85 S.E. 660, 76 W. Va. 370, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 128
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 660 (Harman v. Lambert) 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
Harman v. Lambert, 85 S.E. 660, 76 W. Va. 370, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 128 (W. Va. 1915).

Opinion

Lynch, Judge:

Plaintiffs, some of whom are the heirs at law of David G. Sayers, their co-plaintiffs joining them because of the existing marital relation, brought this suit, praying cancellation of a deed made to defendants by the heirs of H. C. Auvil as a cloud on plaintiffs’ title to a tract of 51 acres of land in McDowell county, and for other relief later referred .to and discussed; and from a decree denying such relief and dismissing their bill, plaintiffs have appealed.

Sayers died intestate, seized and possessed of a tract of 3139 acres, embracing, according to plaintiffs’ contention, the 51 acres in controversy. He acquired exclusive title to the tract under a decree of partition entered July 5, 1889, in the chancery cause of William A. Whitley and others against Henry Harrison’s heirs and others, pursuant to the report of T. P. Brewster and A. J. Beavers, two of the commissioners appointed for the purpose by a decree entered at the preceding May term of the court having jurisdiction of the cause. On October 25, 1889, Sayers, out of lands other than the tract claimed by plaintiffs, conveyed to H. C. «Auvil 100 acres, which defendants claim embraces the lands in controversy, the title to which descend to their grantors as heirs at law of the grantee.

[372]*372The decree denying relief was predicated exclusively upon .plaintiffs’ failure to establish by proof the averment that they were in possession of the disputed area. Was the proof introduced for that purpose sufficient to give jurisdiction in equity to dissipate cloud on the legal title? That the 51 acres was embraced in the deed from the Anvil heirs to defendant Lambert, his deed to the defendant Litz and others, and their mining lease to the defendant Dry Pork Colliery Company, clearly appears from the testimony of the surveyors introduced by plaintiffs as witnesses in their behalf. Though the bill charges fraudulent inclusion of the disputed tract in these several grants, they evidently were intended to conform to the Sa.yers grant to Auvil and to embrace only the lands granted by that deed. There is an entire want of proof or anything showing any intention to the contrary. Plaintiffs did not offer any evidence tending to impeach the bona, fides of the parties to these conveyances.

Apparently acting upon the theory or belief that their title was free from taint and unassailable on any reasonable ground, defendants early in the year 1909 constructed a building on the 51 acres, and in it as their tenant placed one Joe Crigger to hold for them possession of the lands, then and perhaps still unenclosed. True, the building was hastily constructed and temporary in character, but not in these particulars different from many others in mountainous parts of many counties in this and other states. But, whatever its character and purpose, plaintiffs conceived, and in the nighttime carried into execution, the plan whereby they sought to effect a change in possession, by inducing defendant’s tenant to exchange residences with his cousin, Jim Crigger, plaintiffs’ tenant on adjoining lands, the purpose being to secure for themselves such possession as would confer jurisdiction to maintain this suit to cancel defendants’ deeds as clouds on their title. For, virtually without exception, the rule is that, unless some other special grounds for equitable intervention are averred, a holder of the legal title to real estate must, in order to maintain* a bill' to quiet title or remove cloud, be in possession of the land when the proceeding is instituted. Clearly, such is the requirement in this jurisdiction. Poling v. Poling, 61 W. Va. 78; Whitehouse v. Jones, 60 W. Va. [373]*373680; Logan v. Ward, 58 W. Va. 366; Mills v. Oil Co., 57 W. Va. 255; Sansom v. Blankenship, 53 W. Va. 411; Christian v. Vance, 41 W. Va. 734. Where the sole purpose sought is the dissipation of such cloud, not only must the hill aver, but when denied the proof must show, possession of the lands affected, at the date the proceeding is begun.

Such possession plaintiffs did not have when they brought this suit, if they fraudulently obtained that on which they now rely, unless the 51 acres are a part of the 3139 acres; because possession so procured will not avail as ground for the maintenance of a bill quia timet. As an essential jurisdictional fact, the possession necessary for such relief in equity must have been acquired in a legal manner. Campbell v. Davis, 85 Ala. 56; Hardin v. Jones, 86 Ill. 313; Trotter v. Slayton, 41 Ore. 117; Stark v. Storr, 6 Wall. 402; Goldsmith v. Gillelmd, 22 Fed. 865; Collier v. Carlisle, 133 Ala. 478. So that plaintiffs’ effort to put themselves in a position to say by their bill that they had possession of the lands in dispute cannot secure the endorsement or approval of á court of equity. Such endorsement would set at naught the provisions of §4, ch. 93, Code, saying: “The attornment of a tenant to any stranger shall be void, unless it be with the consent of the landlord of such tenant or pursuant to or in-consequence of the judgment, order or decree of a court”. Construing this section, we said, in effect, in Coal & Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co., 71 W. Va. 21, Voss v. King, 33 W. Va. 236, and Stover v. Davis, 57 W. Va. 196, among other cases, that the recognition of the title of another than the landlord who put him in possession, or attornment to such other, by the tenant of an adversary claimant, will not interrupt the continuity of the landlord’s possession except as provided by that section, unless with knowledge or notice the landlord acquiesces in the disloyal conduct of his tenant; or, as in Voss v. King, if a tenant takes a secret lease or conveyance from -another claiming to be the true owner, without the knowledge of his landlord, the character of his possession will not be altered. 32 Cyc. 1341.

But plaintiffs argue that as defendants were trespassers on the 51' acres, their acquisition of the possession was not wrongful, but legitimate and lawful, and therefore not an [374]*374infringement of the role invoked by defendants. The inherent vice of this argument is two-fold. Plaintiffs’ acquisition of the possession was, as we have seen, itself tortious,, and viola-tive of the prior possession of the defendants taken under color of title. It can not, therefore, enure to plaintiffs’ benefit. Kraus v. Congbon, 161 Fed. 18. Again, the argument assumes as true the very fact in issue in this case, namely, that the 51 acres was part of the 3139 acres, the title to which vested in them as the heirs of the prior owner.

Of the same character, and subject to the same criticism, is the further argument sought to be impressed upon us, that, as .plaintiffs were and continuously since the death of Sayers had been in possession of the 3139 acres, they were also in possession of the 51 acres, because the latter was a part of the Sayers tract. As observed, this contention assumes as true the subject matter of the whole controversy. If the fact be as so assumed, this litigation must terminate favorably to plaintiffs; for they have had possession of, and paid taxes on, the 3139 acres, and every part of it since the death of their ancestor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 660, 76 W. Va. 370, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harman-v-lambert-wva-1915.