High's Heirs v. Pancake

26 S.E. 536, 42 W. Va. 602, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 122
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 26 S.E. 536 (High's Heirs v. Pancake) 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
High's Heirs v. Pancake, 26 S.E. 536, 42 W. Va. 602, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 122 (W. Va. 1896).

Opinion

Brannon, Judge:

Harriet Higb and others instituted an action of trespass quare clausum fregit against Joseph A. Pancake to recover damages for cutting timber and taking tan bark from a tract of land claimed by plaintiffs; and the court having excluded the plaintiffs’ evidence as insufficient to support the action, the plaintiffs obtained this writ of error.

Hnder the pleadings, it fell upon the plaintiffs to show their title to the land. They claim as the fountain of their title a patent from the state of Yirginia, in 1801, to Hugh Holmes, for three thousand and five hundred and fifty acres on South Branch Mountain, in Hampshire county; but they have not connected themselves with it. Nothing passing title from Holmes to anybody is shown. The burden was on the plaintiffs to show the defendant a trespasser, and, until such showing, he was called on to show nothing.

We are asked to assume that this land passed in some way from Holmes to David Parsons and JamesDailey, and was divided between Parsons’ and Dailey’s heirs, because we are shown a decree dividing it in 1847 between them; and we are asked to find from it that said land patented to Holmes vested in Parsons and Dailey, on a theory that, as a prerequisite to partition, the coui’t must have found such title to be in them, as equity will only decree partition when the title is clear. This doctrine applies as to those [604]*604asking partition. But, when there is no controversy as to title between parties to the partition, the court does not trace the title ab ovo, but treats it as a coneessum. We could not give this record the force of showing title as against Pancake, a stranger to it. Preem. Coten. § 629. And, if we could give the decree such effect, the trouble arises that we can not say even then that it divided this land, for it divides “the lands in the bill mentioned and described,” without further description, and the bill is not in evidence. We can not identify the land as the Holmes land. It does not prove that it was the Holmes land that was divided. That would be a mere guess or assumption. It is said that this partition gave Hailey’s heirs half the Holmes tract, and that then this half was sold under decree in a case of Ent-ler’s executors against Hailey’s administrators, for the debts of Parsons, and purchased by Angus W. McHonald; but this decree sold “a moiety of three thousand and four hundred and fourteen acres of mountain land in the county of Hampshire, belonging to the heirs of James Hailey,” a description utterly indefinite, and not agreeing in amount with the Holmes tract. We are without anything but the decree in this second case. No deed to McHonald from the court appears. He made a deed to Henry M. High for his interest in “a tract of land situated in the county of Hampshire, being the same and all the land conveyed to the said Angus W. McHonald by Reuben Havis, Sheriff, by deed of bargain and sale, being dated the 10th day of July, 1848,” giving no other description. Reuben Havis is the sheriff who sold under the decree; and, while the McHonald deed recites a deed from the sheriff to McHonald, none is shown. This recital would not prove its existence against a stranger, as recitals in deeds do not bind strangers. Section 5, McDodrill v. Lumber Co., 40 W. Va. 565 (21 S. E. 878). And .it recites a deed made 10th July, 1848, whereas the sale was not confirmed and a deed directed until 20th September, 1852; so that unless we merely guess a mistake in reciting the date of the deed, if we could say there was one, it must be a deed for other land, for the court would not order the sheriff in September, 1852, to convey land already conveyed in 1848. It does not appear that the sheriff' sold [605]*605McDonald any part of the Holmes tract, or that McDonald conveyed any part of it to High, under whom the plaintiffs claim. We are not told what land he sold. The pretensions of the plaintiffs that they thus derived the Holmes land may be true; but it is mere suggestion or claim, not sustained by evidence. Papers to show this claim are absent, it is said, because they were destroyed in the loss or destruction of the records of the Yirginia general court and of the circuit court of Hampshire county in the late Civil War. So, it is clear that the plaintiffs have not shown paper title.

Then, did High, the ancestor of the plaintiffs, get title by possession? What has been said would negative this claim, as he had no written title to make color of title. If he had such adverse possession as to give title by possession, he had nothing to give its extent beyond actual inclosure. But had he possession of a single acre or foot of such character as in law would confer title to what was so in possession? He had not. There was an “improvement” of a few acres of cleared land within the boundary of the large tract of about nine hundred acres of wild, unimproved land claimed by plaintiffs, and about one mile from the land in controversy, where the alleged trespass occurred, made about forty five years ago by Jacob Shockey. Under what title or how Shockey claimed does not appear. It seems to have been abandoned before the war, and Henry M. High, some years before the war, put Jesse Spurlock on it, and took some apples from it, and drove hogs upon it to eat the mast. How long Spurlock remained on it does not appear, but it in no wise appears that such possession continues. And this is all shown to support title acquired by possession. Possession with claim of title must be open, notorious, and continuous. Mere claim of ownership without the requisite possession will not do. The acts of High do not constitute such open, actual, notorious, and continuous possession as gives title even to that small improvement; and, if it would give title to that, it would be limited to it, as he had no paper to constitute color of title, and define boundary, so as to extend his possession beyond the improved land. Jarrett v. Stevens, 36 W. Va. 445, 451 [606]*606(15 S. E. 177); Swann v. Young, 36 W. Va. 57 (14 S. E. 426); Oney v. Clendennin, 28 W. Va. 35.

The plaintiffs did not show a paper title, so as to give them that constructive actual possession which would enable them to maintain the action of ti’espass; nor were they in actual physical possession, constituting, as an element of title, prima fade evidence of title, so as to maintain that action. Wilson v. Phenix Co. 40 W. Va. 413 (21 S. E. 1035). Therefore evidence of a trespass would not have been admissible, but none was offered.

There was not a bit of evidence to show that the defendant entered upon the close of the plaintiffs. This would alone warrant the exclusion of the plaintiffs’ evidence.

Exception was taken to the rejection of certain evidence tendered by the plaintiffs. The plaintiff proposed to ask a witness, Whiteman, who said he had often been on the land claimed by plaintiffs with Henry M. High, what High told him when on the land about its boundaries, whom it adjoined and what he said about its ownership or claim to the land, and whether he ever pointed out the lines or boundaries and how he claimed it, from whom he bought it, and whether he had any paper title to it. High was dead.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.E. 536, 42 W. Va. 602, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highs-heirs-v-pancake-wva-1896.