Hitchcox v. Hitchcox

20 S.E. 595, 39 W. Va. 607, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 94
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 595 (Hitchcox v. Hitchcox) 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
Hitchcox v. Hitchcox, 20 S.E. 595, 39 W. Va. 607, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 94 (W. Va. 1894).

Opinion

ENGLISH, Judge :

This was a suit in equity, brought in the Circuit Court of Ritchie county, returnable to September rules, 1887, by Victor V. Hitchcox, a minor child, who sued, by his next friend, Ellen A. Hitchcox, against Columbia V. Hitchcox, widow of M. M. Hitchcox, deceased, and others. The plaintiff, in her bill, asserts, that the heirs at law of M. M. Hitchcox, deceased, are entitled to the undivided one fourth of a tract of laud situated in said county of Ritchie, containing really two hundred and eighty two acres, but which is described in a patent issued by the commonwealth of Virginia about the 1st of September, 1851, to "William Hitchcox, the grandfather of the infant plaintiff, as containing two hundred and ninety three acres, situated on the Northwestern turnpike and Husher’s run in said county of Ritchie, in which patent the motes and bounds of said tract are given.

Plaintiff further alleges, that said William Hitchcox died seised in fee simple of said land, and that by his will he gave said land to his widow for her lifetime and after her death to his heirs, but to said widow absolutely with power to dispose of the same and convert it to her use during her lifetime, if she saw fit, his said heirs having no right or interest therein while she lived, and only a reversion therein, in case she did not use or.dispose of the same; — that said widow died about the year 1877, and at her death said land became the property of the heirs-at-law of the said M. M. Hitchcox; — that said M. M. Hitchcox died before his mother, the widow aforesaid, and at the death of the said widow said land became the property of the following persons to .wit: William L. Hitch-cox, Nelson K. Ilitchcox, Waldo P. Hitchcox, all of whom were sons of said William Hitchcox, deceased, in the proportion of one fourth each, and the other undivided fourth part became the property of Clay B. Hitchcox, Montrose M. Hitchcox, Columbia V. Hitchcox, Calvert L. Hitchcox, Earnest L. Hitchcox, Phoebe P. Hitchcox and Ellen A. Hitchcox, the children and heirs-át-Iaw of M. M. Hitchcox, deceased, who was the other child of William Hitchcox, deceased.

[609]*609The plaintiff further alleges, that at the death of their grandmother, the widow of said William Hitchcox, deceased, he and his brothers and sisters aforesaid became jointly the owners in fee simple of said undivided fourth interest in and to said tract of two hundred and ninety three acres of land, and their mother, Columbia V. Hitchcox, who is still living and is the widow of said M. M. Hitchcox, has a dower-interests in their said one fourth interest in said land, and he is the owner in fee simple of one undivided eighth of one fourth part of said land, or one thirty second part thereof.

The plaintiff further alleges, that he and his said brothers and sisters had a right to have their one fourth interest in said land set off’to them in one parcel, and that if said one fourth part so set oft should he incapable of proper and judicious partition into eight parts, he had a right to have said fourth part sold, and the proceeds divided so that his one eighth part thereof can be paid to him; that the said Waldo P. Hitchcox had sold his interest in said land to Jacob S. Pratt; — that Nelson K. ITitchcox’s interest in said land had been sold under some sort of judicial proceedings, and that said interest was now owned by J. P. Strickler;— that W. L. Hitchcox had sold his interest, and that the same had been transferred through several hands, and was now owned hv J. 33. and L. E. Pratt; hut that plaintiff knew nothing as to the title or claims of said Jacob S. Pratt, J. P. Strickler, and J. B. and L. E. Pratt, or as to what interest they might own, or what the nature of their several claims was; — that the said Uelson K. Hitchcox urns still in possession of a part of said land, and the said Jacob S. Pratt was in possession of another part thereof, and the said J. B. and L. E.Pratt were in possession of another part thereof; but that William L. Hitchcox and Waldo P. Hitchcox no longer claim any interest in said land, and that the widow of M. M. Hitchcox is entitled to have her dower set apart to her in the one fourth to which the heirs at-law of M. M. Hitchcox were entitled, or to have the same sold, and to receive a gross sum in lieu thereof; — that John M. and William L. Morrison are in possession of another portion of said land, and that they are asserting some claim to [610]*610or interest therein, and plaintiff alleged that they had no right, title, or interest whatsoever in said land, or any part thereof; — that on the 22d day of October, 1888, there was placed on record in the office of the clerk of the County Court of Ritchie county what purports to be a deed from R. S. Blair, special commissioner, to one A. S. Core, purporting to convey an undivided interest in said land; but the plaintiff' alleged that no sale of said land, or any interest therein, was over made by said R. S. Blair, special commissioner, or otherwise, and that neither said land nor any interest therein was ever embraced or contemplated, in the legal proceedings mentioned in said pretended deed; — that said A. S. Core had been long dead before said pretended deed was recorded, and plaintiff alleged that no such deed was ever made or delivered to said A. 8. Core in his lifetime and plaintiff charges that said A. S. Core never had any sort of right, title, or interest in or to said land whatsoever; — that plaintiff’s father, M. M. Iiitchcox, never conveyed any interest therein, nor was any interest of his ever sold or conveyed by any legal proceedings, so that said Core never could have had any interest therein ; and, if said John M. and William L. Morrison have any claim or color of title whatsoever-for said land, it must be under said Core, and said Core never had any valid title and never claimed to have, nor has there been any such claim or color of title, or any paper purporting to convey any title or interest in said laud, on record, except the said deed recorded in October, 1888. And plaintiff further alleged that said pretended deed, or any pretended conveyance made in pursuance thereof, is wholly illegal, null and void and conveys no title or interest whatever in said land; and that the said pretended deed from R. S. Blair, special commissioner, to A. S. Core, and any deeds or conveyances made under the same, are simply clouds upon the title to said land, and that ho has a right to come into a court of equity to have the same removed.

The plaintiff' prayed that the said John M. Morrison and "William L. Morrison might be required to disclose and show by what right or authority they are asserting possession to any part or interest in the said tract of land, and [611]*611wbat character of title they claim to. any interest therein; —that the said pretended deed from II. S. Blair, special commissioner, to A. S. Core, and any deed of conveyance made by said Core in pursuance thereof, may be declared null and void, and of no effect to create any title in said Morrisons or otherwise in said land; and, further, that a-partition of said tract of two hundred and ninety three acres of land might be made, setting off and assigning to Waldo P. Iiitcheox or his assignees one fourth, to Nelson K. Iiitcheox or his assignees -one fourth, to William L. Iiitcheox or his assignees one fourth, and to the plaintiff and his said brothers and sisters, the children of M. M. Iiitcheox, deceased, one fourth; and that out of the one fourth interest so to he assigned to the heirs of M. M. Iiitcheox, deceased, dower may be assigned to the said Columbia V. Iiitcheox, -widow of M. M.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 595, 39 W. Va. 607, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hitchcox-v-hitchcox-wva-1894.