Hunt v. Mounts

133 S.E. 323, 101 W. Va. 205, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 165
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1926
DocketNo. 5372.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 323 (Hunt v. Mounts) 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
Hunt v. Mounts, 133 S.E. 323, 101 W. Va. 205, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 165 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

This is an action of ejectment involving a tract of about 18 acres of land situate in Mingo county. Upon the trial thereof, after the plaintiffs had rested their case, the defendants interposed a demurrer to the plaintiffs’ evidence. On the conditional verdict of the jury the court found the law to be for the defendants and dismissed the case. The plaintiffs complain of this judgment.

The evidence on a demurrer should be interpreted most benignly in favor of the demurree, so that he may have all the benefit which might have resulted from the decision of the case by a jury, the proper forum, from which the decision has been withdrawn by the demurrant. Garrett v. Ramsey, 26 W. Va. 345. In such case the proper test is whether the evidence will sustain a verdict for the party as to whose evidence the demurrer is entered, if one was returned by the jury and there was a motion to set it aside. If a verdict against the demurrant could not properly be set aside, there should be a *207 judgment against Rim. Dempsey v. N. & W. Railway Co., 69 W. Va. 271. Keeping' in view these principles Rave tRe plaintiffs established all the essential requisites necessary to make out a prima facie case in this action?

The following is a resume of .the evidence: (1) TRe title under which the plaintiffs and defendants claim said property came from a common source — Jackson K. Mounts and Ales L. Mounts, sons of James Mounts, who was once the owner of said property and owned it at the time of his death. (2) In the year 1904 Amanda'Mounts purchased of Jackson K. Mounts and Alex L. Mounts the tract or parcel of land in dispute, and each of them executed to her a title bond for their interest in said, property. And in pursuance of said contracts and title bonds, she and. her husband, Charles Mounts, paid the taxes on said land from the year 1904 to the year 1917, inclusive, and at said time, to-wit, 1904, the said Amanda Mounts took actual, physical, notorious and adverse possession of said property, and she and her successors remained in actual and continuous possession thereof until the latter part of the year 1917, at which time the defendant, Emma Mounts, leased said property to her co-defendant, the Brady-Thacker Coal Company. (3) In the year 1918, the defendant, Emma Mounts, obtained a deed of conveyance for said property from Jackson K. Mounts and placed the same on record. Very soon after the recording of said deed Amanda Mounts instituted a suit in chancery against Jackson K. Mounts and Emma Mounts, asking for a specific execution of the contract so far as Jackson Mounts was concerned, and that Emma Mounts show by what right or title she had obtained the deed for said property. Summons was duly issued and served upon the defendants, Jackson K. Mounts and Emma Mounts, and they failed to appear, and a decree was taken in said cause directing the said Jackson Mounts to execute a deed to the said property to Amanda Mounts, and if he did not, that a special commissioner be, and was, appointed for the purpose. And in pursuance of the authority vested in said special commissioner, a deed was executed by him to the said Amanda Mounts, delivered to her, and duly admitted to record. (4) Very soon after the said property was leased by *208 Emma Mounts to the Brady-Thacker Coal Company, this ejectment suit was instituted by Florence Hunt and others, the children and heirs at law of said Amanda Mounts, then deceased, against Emma Mounts and the Brady-Thacker Coal Company, who was then in possession of said property; and before the ejectment suit was decided; a chancery proceeding was instituted by Emma Mounts against Florence Hunt and others for the purpose of removing the deed that had been executed by the special commissioner to Amanda Mounts as a cloud upon her title. An original and two supplemental bills were filed in said suit by Emma Mounts, to which bills answers were filed by Florence Hunt and by the guardian ad litem representing the infant defendants, who were children of Amanda Mounts, deceased, depositions taken and the cause was finally decided, denying the plaintiff, Emma Mounts, the relief prayed for in her bills, dismissing the suit, and rendering judgment against her for costs. (5) After said suit was dismissed, the plaintiff, Florence Hunt, and others, proceeded with this ejectment suit. The bills, decrees, orders and answers that were filed and entered in the two chancery suits were filed as evidence by the plaintiffs in this suit. Parol evidence was taken therein showing acts of possession, to the effect aforesaid.

The separate contracts (title bonds) that were made by Jackson K. Mounts and Alex L. Mounts with Amanda Mounts, though not recorded — not being recordable instruments — • were evidence of title, under the statute of limitations as to hostile claimants, and the possession under the same was notice to the defendant Emma Mounts, sufficient to put her upon inquiry as to the title under which Amanda Mounts was holding said property. McNeely v. Oil Company, 52 W. Va. 618; Weekly v. Hardesty, 48 W. Va. 40; Ellison v. Torpin, 44 W. Va. 436; Camphell v. Fetterman’s Heirs, 20 W. Va. 399; Mining & Mfg. Co. v. Peytona, etc. Co., 8 W. Va. 409; French v. Loyal Company 5 Leigh 236. The chancery suit in which Amanda Mounts sought to enforce the specific execution of the contract against Jackson Mounts (to which suit Emma Mounts was a defendant) was likewise notice to Emma Mounts of the contracts under which Amanda Mounts *209 claimed, if in fact the decree therein did not estop her from making further claim to the property. Sayre v. Harpold, 33 W. Va. 553; Rogers v. Rogers, 37 W. Va. 407; Bank v. Hays, 37 W. Va. 475. Under the foregoing authorities, the doctrine of estoppel and res judicata, as affecting the rights of Emma Mounts, apply also to the final adjudication adverse to her in the other chancery suit in 1917, in which she sought to cancel the deed of the special commissioner as a cloud upon her title. Thus, it is plain that a prima facie case was made in favor of the title of Amanda Mounts and her successors thereto.

We are now met with the question whether under the pleadings a proper judgment may be entered. The action is brought by Florence Hunt and Fielding Hunt in their own right, and Fielding Hunt, guardian for Jackson Mounts, Oceania Mounts, Homer Mounts and Della Mounts, infants under the age of twenty-one years of age, who was duly appointed, qualified and gave bond as such guardian. It was urged that this was an improper joinder of parties. Florence Hunt and Fielding Hunt own a three-eighths undivided interest in said property, and the remaining five-eighths interest is owned by the infant plaintiffs. This .defense on the pleading was not advanced, either on demurrer or plea in abatement. In Virginia a misjoinder of parties cannot be taken advantage of by demurrer. The remedy provided by statute is to move the court to abate the suit or action as to the party improperly joined. Carlton v. Boudar,

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 323, 101 W. Va. 205, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-mounts-wva-1926.