Irvin v. Stover

67 S.E. 1119, 67 W. Va. 356
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 1119 (Irvin v. Stover) 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
Irvin v. Stover, 67 S.E. 1119, 67 W. Va. 356 (W. Va. 1910).

Opinion

WiliiaMS, Judge :

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Raleigh county rendered on the 14th day of December, 1905, upon a bill for the partition of a tract of 100 acres of land. A short statement of the facts is necessary to a correct understanding of the questions of law presented.

On the 11th of February, 1867, Lewis Stover and wife granted to their son Tollison Stover and Martha Jane his wife 100 acres of.land which is the same sought to be partitioned. This grant contains the following clause, viz: “The said parties of the first, part doth grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said Tollison Stover and Martha Jane his wife to be held by them as a homestead for themselves, and after them to their heirs, One Hundred Acres of land.”

On the same day Lewis Stover made -four several conveyances to four of his other children for other portions of his land, apparently thereby conveying all his land, about 614 acres, to his children. At the date of these conveyances Lewis Stover was indebted to one R. P. Toney who brought a suit in chancery attacking these conveyances on the ground of fraud and such proceeding was had in that suit that on the 26th of April, 1870, a decree was rendered holding said deeds to be fraudulent as to the plaintiff and setting them aside “so far as may be necessary for the payment of his (R. P. Toney’s) claims herein decreed and recognized.” The decree further provided for a sale of the land in the event the debt was not paid within thirty days from the date of the decree, and appointed John W. Mc-Creery and Isaac S. Samuels commissioners to make sale of the land, and authorized either one of them to act. John W. Mc-Creery qualified as such commissioner by giving bond, but so far as appears from the record there was never any sale of the land under this decree, and on the 29th of July, 1870, an order [359]*359was entered dismissing said cause on tbe motion of the complainant.

Tollison Stover, his wife, and his father Lewis Stover and wife, by deed dated July 20, 1870, granted the aforesaid 100 acres of land to Burwell Stover, and covenanted to warrant generally the title. Shortly after the execution of this deed Burwell Stover entered into possession of the land and he, and those claiming under him, have been in possession ever since. Burwell Stover made a will devising the land in severalty to his two sons, Andrew and Burdine, and died in 1897. Andrew Stover, one of the devisees, died before his father, and left to survive him eight children, viz: Samuel, Sarah, Iiarvey, Martha, Josie, Laura, Princess and Eliza. Sarah died, after her father, without issue.

Martha Jane, wife of Tollison Stover, died July 28, 1878, leaving seven children, three of whom died shortly after their mother’s death, unmarried and without issue. In the year 1879 Tollison Stover intermarried with one Deborah Kidd by whom he had six children, three of whom died before their father, unmarried and 'without issue. Tollison Stover died December 4, 1900, leaving to survive him four children by his wife Martha Jane, and two children by his wife Deborah, and one grandchild, Lessie Bailey, the child of a deceased daughter by the second wife. It is thus seen that Martha Jane Stover left seven children to survive her, and that Tollison Stover left six children and one grandchild to survive him, as their respective heirs at law, but that four of Tollison’s children were by his first wife, and two and a grandchild by his second wife. The children of Tollison Stover, and his grandchild, are asking partition of the land against Burdine Stover and the heirs of Andrew Stover ■who claim the whole.

One question is, what affect had this decree upon the title which passed by the deed of Lewis Stover and wife to Tollison Stover and Martha Jane, his wife? We can not see that it had any. The decree did not set aside the deed in toto; the court could not thus avoid the deed. It was good between the parties, and void only so far as it stood in the way of Toney’s collecting his debt. Love v. Tinsley, 32 W. Va. 25. The record shows that Toney’s debt was paid by Burwell Stover. Toney testifies that Burwell Stover bought the land from the “old man Stover,” [360]*360who, we suppose, is Lewis Stover. He further states that Tolli-son and the old man “swapped land” in order that the old man might get the land in question to sell to pay the debt. It clearly appears that Burwell Stover took whatever title he got, directly from Lewis and Tollison Stover; he took none from the court.. He apparently bought the land privately from the original owner, pending the suit, and paid off the debt sought to be enforced by the suit. Consequently, there being no assignment of the decree- by Toney to Burwell Stover, the decree became inoperative for any purpose; it was satisfied, and the, title remained where it was before the suit was brought. The suit was dismissed on Toney’s motion in July, 1870, forty years ago. Lewis Stover, Tollison Stover and Burwell Stover'are now all dead and nothing remains to explain what agreement, if any, they had concerning the payment of the debt, the record is all we have to enlighten us, and it is silent on the question of the value of the land. Toney’s debt was only $113.39, and all of the conveyances which Lewis Stover had. previously made to his five children severally, conveying away 614 acres Of land, were likewise set aside by the same decree. May not all of these grantees have contributed to the payment of this debt in order to avoid a sale of their land? We do not know. Toney testified that Lewis Stover and Tollison Stover “swapped land” in order that Lewis might get this land to pay the debt. May not this arrangement have amounted to Tollison’s paying the debt himself' indirectly? We do not know, but if he did-so pay the debt, or if it 'was paid in any other way than by taking the proceeds of the very land itself, there is clearly- nd equity that will defeat the title of those who took an estate in remainder, by purchase,’ under the Lewis Stover deed of February. 11, 1867. Consequently, the suit of Toney v. Lewis Stover and others, having been dismissed before any sale of the land under the decree, it can have no effect upon the title to the land; it is as if the suit had never -been brought.

In order to ascertain who is now entitled of the land, it is first necessary to construe the deed from Lewis Stover and wife to Tollison Stover and Martha Jane his wife, wheréin the following language is used, viz: “to be held by them as a homestead for themselves, and after them to their heirs.” Do not these words limit the estate to Tollison and Martha Jane for life [361]*361only ? If these words are to have any meaning at .all they clearly have this effect. Without these words the deed would have operated to carry a fee, under the statute providing that the greatest estate the grantor has shall pass, unless it appear that a less estate was intended to be conveyed. Section 8 chapter 71, Code 1906. We think these words operate to invest Tolli-son and Martha .Jane Stover with a life estate by entireties. By the use of the word homestead it was not the intention of the grantor to create a technical homestead, but only to indicate the purpose for which the land was to be used; that is, as a place of abode; and by the words, “and after them to their heirs,” he must have meant after their death to their heirs. In the case of Arrants v. Chumley, — Tenn. -, (48 S. W. 342), the supreme court of Tennessee held that the use of the word homestead

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67 S.E. 1119, 67 W. Va. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvin-v-stover-wva-1910.