Jackson v. Cook

76 S.E. 443, 71 W. Va. 210, 1912 W. Va. LEXIS 138
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 443 (Jackson v. Cook) 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
Jackson v. Cook, 76 S.E. 443, 71 W. Va. 210, 1912 W. Va. LEXIS 138 (W. Va. 1912).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

The land involved is a tract of about thirty-three acres in "Wyoming County. The rights of the parties thereto, to be adjudicated on this appeal by plaintiff, are presented by the original bill, and the answer ■ and cross-answer of Martha J. Belcher thereto.

The plaintiff claims to be owner by purchase and deed of the equitable title to the undivided interests of the heirs of Joseph Belcher, deceased, by his first wife, in said land. He alleges that from April 1, 1893, to September 19, 1903, the legal title to this land was vested in defendant R. Wade Cook, as trustee for Joseph Belcher; and that Joseph Belcher died seized and possessed of the equitable title thereto, September 2, 1903; that on September 19, 1903, by her procurement, the legal title was wrongfully and without authority of law or of the said Joseph Belcher or his heirs, conveyed by said Cook, trustee, to the defendant, Martha J. Belcher, widow. It is further alleged, in substance, that when Joseph Belcher bargained for and purchased the land from Daniel L. Perdew, about the year 1889, the legal title thereto was then outstanding in the Little Ka-nawha Lumber Company; that in the year 1893, by direction of Joseph Belcher, and payment by him of the balance of the purchase money due Perdew, and with the latter’s consent, the legal title was conveyed by the Lumber Company to Cook, in trust, and as security to Cook for money borrowed by Belcher [212]*212to pay Perdew. It is also alleged that Belcher, before his death, had discharged the loan from Cook, trustee, and was then entitled to a deed according to the terms of the trust, and that plaintiff as grantee of the heirs of Belcher by his first wife was entitled to a deed from the defendant, Martha J. Belcher, as trustee holding the legal title, for their interest in said land, subject to her dower therein, and such was the plaintiffs prayer for relief.

The defendants, R. Wade Cook and wife, and J. B. Belcher and wife, immediate grantors of plaintiff, answered admitting the allegations of the bill. The defendant Martha J. Belcher demurred and answered, and in her answer also set up alleged grounds for affirmative relief, and upon which she prayed that the claim and deeds of the plaintiff be removed as clouds upon, her title.

To this answer and cross-answer plaintiff demurred and answered, and replied specially to the affirmative matter, denying therein the material facts alleged by respondent as constituting her claim for affirmative relief against him. ■

The decree appealed from denied plaintiff relief, and, upon the cross-answer of Martha J. Belcher, cancelled, recinded, annulled and set aside as clouds upon her title the deeds of the-plaintiff from the heirs of Joseph Belcher.

Defendants’ demurrer to the bill was overruled, and the first question presented is, Is the bill good on demurrer? The demurrer was a general one, assigning no grounds, except that it. was not good in law. The argument here on behalf of the de-murrant is, first, that a bill to quiet title must contain a correct, description of the land in controversy. But the bill is 'not a bill to quiet title but to get in the outstanding legal title. Of' course such a bill ought to identify the land by description or with reference to exhibits. This bill does that. One of the-exhibits actually filed — the deed from the Little Kanawha Lumber Company to Cook- — does contain a correct description of the-land. The mediate and immediate deeds to the plaintiff are proffered as exhibits, and though not actually filed, are offered' to be filed on request of any party in interest. If material to the defense they could have been called for on demurrer and no-doubt they would have been filed. Their absence, without re[213]*213quest for production, where the land was sufficiently described in the exhibit filed, would not render the bill bad on demurrer.

Another ground of demurrer, on the theory of a bill to quiet title, is that there is no allegation of possession by the plaintiff. But as we have said the bill is not one to quiet title but to get in the legal title alleged to be outstanding in the defendant Martha J. Belcher. The demurrer we think was properly overruled.

But is the case made by the bill admitted or established by legal and competent evideuce? The answer of the defendant puts in issue the material facts alleged, which depend on oral testimony, and she has attempted to put in ifesue also the facts alleged respecting plaintiffs title, acquired, or alleged to have been acquired, by deeds from the heirs of Joseph Belcher.

The first question is, Does the proof sustain the allegation of the bill that the plaintiff has equitable title by deed from these heirs? The answer of Mrs. Belcher denies that the heirs of Joseph Belcher, deceased, conveyed to J. E. Belcher, who and whose wife are alleged to have conveyed to plaintiff, but she makes an admission that the children of Joseph Belcher, by his first wife, executed a quit claim deed to plaintiff, attempting to convey certain land, but which she alleges is so vaguely described in the deed, that she is unable to determine therefrom, whether or not, it is the thirty-three acres of land, the title to which was formerly held by E. Wade Cook, and she calls for strict proof thereof and of all material matters in connection therewith. She does not specifically deny the fact alleged, that J. E. Belcher and wife, by quit claim deed, conveyed the land to the plaintiff. Literally speaking, it is not true, as the allegation of the bill might imply, that all the heirs of Joseph Belcher conveyed the land to J. E. Belcher. Lack of attention in drafting the bill to the literal fact, makes the bill say that the heirs of Joseph Belcher, implying all of them, conveyed to J. E. Belcher. The answer of the defendant admits a fact not alleged, that the heirs of the first wife conveyed to the plaintiff. This admission shows lack of attention to the literal fact. The literal fact alleged and established by the proof, is, that the heirs by the first wife did not convey directly to plaintiff, but some of them conveyed directly to J. E. Belcher, [214]*214and lie and his wife conveyed directly to plaintiff. The admission of the answer is a substantial admission of the existence of these deeds, but not an admission of the fact denied, that the description of the land is sufficient to put the equitable title of these heirs in plaintiff.

It would appear from the evidence that the original deed from these heirs, by the first wife, to J. E. Belcher, of January 1, 1909, was perhaps indefinite in description, but a subsequent deed of correction between the same parties, of January 16, 1909, made and recorded before suit brought or answers filed, and exhibited with the deposition of the clerk of -the county court, taken on behalf of the plaintiff, contains a correct description of the land, and the land described is proven by witnesses to be the land in controversy. So that, we think, equitable title in the plaintiff for the interest of those heirs in the land in controversy is substantially established by the evidence, oral and documentary, in connection with admissions in the answers.

But what about the other allegations of the bill, denied by the answer, and sought to be established by the oral evidence? Without.going into detail, which is-unnecessary, the evidence of .the witnesses, R. Wade Cook, John Ball, agent for the Little Kanawha Lumber Company, which conveyed the land to Cook in trust, Levi Hash, surveyor, T. G. Walker, and A. M.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 443, 71 W. Va. 210, 1912 W. Va. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-cook-wva-1912.