Johnston v. Virginia Coal & Iron Co.

31 S.E. 85, 96 Va. 158, 1898 Va. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 30, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 31 S.E. 85 (Johnston v. Virginia Coal & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Virginia Coal & Iron Co., 31 S.E. 85, 96 Va. 158, 1898 Va. LEXIS 75 (Va. 1898).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears from the record that on January 30, 1796, the Commonwealth of Virginia issued a ° patent to Nathaniel Taylor, Nathan Fields, and John Johnson, all non-residents of the State, granting to them a tract of land containing sixty-two thousand acres, situated, at the time of the grant, in Lee county, the larger part of the tract being now located in Wise county.

The entries and surveys for this patent had been made in 1795, and before the patent was formally issued, to-wit, on January 1, 1796, Nathan Fields conveyed to Nathaniel Taylor all of his right, title, and interest in the tract of land called for by the grant.

In 1816 Nathaniel Taylor died, leaving a will, by which he directed his executors Ci to sell so much of his back lands and other property as could best be spared, sufficient to pay all of his just debts.”

In 1827 Mary Taylor and James P. Taylor, as executrix and executor of this will, sold and conveyed to John Crabtree a boundary containing twelve thousand eight hundred acres, it being part of the sixty-two thousand acres covered by the patent of January, 1796.

The evidence shows that Crabtree took possession under this deed, and commenced selling off portions of the land thereby conveyed, and that he and his -grantees have been in the open, notorious, uninterrupted, adverse possession thereof ever since. Among other alienations by Crabtree of this land, he conveyed by deed dated March 18, 1833, four thousand acres to J. C. Olinger.

The sale of twelve thousand eight hundred acres by Taylor to Crabtree left of the Taylor, Field, and Johnson patent forty-nine thousand two hundred acres, which residue stood on the land books for the years 1833-1834, assessed in the name of £< Taylor’s heirs.”

[160]*160At the October court for Lee county, on the 21st of October, 1834, this residue of forty-nine thousand two hundred acres was offered for sale at public auction for the non-payment of $4.92, the taxes due thereon for the year 1834, and forty-eight thousand and two hundred acres thereof was knocked down to J. C. Olinger, no other person offering to pay the taxes for a less quantity of said land.

On the the 7th of December, 1836, Alexander Mills, clerk of the County Court of Lee county, conveyed to J. C. Olinger the forty-eight thousand two hundred acres purchased by him at this tax sale. This deed sets forth that J. C. Olinger had complied with the terms of his purchase and the requirements of law in respect thereto, and expressly reserves on its face the residue of the forty-nine thousand two hundred acres, to-wit, one thousand acres not sold to Olinger.

This residue of one thousand acres reappeared upon the land books in the name of Taylor, Fields, and Johnson, and was sold for taxes due thereon, and conveyed to the purchaser, Henry S. Kane, by Claiborne Anderson, commissioner of delinquent and forfeited lands for Lee county, by deed dated November 20, 1842.

By deed dated May 12, 1853, J. C. Olinger conveyed to Henry S. Kane an undivided one-half interest in the forty-eight thousand two hundred acres bought by him in 1834 at the tax sale.

J. C. Olinger, by his will probated in 1863, devised to his children his undivided half interest in this forty-eight thousand two hundred acr'e tract held jointly with Henry S. Kane.

In 1876 Henry S. Kane died intestate, and it is conceded, by' agreement of counsel, that his undivided interest in the forty-eight thousand two hundred acres was sold in appropriate proceedings under a decree of the Circuit Court of Scott county, and conveyed by Vance and Wood, commissioners acting under decree'of that court, to the purchaser, C. S. O. Tintsman, by deed dated April 30,1880.

[161]*161In 1881 the heirs of J. C. Olinger conveyed the undivided half interest in the forty-eight thousand two hundred acres derived by them under the will of their father to C. S. O. Tints-man, and in the same year Tintsman conveyed the whole tract that vested in him by these several deeds to E. K. Hyndman.

By deed dated May 6, 1882, E. K. Hyndman and wife conveyed, together with other lands, this forty-eight thousand two hundred acres, which has been known and described all through these transactions as the “ Olinger survey,” subject to certain reservations mentioned in the deed, to the Virginia Coal and Iron Company, the appellee here.

As already stated the thi’ee original patentees were nonresidents of the State of Virginia, and none of them was ever in the actual possession of the land.

This suit was brought to the June rules, 1893, of the Circuit Court of Wise county, by Joseph T. Johnston and some thirty other persons residing in some ten different States of the Union, representing themselves as the children, grandchildren, and heirs at law of John Johnston, deceased, who they say was sometimes known as John Johnson, and further allege that their.ancestor was the John Johnson named in the patent of 1796, and that he resided up to the time of his death in the State of Pennsylvania, and died intestate in the year 1826, leaving to them as his heirs at law an undivided one-third interest in the tract of sixty-two thousand acres mentioned in the patent of 1796 to Taylor, Fields, and Johnson. They further allege that they are tenants in common with those claiming to be the owners of the Taylor and Fields interests in said patent, and pray that there may be a partition in kind between the various owners, and an account for rent, &c.

The land in dispute in the case now before us, is the forty-eight thousand two hundred acres bought by J. C. Olinger at the tax sale in 1834, and we do not understand it to be denied that said land is now in possession of the Virginia Coal and Iron Company, under and by virtue of the various alienations through which it has passed from J. C. Olinger to the appellee.

[162]*162The evidence abundantly shows that immediately after J. C. Olinger obtained the deed from Mills, clerk, in 1836, he took actual possession of the land conveyed to him, and that he and those claiming under him have been in open, notorious, continuous possession thereof, claiming and dealing with the whole as their own from that day to this.

It is contended, however, by appellants that the effect of the deed in 1827 by Taylor’s executors to John Crabtree for twelve' thousand eight hundred acres by metes and bounds was to make him a co-tenant to the extent of the interest thereby conveyed with the heirs of Johnson, and the estate of Taylor in the sixty-two thousand acres of land; and that the conveyance by Crabtree to J. C. Olinger in 1833 for four thousand acres made Olinger a co-tenant with the heirs of Johnson and the estate of Taylor, and that therefore when J. C. Olinger bought the forty-eight thousand two hundred acres by metes and bounds at the tax sale in 1834, he, being a tenant in common with the Johnson heirs at that time, could not buy and hold adversely to them, but that his purchase inured to the common benefit of all his co-tenants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 S.E. 85, 96 Va. 158, 1898 Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-virginia-coal-iron-co-va-1898.