Kertesz v. Falgiano

84 S.E.2d 744, 140 W. Va. 469, 1954 W. Va. LEXIS 80
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1954
Docket10662
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 S.E.2d 744 (Kertesz v. Falgiano) 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
Kertesz v. Falgiano, 84 S.E.2d 744, 140 W. Va. 469, 1954 W. Va. LEXIS 80 (W. Va. 1954).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

In this suit in equity instituted in the Circuit Court of MjcDowell County by Virgie Kertesz, plaintiff, against Quinto Falgiano, defendant, plaintiff filed a bill of complaint labelled “Bill of Complaint for Injunction”, alleging that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of a certain Lot No._, in the City of War, McDowell County, West Virginia, which is more particularly, and erroneously, described in the bill of complaint as “Lot No. 33 (Thirty-three), in the Beavers addition to the town of Miners City (now known as War), in McDowell County, West Virginia, facing on the right of [way of] N. & W. Railway Company, a distance of thirty (30) feet, and running back between parallel lines a distance of One Hundred, (100) feet”, and the two other numbered lots, plaintiff’s ownership of or interest therein not being pertinent to the controversy involved in this proceeding. In this bill of complaint the plaintiff alleges the existence of an alleyway twenty feet wide running between plaintiff’s property and that of the adjacent landowner, the defendant, Quinto Falgiano, which has been in use as a public way for thirty-seven years; that plaintiff’s line adjoins the alleyway; that defendant has a fence defining the extent of his real estate separate and apart from the alleyway, which has been in use for thirty-seven years and so recognized by the property owners of the City of War, McDowell County; that on May 13, 1951, during the nighttime defendant wrongfully, maliciously and without permission therefor erected a barricade of rock and stone across the alleyway, thus *471 depriving plaintiff of the use thereof; and that in connection with the alleyway the plaintiff owns a number of houses at the end or at the rear of the alleyway, which alleyway provides a means for the tenants occupying the houses for transferring coal, groceries, furniture, goods and chattels to the houses so occupied by them from the public street, which connects with the alleyway and the highway adjacent thereto, to plaintiff’s property in the rear and to the place of business owned and operated by the plaintiff. In this original bill of complaint the plaintiff prays, inter alia, that the court decree that the defendant does not own the land upon which he allegedly illegally erected the barricade; that he has no right to the land upon which the barricade has been erected; that the court decree that the barricade be taken down and removed from the place where it was placed in the alleyway; and that the court decree that the plaintiff has the right to have the barricade so erected upon the alleyway by the defendant taken down and removed. Further the bill of complaint prays that the circuit court order an issue out of chancery for the purpose of ascertaining the damages, if any, which the plaintiff has suffered by the defendant’s erection of the barricade, thus preventing the use of the alleyway, and that plaintiff may have general relief.

To a final decree entered on July 15, 1953, this appeal is prosecuted, by which the circuit court decreed in the following details: (1) The court refused to grant unto the plaintiff an injunction, requiring defendant to remove the barricade or fence described in the bill of complaint and in plaintiff’s amended bill of complaint, for the reason that the fence or barricade is situated and erected on the lot or parcel of land owned by the defendant, to-wit, Lot No'. 20, Block 2, Beavers Second'Addition to War (formerly known as Miners City); (2) that there is no strip or parcel of land, alleyway, or walkway across defendant’s Lot No. 20, Block 2, Beavers Second Addition to the Town of War, as alleged in plaintiff’s bill of complaint, amended bill of complaint, and amended and supplemental bill of complaint; (3) that the plaintiff, Virgie Kertesz, has not ac *472 quired the strip of land across defendant’s Lot No. 20 by prescription; (4) that the plaintiff has not acquired title to the strip of land alleged in plaintiff’s pleadings across defendant’s Lot No. 20 by adverse possession; and (5) that the true and correct division line between defendant’s Lot No. 20 and plaintiff’s Lot No. 21 (which latter the record discloses is the correct designation of plaintiff’s property which adjoins that of defendant) is as shown by the “red pencil line” on a map prepared by defendant’s witness, E. C. Zick, purporting to show Block 2 of Beavers Addition to the Town of War, filed with the record as “Defendant’s Exhibit No. 7”, which “red pencil line” marked on the exhibit in red crayon the court decreed “is the true division line that divides said Lot No. 21 owned by the plaintiff and Lot No. 20 owned by the defendant.”

Following the filing of the original bill of complaint, a number of pleadings were filed, accompanied by many exhibits, throughout which both plaintiff and defendant, and in particular the plaintiff, assumed a variety of positions, and after a change in plaintiff’s counsel, the evidence adduced on behalf of plaintiff materially differed from that originally offered by plaintiff’s prior counsel.

As there arises in this case the initial and pivotal question whether this case is properly in a court of equity, or Whether plaintiff’s claim should initially have been asserted in a court of law, it becomes necessary for this Court to determine whether the decree of the trial court entered as a decree in equity was within the jurisdiction of the circuit court, acting as a court of equity.

At the risk of making this opinion prolix, this Court has no other course in determining the jurisdictional question but to consider somewhat in detail the many pleadings filed by both the plaintiff and the defendant, the scope of which is variegated, together with so much of the evidence as bears on the question whether this suit was properly cognizable in a court of equity.

To the plaintiff’s original bill of complaint, the defendant, Quinto Falgiano, filed an answer. From the allegations of the answer itself, defendant charges that the *473 plaintiff is the owner of Lot No. 21, Block 2, Beavers Addition to Miners City, now the Town of War, filed as defendant’s exhibit “G”, which lot was conveyed to plaintiff by Walter Hudler and Bessie Hudler, his wife, by a deed, a copy of which is filed with the answer as defendant’s exhibit “B”, dated June 5, 1944, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of the County Court of McDowell County, which deed describes Lot No. 21 of Block 2 of Beavers Addition to the Town of War by metes and bounds in the following language: “Beginning at a point at the.Northeastern corner of Lot No. 21, of Block No. 2 of said Beavers Addition to said Town of War and adjoining Lot No. 22, sold by A,. D. Beavers to W. S. Bolding and in line of the right of way of the Norfolk and Western Railway Company, thence with line of said right of way, a distance of 30 feet to a point, and being the corner of Lot No. 20, thence with Lot No. 20, and being the west side of Lot No. 21, running back to edge of Dry Fork River a distance of 150 feet, more or less, thence with said river in an easterly direction a distance of 30 feet to the back corner of Lot No. 22, thence with said Lot No. 22, a distance of 150 feet, more or less, to the beginning; Being known as Lot No. 21, in Block No. 2, of Beavers Addition to the Town of War, 5*5 5*5 * »

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Erickson v. Erickson
849 F. Supp. 453 (S.D. West Virginia, 1994)
Attorney General v. Dime Savings Bank of New York, FSB
596 N.E.2d 1013 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1992)
Gauley Coal Land Company v. O'DELL
110 S.E.2d 833 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1959)
Fredeking v. Grimmett
86 S.E.2d 554 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.E.2d 744, 140 W. Va. 469, 1954 W. Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kertesz-v-falgiano-wva-1954.