Keyser v. Seiver

148 S.E. 135, 107 W. Va. 263, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 75
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1929
DocketNo. 6347.
StatusPublished

This text of 148 S.E. 135 (Keyser v. Seiver) 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
Keyser v. Seiver, 148 S.E. 135, 107 W. Va. 263, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 75 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: MAP IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *Page 265 The bill prayed for mandatory injunction against defendant C. W. Seiver requiring him to remove a triangular "tin shop" from a small triangular strip of land containing 728 square feet claimed by plaintiff as a part of Armstrong Street, a public street in the city. The answer denied that the strip of land was a part of the street, or that plaintiff had ever exercised any control thereover or possession thereof, and claimed title thereto in respondent. Upon final hearing after all the evidence was in, the court decided that the strip in controversy was a part of Armstrong Street, and decreed that respondent should remove his building therefrom; from which decree this appeal was granted.

A photostatic copy of a map filed by defendant's surveyor will visualize the controversy. The map may not be exactly correct, as there appears to be no fixed point for starting a survey of the town as laid out by the Davises about 1866, and is here inserted for the purpose of aiding a comprehension of the controversy. (See map.)

The land lying west of New Creek and contiguous thereto was owned in fee in 1865 by Henry G. Davis and his two brothers. Shortly after acquiring the land the Davises mapped a portion into lots and streets, and began conveying lots designated by numbers and with reference to named streets to various persons in the "Town of New Creek", the first deed of record being for lot 33 fronting on Centre Street on "map of said town" to Joseph Ritsell, dated June 16, 1866. In the same year, they conveyed lot No. 1, as designated on the map, to the Board of Supervisors of Mineral county, where the courthouse now stands. It does not appear that the map of the "Town of New Creek" as referred to in these deeds, was ever recorded. In 1874 the town of Keyser was incorporated and included the Davis land, and in 1913 the city of Keyser was incorporated including the same and other lands. Many lots, perhaps hundreds, were sold by the Davises up to 1880 reference in the deeds therefor being to map of "Town of New Creek" or "Town of Keyser." In 1880 a map of the Davis land laying it out into lots, streets *Page 266 and alleys was admitted to record, and was thereafter referred to as the "Davis map of town or city of Keyser." The lots theretofore sold correspond in numbers and location with the lots designated on the recorded map. By this map it appears that Armstrong Street extended east past the courthouse to Water Street only. (Designated by Davis in a deed made in 1890 as New Creek Turnpike). However, it appears that after about the year 1870 a county road crossed New Creek where Armstrong Street if extended in a straight line would end at New Creek, and a public footbridge had been constructed for pedestrians over the creek which was later, in the year 1886, superseded by an iron bridge, shown on the map, 86 feet long and 16 feet wide. At the time the iron bridge was constructed the town council had obtained a right of way for an extension of Armstrong Street through the Arnold lands lying east of the creek, from the foot of Armstrong Street where the bridge began on the west side of the creek. The footbridge appears to have been across the creek with its west end located at and attached to a sycamore stump immediately below the present tin shop building and just inside the present wall along the creek under the rear of that building. The pedestrian using it approached it over the land now occupied by the tin shop as testified to by the old residents. The county road, known as the Knobley road, crossed the creek practically where the bridge now stands. The record does not show the exact place where this right of way for Knobley road was originally located at the creek crossing with reference to Armstrong Street or the town of Keyser. It is conceded that it must have been at least thirty feet wide, for the statute required that width at that time. Armstrong Street is one of the main streets of the city and the main street for ingress and egress from the county eastward to Reedsville and other points.

The proper location and width of Armstrong Street from Water Street eastward to the creek is the controlling issue. The city claims a dedication by definite location by two deeds made by Davis and his brothers who originally owned the strip of land lying between Water Street and New Creek, and acceptance of that dedication by corporate acts over the *Page 267 land so dedicated. Defendant says that no such dedication was made; and he claims title thereto by virtue of a special warranty deed for the strip in controversy and another strip further down the stream, executed to him by a representative of the Davis estate in 1912. In 1890 Davis (and the other owners) conveyed to John W. Keys land lying between Water Street and New Creek described as "all that strip of land in the Town of Keyser lying between Armstrong Street and Patrick Street in one direction, and between the New Creek Turnpike (now commonly called Water Street) and New Creek in the other direction lying in the rear of the lots of said John W. Keys known as 'The Keys House Property' and separated from said Lots by said Turnpike and being of the same width as the said Keys Lots and extending the same width from said Turnpike or Water Street to the Creek." Subsequent deeds, including the one to the present owner, Huffman, contain practically the same description. The line on the map as the northern line of the disputed triangular strip marked S. 41° 48' E. 56.5 is conceded to be the southern boundary of the Keys deed, although plaintiff claims that this line should be about 2 1/2 or three feet further south. Ten years later, in 1900, Davis deeded to plaintiff, C. W. Seiver, a lot described as "all that certain strip of ground, situate in the Town of Keyser in Mineral County, West Virginia, between Water Street and New Creek, said strip of ground being particularly bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a point in the line of said Water Street, on the side next to New Creek, seventy-five feet below where the rear line of Walter Lowry's lots if extended would cross Water Street, thence by a straight line to New Creek, thence down said New Creek with the meanders thereof, to the Knobley road where it crosses New Creek by a bridge at the foot of Armstrong Street; thence with the line of said road, back to the line of Water Street; thence with said street to the beginning point, containing a fraction of an acre." The lines of this conveyance are not attempted to be shown on defendant's map, as shown by the photostatic copy above. Defendant' surveyor who made this map says that the southerly line of Knobley road is the dotted line shown on the *Page 268 map running across the creek parallel with the bridge. He located this road, he says, from information given him by a Mr. Arnold. However, the exact location of this right of way for a road is very much in doubt. Many of the witnesses for defendant say that this road crossed the creek on the ground over which the bridge now stands. Senator Davis in his deed to Seiver in 1900, considered the southerly line of the road to be at the bridge where it crossed New Creek at the foot of Armstrong Street. His deed was made with reference to the actual location of Knobley road on the ground. The bridge had been constructed and used for about 14 years prior to this deed.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.E. 135, 107 W. Va. 263, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyser-v-seiver-wva-1929.