Lynch v. Brookover

77 S.E. 983, 72 W. Va. 211, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 34
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 S.E. 983 (Lynch v. Brookover) 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
Lynch v. Brookover, 77 S.E. 983, 72 W. Va. 211, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 34 (W. Va. 1913).

Opinion

RobiNSON, Judge:

The object of this suit is to cause a partition of lands in which plaintiff Dorcas A. Lynch claims an undivided one-fourth -interest, and to cancel and remove as clouds on plaintiff’s title to the land certain conveyances relating thereto. The circuit court denied relief to plaintiff and dismissed her bill.

On June. 2', 1857, George P. Wilson and wife made a deed of general warranty to their son-in-law and daughter, Asbury ■ Brookover and Dorcas, his wife, for the natural life of the said Dorcas, and after her death to her children, conveying a tract of about 102 acres in Monongalia county, in consideration, as the deed recited, that Asbury Brookover had on that day entered into a bond with security to maintain and support the grantors in a proper and comfortable manner during the remainder of their lives and also to pay to the other children of the grantors fifty dollars each. The bond referred to in the deed was executed by Asbury Brookover, with another as his surety, on the same date as that of the deed.

At the time of the conveyance, Dorcas Brookover had four children living, namely: George Brookover, defendant in this suit; Stephen Brookover, father of plaintiff Dorcas A. Lynch; Rebecca J. Brookover; and Nancy E. Brookover. The two las! [213]*213named died in infancy on December 16, 1862, unmarried and without issue. Dorcas Brookover never after had other children. Stephen Brookover, the father of plaintiff Dorcas A. Lynch, died on January 2, 1864, leaving her an infant four months old, as his only heir at law.

In 1858, Levi Haught, a creditor of George P. Wilson, brought a suit in chancery attacking the deed made by Wilson and wife to Asbury Brookover and Dorcas, his wife, for the life of the latter and then to her children, as being in fraud of the rights of Haught as a creditor, and as made for the purpose of hindering and avoiding the payment of the debt due him. To that suit all the grantees in the deed, as well as others, were made parties. The answers of Wilson and Asbury Brook-over to Haught’s bill, filed at the Spring Term 1860, .denied any fraud or combination in the making of the. deed. Wilson averred that the deed was made in good faith solely .to provide for himself and wife, and in support of his answer he filed therewith the original of the bond to which we have referred. Asbury Brookover answered that the.deed was made “in conformity to an arrangement made some four years ago with said Wilson” and that on the 2nd day of. June, 1857, this arrangement was carried out by Wilson and wife conveying to respondent the tract of 102 acres of land and respondent executing a bond binding himself to support the grantors and to pay fifty dollars to each of the other children of the grantors. By . these and other allegations in the answer of Asbury Brookover, it clearly appears that he relied on the deed of June 2, 1857, claimed thereunder, and defended the same against the attack of Haught.

The Haught suit was delayed by the Civil War, though in 1863 it was referred to a commissioner • “by consent of the parties,” and in 1864 the order of -reference was executed and a report filed. Thereafter no orders or decrees were entered in the cause until November, 1865, when on motion of Haught, the plaintiff, it was dismissed.

On September 20, 1865, Asbury Brookover and wife made a deed to George P. Wilson, with covenants of general warranty, for the 102 acres, therein referring to the land as “being the same land conveyed to the said grantors by George P. Wilson by deed of record.” Here it seems was .an attempt to..put the [214]*214title back in Wilson., though the interests of the remaindermen created by the deed of June 2, 1857, were entirely overlooked and ignored. At this time Stephen Brookover, one of those remaindermen, was dead, and his estate m remainder had vested by descent in plaintiff Dorcas A. Lynch, then an infant. George Brookover, another of those entitled in remainder, was living, but was under the age of 21 years. The interests in remainder of the other two, Bebecca and Nancy, had, at their deaths on December 16, 1862, descended to their father Asbury Brookover. It is well to observe that this deed of September 2'0, 1865, did not revest title in Wilson to the interest in remainder belonging to plaintiff Dorcas A. Lynch in the right of her deceased father.

On the next day after the making of this deed of September 20, 1865, George P. Wilson and wife made a deed of general warranty to James S. Walker for 52 acres of the 102 acre tract, in consideration of thirteen hundred dollars, which Walker paid to Hauglit on the debt sought by the latter as against Wilson in the suit to which we have referred. It was this payment .by Walker and an additional payment by Asbury Brookover in satisfaction of the liaught debt that brought about the dismissal of the Hauglit suit. And, on September 23, 1865, Wilson and wife, in consideration that they be supported and maintained during their lives by Asbury Brookover, made a deed of general warranty to him for 50 acres, the residue of the original tract.

Ever since the date of the deed to Walker, he has been in possession of the 52 acres, claiming it in fee, .improving it as his own, and making conveyances of the coal and other rights thereunto appertaining. And from the date of the deed to Asbury Brookover, he was in possession of the 50 acres as though owning it in fee, purporting to convey coal and other rights in relation thereto, until his death on April 1, 1904. He left a will divising the 50 acres to his son George Brookover, who we have seen was given a remainder by the deed of June 2, 1857, and to Normán Brookover, the son of George.

Dorcas Brookover, for whose life the life tenancy by the deed of June-2, 1851)', was created, died August 27, 1905. Soon after her’ death’, plaintiff Dorcas A. Lynch claimed the right of entry that’ cáme to' her by the determination of the tenancy for the [215]*215life of Dorcas Brookover, and brought this suit to assert her right to a one-fourth interest in the land.

That the deed of June 2, 1857, vested in Stephen Brookover, the ancestor of plaintiff Dorcas A. Lynch, an estate in remainder for an undivided one-fourth interest in the 102 acres is clear. That right of entry would come to her in the right of her deceased father at the death of Dorcas Brookover is equally clear. Therefore, if the deed of June 2, 1857, is to be considered at all effective, it does not require discussion or the exposition of legal principles to prove that plaintiff’s suit is well grounded.

Defendants Walker and the devisees of Asbury Brookover, in their answers, proofs, and arguments on the one hand assert that the deed which gave the remainder to Stephen Brookover was annulled and considered for naught by the parties thereto that Stephen Brookover before his death, being of -age, consented that the land might go by the deeds of Wilson and wife made in September, 1865, to Walker for money with which to' pay the Haught debt, and to Asbury Brookover for support of the old people, the Wilsons; while on the other hand defendants maintain that the deed of June 2, 1857, was never accepted by Asbury and Dorcas Brookover on behalf of themselves and their children to whom it was made, 'so that title never went out of. Wilson by it. Latterly in the cause, defendants seek to rely on .an executory contract made by George P. Wilson to Asbury Brookover and William PI. Wilson, jointly, in May, 1856, contracting to them-all the lands that George P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 983, 72 W. Va. 211, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-brookover-wva-1913.