Maynard v. Shein

125 S.E. 585, 97 W. Va. 597, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 236
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 125 S.E. 585 (Maynard v. Shein) 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
Maynard v. Shein, 125 S.E. 585, 97 W. Va. 597, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 236 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Lively, Judge :

This controversy is over the legal title to about 107 acres of land lying at the mouth of Lick Creek in Mingo County. *599 The deed under which the parties claim was executed by Richard Maynard and wife to M. V. B. Maynard, his son, in the year 1870, and the parts material to the controversy are: “the parties of the first part hath this day devised, bargained and sold and by these presents doth bargain and sell unto the party of the second part for and in consideration of the sum of twenty-five dollars to be paid to Parta Step wife of Aaron Step by the first day of June 1871 and in further consideration of that the party of the second part shall maintain and aid in maintaining the party of the first part together with his wife Charlotte Maynor during their natural leives and the party of the first part reserves to himself his House and House room for the use of himself and wife the Lands bounded are described as follows to-wit: (here follows description of land), to have and to hold the same during his natural life there to belong to the heirs of his doby but the parties of the first part grants to the party of the second part the rite to make sale to either of his Brothers or sisters the above namled lands and the parties of the firrt part’ reserves the venders lien on said lands for the payment of the amount named above and for the support stipulated above the parties of the first part hereby relinquishes the pwrtys of the second part all their right title and interest in the said lands to have and to hold the same forever upon the conditions above named and stipulated given under our hands and seals day and date above named. ’ ’

M. V. B. Maynard, the grantee, took possession, and some time prior to 1890, conveyed the underlying mineral which is now claimed by Thacker Coal Company, not made a party to this suit. Subsequently he sold to Emmaline Eunyon a part of the land lying’between the railroad and Tug River, where she lived for about 16 years. This deed is not in the record. M. V. B. Maynard having failed to pay the $25.00 to Parta Step for which the vendor’s lien was reserved in the deed, suit was instituted by Samuel Simpkins, assignee of Parta Step, to enforce the lien, which resulted in sale to Mary Taylor who took possession of all the land not held by Emma-line Runyon. No deed was made to her, but she joined with the Commissioner in a deed dated December 11, 1905, to *600 S. Shein (one of the principal defendants), in which they conveyed to him all their right, title and interest to -the surface of the land in controversy, for $400.00, “being the surface of that certain tract or parcel of land conveyed by Richard Maynard in his lifetime to M. V. B. Maynard, and sold in the chancery cause of Samuel Simpkins against M. V. B. Maynard and others, aforesaid.” On March 22, 1905, M. Y. B. Maynard and wife deeded to Harriett E. Simpkins all their right, title and interest in the land, for the sum of $225.00. On the 28th of April, 1905, Harriett E. Simpkins and husband deeded all their right, title and interest to S. Shein, for $325.00. On December 11, 1905, Mary Taylor and John L. Stafford, Special Commissioner, made a deed to S. Shein for $400.00, as above set out. On November 12, 1907, Emmaline Runyon and husband deeded to S. Shein all their right, title and interest in that part of the land lying between the railroad and Tug River. Shein then divided the bottom land into town lots and sold fourteen or fifteen of them to various purchasers. In 1910 he deeded a railroad right of way over the land now held and operated by Sycamore Coal Company. In the same month he deeded the land to Goodykoontz, Trustee, for certain creditors; and later in 1915 he conveyed the land to Friedburg and Scheer, Trustees, for the benefit of all of his numerous creditors. These creditors have not been paid. M. Y. B. Maynard died in 1912 in the asylum for the insane, survived by Young Maynard and three other children and his wife, Mary. His children are the plaintiffs in this suit, which was begun in 1916. Previous to this suit,, they had instituted suit to set aside the deed from their father, M. Y. B. Maynard, to Harriett E. Simpkins, his sister, which suit was removed to the federal court and there dismissed on the ground that they had' a complete remedy at law. Then they instituted suit in ejectment in Mingo County Circuit Court against those holding the land upon the trial of which they took a nonsuit. This suit followed.

The bill and amended bills are for the purpose of cancel-ling the deed from M. Y. B. Maynard to Harriett E. Simpkins, the.deed from Mary Taylor to Shein, and to cancel and re *601 move as clouds upon plaintiffs’ title the various deeds made by Shein, and to quiet plaintiffs’ title in fee simple to the lands as remaindermen under the deed from Richard Maynard to their father, made in 1870. The bill charges that the decree in the vendor’s lien suit instituted by Samuel Simpkins, ascertained that M. Y. B. Maynard had a life estate only in the land; and charged that in a condemnation suit instituted by the N. & W. Ry. Co. for a railroad right of way in their faiher’s lifetime, it was judicially ascertained that he had a life estate only, with remainder to his children, the plaintiffs. The bill purports to exhibit the decree and order, but they are not in the record, and defendants say they were never filed as exhibits with the bill. The bill charges that Shein and Sam’l Simpkins, well knowing that M. Y. B. Maynard had only a life estate, combined and conspired together to induce him to make the deed to Harriett Simpkins, hoping that such deed would comply with the power given to M. Y. B. Maynard in the deed to him in 1870, to sell the land to one of his brothers or sisters; that by making him drunk and by undue influence they procured him to make the deed in order to deprive plaintiffs of their inheritance; that he was insane at the time and knew not what he was doing; all for the purpose of defrauding plaintiffs; that the deed of 1870 gave plaintiffs a vested remainder in fee after their father’s death, and that the power given their father to sell was repugnant to the granting clause and is void.

The answers deny the material allegations of the bills. The answers of the trustees and beneficiaries, and the answers of those defendants who had received deeds immediately or mediately from Shein are that they are- innocent purchasers for value with no notice of the alleged fraud committed by Shein and Simpkins in the procurement of the deed from M. Y. B. Maynard in 1905 in the exercise of the power given him in the deed of 1870.

A large number of witnesses were examined in respect to the sanity of M. Y. B. Maynard, and his intoxication‘at the time of the deed to his sister, Harriett Simpkins, and the part taken therein by Shein and Samuel Simpkins.

*602 The decree set aside the deed to Harriett Simpkins; the deed from her to Shein; the deed from Mary Taylor and others to Shein; and the various deeds and deeds of trust executed by Shein, as clouds upon the plaintiffs ’ title to the surface of the land; and adjudicated plaintiffs’ title to the surface as superior to all others, and awarded them a writ of possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 585, 97 W. Va. 597, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maynard-v-shein-wva-1924.