McLanahan v. Mills

80 S.E. 351, 73 W. Va. 246, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 181
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 S.E. 351 (McLanahan v. Mills) 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
McLanahan v. Mills, 80 S.E. 351, 73 W. Va. 246, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 181 (W. Va. 1913).

Opinions

MilleR, Judge:

After the decree of August 31, 1906, pronounced in Mills versus McLanahan, and after an appeal therefrom had been allowed by this court on May 10, 1907, the defendants thereto, plaintiffs here, at November Rules, 1907, filed their bill of review, to review that decree for certain alleged errors of law therein, newly discovered evidence, and alleged want of parties. Afterwards and after pleas and answers had been filed by the defendants to said bill of review, and depositions had been taken and filed in the cause on the issues joined thereon, plaintiffs at April Rules, 1910, filed what they entitled an amended and supplemental bill, and amended and supplemental bill of review, making said original bill of [248]*248review and all the depositions and proof taken .and filed thereon, parts thereof, and sought to have the same treated as a bill of review or as an original bill in the nature of a bill of review.

In addition to the allegations in said original bill of review it is ¡alleged in said amended and supplemental bill, first, that after adjournment of the term of court next before the filing thereof plaintiffs had discovered among the files in the clerk’s office of said court a report made by one George E. Floyd, commissioner in chancery, showing that John R. Dunlap, administrator de bonis non of Robert McCulloch, deceased, had settled his fiduciary accounts before him, and among other things had turned over to William McClellan, his successor in office, a bond of Robert Mills, due December 5, 1867, for $350.00, for land sold by him to said Mills out of a survey of 35,500 acres, and that said Dunlap, administrator, had never sold said Mills any land out of said survey unless it was the 1000 acres involved in said suit; that said report had never been recorded, but was in the hand writing of said commissioner, and a copy whereof was exhibited with said bill: Second, that after said term of court, they had also for the first time discovered that in 1878, defendant C. W. Mills, administrator of the estate of Benjamin Mills, deceased, had instituted suit in chancery in said circuit court against the widow and heirs at law of said Robert Mills, deceased, to sell their lands to satisfy the liens thereon, said Dunlap in his own right, .and-William McClellan, as administrator of the estate of Robert McCulloch, deceased, being made parties thereto, but the papers in which cause, they allege were missing, except a memorandum of counsel directing process and the orders and decrees made in the cause, copies whereof they also exhibited with the bill: Third, that from the partial record of said cause it .appeared that McClellan, administrator, answered that on October 29, 1879, he had recovered from Lydia Mills, administratrix of Robert Mills, deceased, the sum of $620.55; and that a commissioner had been appointed to sell the land sold by Dunlap, administrator,, to Robert Mills, on terms prescribed by the decree, which'also provided that the sale should not be made until a deed for the land should be made by Dunlap, administrator to Mills, [249]*249for the land decreed to be sold, and filed in escrow- in the papers of the cause; that afterwards said commissioner reported that he had made sale, and the sale was confirmed, hut that the decree of confirmation did not show to whom the sale was made, nor did it mention the 1000 acre tract, but that the record showed that the only land decreed to be sold was said 1000 acre tract, and that the parol evidence taken in the cause showed that Dunlap had sold no land to Mills, unless it w,as said tract: Fourth, that at said sale, as a matter of fact, said McClellan, administrator, had bought in the Mills claim, whatever it was, to said 1000 acre tract for the benefit of the McCulloch estate, and that thereby the title thereto had become reinvested in the administrator and heirs at law of said McCulloch: Fifth, and lastly, and- as ground for impeaching and setting aside said decree of August 31, 1906, it is alleged, that the defendants, plaintiffs- in the suit of Mills against McLanahan, knew, at the time of instituting their suit, that said 1000 acre tract had been so sold as aforesaid, and that by the institution of their suit and procuring the decree of August 31, 1906, they had perpetrated a fraud on plaintiffs as well as on the court, wherefore they prayed that said decree be set aside and nullified, and that the land conveyed to the Mills heirs, pursuant to said decree, be re-conveyed to plaintiffs according to their interest therein, and there was also a prayer for general relief.

The present appeal by plaintiffs is from two separate and independent decrees, pronounced on the same day, December 7, 1910, the first on said original bill of review, the second on said amended and supplemental bill in the nature of a bill of review. By the first of said decrees, the court denied the motion of plaintiffs and appellants to treat their said amended and supplemental bill, filed at April Rules, 1910, as amenda-tory of and supplementary to their original bill of review, filed at November Rules, 1907, and as so amended, to treat the same as an original bill in the nature of a bill of review, and likewise also denied their motion to hear said two causes together. And thereupon, upon said original bill of' review, defendants’ demurrer thereto, the joint answers of the defendants, John B. Mills and others, the plaintiffs’ general replication thereto, and the answer of infant defendants by [250]*250their guardian ad litem to the said bill of review, and upon all depositions taken in said cause, and the exception to said depositions by the defendants, the court was of opinion to overrule the exception to said depositions, and was further of opinion and so decreed, that plaintiffs therein were not entitled to the relief prayed for, and that their said bill of review should be dismissed, with costs to defendants, other than the defendant Hugh G-. Mills.

By the decree on said amended and supplemental bill, the same motions made by plaintiffs and appellants in the first cause were renewed and overruled, the court being of opinion that the two causes on the said original bill of review, and on said amended and supplemental bill, should be heard and determined separately, and that the plaintiffs in the latter bill should be permitted to further prosecute the same as an original bill, but in no wise to be considered or treated as amendatory of and supplementary to said original bill of review.

Whereupon on the motion of the adult defendants, other than Hugh GL Mills, leave was given them to file their joint demurrer and answer thereto, which demurrer and answer was filed, with general replication of the plaintiffs thereto, and there was answer thereto also by the guardian ad litem for the infant defendants, with general replication by the plaintiffs thereto, and according to this decree the only other action of the court in said cause was, that a decision on the said demurrer be continued until a final hearing of the cause. Of course this was not a final decree, from which an appeal would lie, and the appeal from that decree will necessarily have to be dismissed as improvidently awarded, and it will be so ordered. • ■

The only questions presented for decision, therefore, are those which properly arise on the final decree in the first cause. First, did the court err in denying plaintiffs relief on their original bill of review? As already noted that bill was fully matured for hearing on bill, answer and proof. Were plaintiffs entitled to any relief on that bill, treated as a pure bill of review? We do not think they were.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.E. 351, 73 W. Va. 246, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclanahan-v-mills-wva-1913.