Moore v. Harper

27 W. Va. 362, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 20
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 27 W. Va. 362 (Moore v. Harper) 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
Moore v. Harper, 27 W. Va. 362, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 20 (W. Va. 1886).

Opinion

Smyder, Judge :

Henry Harper of Pocahontas county made his last will dated February 25, 1856, by which he disposed of all his real [363]*363and personal property.' He was then the owner of valuable improved lands for a considerable distance along the bottom or valley of Knapp’s creek, and also of a large quantity of unimproved mountain land of little value adjoining his improved land and extending along the side of it and for some distance north and beyond his creek land. He devised all his creek or improved land to his sons by dividing it into sections by lines across the bottom. His son-in-law, A. W. Moore was at that time the owner of a section of bottom land on said creek above the land of the testator, and Preston Moore and F. Deve.r owned sections between thelands of said Moore and the testator, Hever’s land being next and adjoining the testator’s on the north side. Of the said mountain land the testator devised to Peter and Rachel Ann, the children of his deceased son Henry, all that part lying along the border of their creek land, that is, “ so much as may be included by and within straight lines run' from the lower and upper ends of the place to the top of the little mountain — Alleghaney side.” The will then proceeds as follows: “ 7. And all above that devised to said Peter and Rachel Ann up to Hever’s line I give and devise to my son Samuel.”

“ 8, And all of said lands above Hever’s, being about 500 acres, I will and devise to my son-in-law, Washington Moore and his heirs.”

In regard to this mountain land, he says in the twelfth clause ol his will, that it contains some 20,000 acres, of which he owns three fifths, Lightner one fifth and Cleelc one fifth; that in the partition it is understood he is to have his interest laid off in the rear of his creek lands, and that he has devised the same to his sons and son-in-law in rear of the creek lands devised to them respectively. In the next, the thirteenth clause, ho says: “ This leaves my Alleghaney mountain lands above the ‘Moore’s Sugar Camp Run’ and my Meadow creek land undisposed of. Should I sell them, they will become personal assets and be embraced by the foregoing claims. It I fail to do so, then I direct my executors to sell the same, and after my daughters are equalized as aforesaid, I direct the proceeds, or the balance after making them equal, to be divided among all my said daughters.”

By the fourteenth clause he appoints his son Samuel and [364]*364his son-in-law Washington Moore his executors; and the fiiteenth and last clause is as follows :

‘‘ 15. And should any difficulty occur in the construction of this will or among the legatees or devisees herein enumerated in relation to it, it is my will that said question be submitted to William Skeen, whose written opinion shall be final between them, or if from death or removal said Skeen’s opinion can not be had, I authorize the circuit judgé to appoint three persons as arbitrators, whose opinion shall be final of any or all such questions, as I desire that no suits shall grow out of the distribution of the little property it has pleased God to intrust to my care and disposal.”

Shortly after the date of the will and before the testator’s death, the mountain land was partitioned and he couveyed two fifths thereof to Lightner and Cleek retaining his three fifths next to his creek lands, the legal title to the whole prior to said ■ partition and conveyance being in the testator.

Some of the parties differing as to their rights under the will which had been admitted to probate in January, 1858, William Skeen, under the authority vested in him by the fifteenth clause, filed a written opinion, dated March 10, 1860, in which, among other matters not nowin controversy, he says : “ That by the testator’s will he intended to and did dispose of all his Alleghaney mountain lands and under the will the executors therefore have no power to sell any except those lying above the ‘ Moore’s Sugar Gamp Run.’ They are designated ©n the accompanying plat and contain 1,654 acres, divided in order to a sale into two lots of 821 and 833 acres.” In this opinion Skeen waived any decision as to the division line between Samuel Harper and Washington Moore. In a subsequent written opinion dated October 25, 1875, he made the following decision in reierence to said division line :

“By item 12 of testator’s will, speaking of his Alleghany mountain lands, he says: H have devised the same to my sons in the rear of the creek lands devised to them, so also to my grandchildren in rear of that conveyed their father and to my son-in-law in rear of his own lands.’ This ought to settle the matter in dispute. But he makes the matter still plainer: Bv item 8 of will he says: ‘And all of said laud above Dever’s, being about 500 aeres, I will and his [365]*365devise to my son-in-law Washington Moore and heirs,’ &c. What did he mean by the phrase ‘ above Dever’s ?’ By item 7 he provides that, ‘and ail above that devised to said Peter and Rachel Ann up to Dever’s line I give and devise to my son Samuel.’ ”

By the phrase ‘above Dover’s’ testator meant above De-ver’s upper line, where Andrew W. Moore’s lower line joins Dever’s, and that all the lands in the rear-of Andrew W. Moore’s creek land above Dever’s should go to said Moore and his heirs. Samuel Harper, therefore, under the will, takes all the Alleghany mountain lands from the upper line of the lands willed to Peter and Rachel Ann Harper to the upper line of Dever and Andrew W. Moore the lands above the Dever line not sold under my opinion of March 10, 1860, whether there be 500 or 5,000 acres, for all is devised him above the Dever line and in the rear of his own lands.”

The executors sold the aforesaid 1,654 acres of land lying above “Moore’s Sugar Camp Run.”

On March 21, 1882, A. W. Moore, the same person who is designated as Washington Moore in the will aforesaid, brought this suit in the circuit court of Pocahontas county against the executors and all the devisees and legatees of Henry Harper, deceased. The plaintiff’s bill is rather confused and uncertain in its allegations, so much so that it is very difficult to determine from its allegations alone the real objects and purpose of the suit. After stating the contents of the will and the names of the parties and their respective interests, the bill avers that the testator devised to the plaintiff the lands designated in the 8th clause of his will and further described in the 12th clause as the land “in rear of his own lands,” that in regard to the plaintiff’s right to these lands there should be no dispute, but owing to the grasping disposition of the defendant, -Samuel Harper, who, having already secured to himself the lion’s share of his father’s estate, has “persuaded himself that his brother-in-law, the plaintiff, is entitled to little or nothing, and has therefore pretended to claim the lauds formerly belonging to Henry Harper lying in rear of the lands of the pffaintiff, which the plaintiff: is advised belonged to himself, whether the boundary be 500 or 5,000 acres.”

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Bluebook (online)
27 W. Va. 362, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-harper-wva-1886.