Nickell v. Tomlinson

27 W. Va. 697, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 52
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 27 W. Va. 697 (Nickell v. Tomlinson) 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
Nickell v. Tomlinson, 27 W. Va. 697, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 52 (W. Va. 1886).

Opinion

[698]*698Statement of the case by

G-iieeN, -Judge :

William Dunsmore, Sr., a resident of Monroe county, then in the State of Virginia now in the State of West Virginia, died in 1860 leaving a widow Sarah Dunsmore, who died in 1865 leaving four sons, William Dunsmore, Jr., Jacob II. Dunsmore, Charles Lewis Dunsmore and James Alexander Dunsmore, and three daughters, Eliza F. Vines, Catharine Tomlinson and Mary Couch, who died in 1881 intestate leaving six children her heirs, two of whom have since died intestate leaving children, and William Dunsmore, Jr., also died intestate in 1882 leaving six children his heirs, and Catharine Tomlinson, who is still living, having ten children and Eliza F. Vines, still living, having ten children. All of these parties now living are defendants in this cause as well as the personal representatives of the deceased parties and the husbands of said iemales and Mary C. Dunsmore, the widow of Jacob H. Dunsmore, who died intestate on March 17, 1882, leaving no children. Shortly before his death on March 9, 1860, William Dunsmore, Sr., made his will and after devising certain of his lands to James Alexander Dunsmore, one of his sons, he devised all the remainder of his lands including his wife’s third after her death to his son Jacob TI. Dunsmor’e and qualified his devise by adding thereto : If my son Jacob H. Dunsmore should die without having heirs, he shall divide the land between his sister’s heirs as he may think proper.”

On March 12, 1872, Jacob H. Dunsmore and Mary C. Dunsmore his wife conveyed with general warranty of title to Samuel W. Nickell, the plaintiff in this cause, and his heirs forever in consideration of $7,961.72 paid and to be paid, a tract of land containing 207 acres in Monroe county West Virginia described by metes and bounds, which he had agreed to purchase of Jacob IT. Dunsmore on May 10, 1871, and of this purchase-money at the time of the purchase he paid him $2,500.00 in cash, and when the said deed was made gave him his bond for $2,807.00 with interest from May 10, 1871, payable May 10, 1873, and he also for the residue of the purchase-money $2,658.74 with interest from May 10, 1871, gave his bond to Samuel A. Clark trustee for said Mary C. Dunsmore wife of Jacob H. Dunsmore payable [699]*699May 10, 1876. For these deferred payments the vendor’s lien was reserved in said deed, and they were afterwards in the lifetime of Jacob H. Dunsmore paid, and the proceeds of this bond payable to Samuel A. Clark, trustee of Mary C. Dunsmore, was invested in a tract of land for her sole and separate use. She refused to join in the said deed conveying said tract of 207 acres of land to Samuel W. Nickell and his heirs, till it was agreed, that the amount of the purchase-money above named, ($2,658.74,) was to be paid with interest as aforesaid to her for her sole and separate use. This 207 acre tract of land was the land, which was devised to Jacob H. Dunsmore by his father with the qualifications of the devise as above stated.

This deed of March 12, 1872, was duly acknowledged before a justice of Monroe county by both Jacob H. Dunsmore and his wife Mary G. Dunsmore, and such a certificate of this acknowledgment, as is required by our statute-law, was appended to the said deed; and on March 10, 1872, it was duly recorded.

When Jacob H. Dunsmore died, March 17, 1882, intestate and leaving no children, the children of his three sisters claimed, that they were entitled to this tract of land under the will of William Dunsmore, Sr., as it was as they claimed, so devised to Jacob H. Dunsmore, that he had in this tract of land but an estate in fee. defeasible upon his dying intestate without issue, and having failed to divide it among them as he was empowered to do, it went to them by law, one undivided third to the children of each of his sisters, whether these sisters were living or dead at the death of Jacob H. Dunsmore. Samuel H. Nickell, who had been in the possession of said tract of land, since he purchased it, claimed by virtue of the deed to have a fee simple absolute in this land and refused to give it up ; and thereupon said claimants in February, 1883, brought an action of ejectment against Samuel W. Nickell in the circuit court of Monroe county claiming said land in fee. The facts were agreed, and the case submitted to the court in lieu of a jury ; and on June 6,1883, the court rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in accordance with their claims, as above stated.

Samuel W. Nickell obtained a writ of error and supersedeas [700]*700to this judgment; and this Court on April 19, 1884, decided the case. (See 24 W. Va. 14. p. 148.) This Court was of opinion that by this will of William Dunsmore, Sr., Jacob iT. Dunsmore took in this tract of land an estate in fee simple defeasible upon bis dying without children, and that the authority was given him, if he so died without children, to divide this land among his sisters’ heirs, as he might think proper ; and that, as he had failed to exercise this power, one undivided third part of this tract went to the heirs of his deceased sister Mary Couch, and the remaining undivided two thirds of this tract of land went to the heirs of the testator William II. Dunsmore, Sr., being undisposed of by the will under the events, which had happened, till the death of Catharine Tomlinson and Eliza F. Vines the other sisters of Jacob Ii. Dunsmore, and that these undivided two thirds of said tract of land the heirs of William Dunsmore. Sr., held, until the death of said Catharine Tomlinson or Eliza F. Vines, when one undivided third thereof would go in fee simple to the heirs of the sister first dying, and the other undivided third would be held by the heirs of said William Dunsmore, Sr., till the death of the survivor of these two sisters, and then the remaining undivided third would go to the heirs of said surviving sister in fee simple. The judgment of the court below was therefore reversed, and this Court would have rendered a judgment in accordance with these views against the defendant Samuel W. Nickell, except that the facts agreed did not show definitely, who were the children and heirs of Eliza F. Vines the deceased sister. The case was therefore remanded to the circuit court of Monroe county, and it, I presume, promptly rendered a judgment in accordance with the views of this Court.

Being thus ousted from this tract Samuel W. Nickell brought this chancery suit in the' circuit court of Monroe county against all of said parties, who under said opinion of this Oom't in this ejectment suit (see 24 W. Va., p. 148,) had title to said tract of land including the husbands of the females and the personal representatives of such as'were dead and Mary C. Dunsmore, the widow of Jacob H. Dunsmore. After setting out their title to said tract of land and filing witli his bill as exhibits a copy of said will of William Duns-[701]*701more, Sr., and oí the deed ot Jacob H. Dunsmore and Mary C. Dunsmore, his wife, of date March 12, 1872, conveying safd land to him in fee and the certificates of the proper acknowledgment and recordation of said deed by the husband and wife and substantially the material facts above stated, his bill proceeds and concludes as follows:

“This plaintiff further states that by virtue of said deed from Jacob H. Dunsmore and M. C. Dunsmore, his wife, he became the owner of said real estate during the lifetime of said Jacob H. Dunsmore, and also after his death by virtue of said deed said M. 0.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People Ex Rel. Hargrave v. Phillips
67 N.E.2d 281 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1946)
Crookshanks v. Ransbarger
92 S.E. 78 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1917)
Sheffield v. Cooke
98 A. 161 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1916)
Couch v. Eastham
73 S.E. 314 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1911)
Headley v. Colonial Oil Co.
69 S.E. 296 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1910)
Reynolds v. Whitescarver
66 S.E. 518 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1909)
Vann v. Edwards.
67 L.R.A. 461 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1904)
Hull's Adm'r v. Hull's Heirs
13 S.E. 49 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1891)
Burt v. Timmons
2 S.E. 780 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1887)
Davis' Widow v. Davis' Creditors
25 Va. 587 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1874)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 W. Va. 697, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickell-v-tomlinson-wva-1886.