Norfolk & W. R. v. Perdue

21 S.E. 755, 40 W. Va. 442, 1895 W. Va. LEXIS 32
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 755 (Norfolk & W. R. v. Perdue) 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
Norfolk & W. R. v. Perdue, 21 S.E. 755, 40 W. Va. 442, 1895 W. Va. LEXIS 32 (W. Va. 1895).

Opinion

English, Judge:

On the 2d day of December, 4892, the Norfolk & Western Railway Company presented to the Circuit Court of Mercer county in open court its bill praying for an injunction to restrain the defendant, George W. Perdue, from prosecuting certain actions of law mentioned in said bill, and from instituting any future actions against the plaintiff on account of the matters set up in said bill, which injunction was awarded.

The material facts alleged and relied upon by the plaintiff in said bill are: That it was a consolidated corporation doing business in said county of Mercer pursuant to the laws of the state of West Virginia, and was the owner and operator of a certain railroad which runs through said county, part of Avhich runs through 'a tunnel known as “Plat Top Tunnel.” That on the 7th day of January, 1887, it entered into a contract in writing with the Plat Top Goal Company by which the latter agreed and bound itself to convey to plaintiff a strip of land two hundred and twenty feet in width, and extending the entire length of said tunnel, one half thereof to be 'on each side of the center line of said railroad or tunnel; the obect in acquiring said strip being to construct a tunnel through which to locate its railroad, which was well known to both parties to the contract. That at the time said contract was entered into the land in controversy belonged in fee' simple to the Bluestone Coal Company, and that on the 12th day of April, 1889, the said Blue Stone Coal Company conveyed, by deed of that date, to the plaintiff, the said strip of land through which the said tunnel now runs, and that on the 25th Iday of February, 1890, E. W. Clark and others, trustees, who were grantees of the said Blue Stone Coal Company, again conveyed the said strip or parcel of land to the plaintiff; and in this manner the plaintiff became the owner in fee simple of said strip of land. That soon after obtaining the contract aforesaid, by [445]*445■which it acquired said strip of land, it began tbe construction of its tunnel through the said strip of land, and prosecuted the said work, at a cost of many thousand dollars, until it was completed, early in the year 1888, and constructed therein its railroad, over which it began running its trains in the early part of the year 1888. That part of the excavation'of said tunnel was through a vein of bituminous8 coal, which was taken out by plaintiff, but the cost of the said tunnel was many thousands of dollars more than the value of the coal taken out of same. That on the 21st day of February, 1890, the defendant, George W. Perdue, in-stitutedintheCircuit Court of Mercer county, West Virginia, against the plaintiff, an action of trespass on the case, in which he set up claim to thirty four and thirty five one-hundredths acres through which the said tunnel is located and constructed, claiming ten thousand dollars damages on account of injury to the said tract of land claimed by him as aforesaid, and for excavating and removing the coal from the same in the construction of the said tunnel, which action is still pending and undetermined in said court, the papers in which cause are exhibited. That on the 25th day of March, 1891, the defendant, George W. Perdue, instituted another action of trespass on the case against the plaintiff, in which he claims one thousand dollars damages on account of the construction of the tunnel through the said thirty four and thirty five one-hundredths acres of land, and the construction and operation of the said railroad therein, which action is still pending and undetermined, and the record in which action is also exhibited with plaintiff’s bill. That said George W. Perdue is prosecuting the said actions, and declares his intention to 'prosecute them to a final judgment. That the plaintiff is informed and believes that the said Perdue will bring other actions, and continue to harass the plaintiff with repeated actions, on account of his pretended claim to said thirty four and thirty five one-hundredths acres of land, and in regard to the same subject-matter involved in the first aforesaid action, unless he is restrained from so doing by a court of equity. That plaintiff is involved in a multiplicity of suits, and will con[446]*446tinue to be harassed with a multiplicity of suits, on account of the pretended claim of the said thirty four and thirty five one-hundredths acres, which embraces part of the said tunnel, unless the title of the plaintiff to its said strip of land is quieted by a court of equity, and the said Perdue restrained from setting up further claim to it. That the claim of said Perdue to that part of said thirty four and thirty five one-hundredths acres of land which covers part of its said strip of two hundred and twenty feet through which the said tunnel is located is a cloud on the title of the plaintiff. That the said Perdue does not own the said land, or any part of the strip of land, belonging to the plaintiff as aforesaid, and that the claim of said Perdue should in equity be set aside as a cloud upon the title of the plaintiff. That the said Perdue knew when the plaintiff acquired title to the said land, and soon after the plaintiff began the work of constructing the said tunnel, and taking out the said coal, the said Perdue began work for the contractors who were carrying on the said work for plaintiff, and aided them in the construction of the said tunnel, and continued to aid in the construction of the same, for wages to be paid to him by said contractors, until the completion of the said tunnel. That notwithstanding the full and complete knowledge of the said Perdue of the claim of the plaintiff to said land, of the immense amount of money it was spending in the construction of the said tunnel and the railroad therein, he stood by and saw the work proceed till its completion and made no objection whatever to it, and gave to the plaintiff no notice whatever of his claim to the said land, and that the said George W. Perdue is estopped from setting up claim to any part of said strip of land belonging to plaintiff as aforesaid. That the conduct of said Perdue in keeping silent under the circumstances was a fraud upon the plaintiff, which will estop him from setting up claim to any part of the land of the plaintiff. That plaintiff had no notice whatever of the said Perdue’s claim to the land purchased by it as aforesaid through which the said tunnel is located, or any part thereof, until after the completion of the said tunnel and railroad therein; its first notice of said claim [447]*447■being but a short time before the instituion 'of said first .action by said Perdue aginst plaintiff. That plaintiff has been in the complete and full possession of its said land, and •every part' thereof, continuously ever since the beginning •of the construction of the said tunnel, is now in the possession of the same, and entered into the possession thereof peaceably, quietly, with the full knowledge "of the said Per-due, and without any objection by him. That said George W. Perdue asserts his claim to said land under a deed from ■one Zachariqh Perdue; that said deed is a cloud on plaintiff’s title; that it is invalid, so far as conveying title is concerned, and that it should be set aside as a cloud on plaintiff’s title.

An injunction was prayed for enjoining and restraining said George W.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 755, 40 W. Va. 442, 1895 W. Va. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-w-r-v-perdue-wva-1895.