Palmer v. Lansburgh

102 F. 376, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5215

This text of 102 F. 376 (Palmer v. Lansburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Lansburgh, 102 F. 376, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5215 (circtdwv 1900).

Opinion

JACKSON, District Judge.

This is a bill filed by the plaintiffs to remove a cloud upon the title of the testator to 15,000 acres of land lying and being on Panther creek, and the waters thereof, in the county of McDowell and state of West Virginia, conveyed to John Handley in his lifetime by E. C. Fuller and wife and by Edward L. Fuller and wife, by deeds bearing date April 22, 1886; and it ist alleged that the Fullers derived title through various intermediate deeds from Minard W. Wilson, and that they also claimed that Wilson derived title from one James W. Everette. It appears that John Handley departed this life on the-day of-, 18 — , in the state of Pennsylvania, having first made his will, which was duly probated in the state of Pennsylvania, an authenticated copy of which was recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court of McDowell county, W. Va.; that up to the death of the said Handley he was in the actual possession of the 15,000 acres of land under his deeds therefor, and that his executors, since his death, have continued in the actual, exclusive, continuous, notorious, uninterrupted, adverse, and peaceable possession of the said 15,000 acres for more than 15 years prior to the institution of this action. It is further alleged that a deed made by P. R. Spracher, commissioner of the circuit court of Tazewell county, Va., conveying 50,000 acres of land to [377]*377Mas Lansburgh, which, it is alleged, covers the land in controversy, “is illegal, but not void, but gives color of title to the said Lans-burgh.” The plaintiffs also introduce a deed from James W. Everette to Wilson, as a part of the chain of title that they rely upon, but there is no allegation in the bill which tends to connect the title of Everette with the commonwealth; and the deed under which Everette claimed was held by the circuit court of McDowell county to be a forgery, and by a decree of that court was canceled and annulled, thus destroying the chain of title derived through Everette. The other allegations of the bill it is not deemed material to notice. The plaintiffs must rest upon their bill, and the chain of title which they have set out therein and rely upon. Their title commences with one E. L. Fuller1, who, it is alleged, was the owner of the tract of land in controversy, and in the year 1888 placed W. Taylor Fayne and other tenants in possession of this land or certain portions thereof. Jn 1883 Fuller sold and conveyed this tract of land to John Handley, who recognized the possession of the tenants that Fuller claimed he had placed on the land before he sold it to Handley. The defendant, in his answer, claims a regular chain of title from the commonwealth of Virginia, by patents issued to Robert Morris on March 4, 1795, for 320,008 acres, and March 23, ,1795, for 480,000 acres, and that by mesne conveyances he holds a regular chain of title from the patentee down to himself. . The only question in this case is one of an adverse possession under color of title claimed by Handley’s executors to have been derived from the two Fullers.

Daniel H. Harman testifies that Taylor Payne, Henry Allen, and James L. Payne were placed in possession of the 15,000 acres in 1880 or 1881 by the agent of Fuller, who conveyed this land to Handley, and that the same parties were placed in possession of the land by John Handley in the year 1884. This deposition of Harman was taken on the 10th day of January, 1899, and he testifies, that he “saw Handley in this country about six or seven or eight years” before the taking of the deposition. Harman states that Tayior Payne, Henry Allen, and James Payne were living and remained on the land from 1881 or 1882 to 1893, and that they first claimed under Fuller, and afterwards under Handley. He also testifies that he was agent for Handley, had frequent communications with him by letter, and paid taxes for him on the land. D. H. Harman, Jr., testifies that he knew Taylor Payne and James L. Payne, and that they both lived on the 15,000 acres claimed by Fuller; that Taylor Payne told him he lived there under John Handley, and that Taylor Payne had cleared “quite a good lot of land, — fifteen or twenty acres”; and that he was living there when he (the witness) made the survey of the 15,000 acres with D. H. Harman, Sr. W. Taylor Payne states that he purchased the land where he resides from James L. Payne about 9 or 10 years prior to March 1,1892, as appears by his affidavit of that date. He denies in that affidavit that he ever held this land, or any other land, under either Fuller, Handley, Lansburgh, or any other party, since he purchased it. This claim of title upon the part of Payne to the land which he purchased, and upon which he lived, was an assertion of his own right to the land, and a disavowal of any other claim of title, [378]*378either under Handley or Fuller, and overthrows the stateiuent of Ha;man that Payne ever held possession of that land under Fuller or Handley. The court treats this affidavit as the declarations of a man, who lived upon the land át the time, as to how he claimed it. Harman’s evidence does not disclose any agreement, either verbal or in writing, between Fuller and Payne, whereby Payne agreed to become the tenant of Fuller. His evidence does not show that there was any agreement for a specific time, nor the boundaries of the land that he was to- hold, and the most that can be said of it is that it was a declaration upon the part of Payne that he would become his agent. It must be apparent to every one that, if Fuller understood that Payne was to be his tenant for the purpose of holding the land, there would have been a term of years agreed upon, and that the boundaries of the tract of land that he was to hold should have been stated in the agreement, so as to locate the land that Fuller laid claim to. The statement of Harman, contradicted as it is by Taylor Payne, is unsatisfactory. It does not of itself disclose such a possession as the law defines to be an adverse possession. James L. Payne, according to his evidence, had lived upon the land for upwards of 20 years, at the time of the taking- of his deposition, as-a roving squatter; having lived at three different places upon the land. He states that some 17 or 18 years before January 10, 1899 (the time of the taking of his deposition), a man by. the name of Silkman came along, claiming to represent Fuller, before Fuller had sold to Hand-ley, and that Silkman told him to remain upon the land, "to cut where he pleased, and build where he pleased, and to hold possession for him.” This is what Harman refers to when he states that Fuller placed James L. Payne upon the land. Payne did not remain at the point he was living when Silkman told him to remain there and hold possession for him, nor does he state that he agreed to remain there as a tenant of Fuller. He left the place where he and Silkman had this conversation, and went to other places, which he supposes were on the 15,000-acre tract; but on cross-examination he admits that he does not know where the boundaries of the 1-5,000-acre tract are, and that the other places he moved to had' been occupied by parties who were squatters, whose rights he purchased, and who were not claiming under anybody but i aemselves. His evidence is very unsatisfactory, but if he had taken possession under Silkman, as the agent of Fuller, that possession was interrupted and broken when he left the place upon which he was then living, and went to other places. It is to be observed that his testimony merely says that Fuller told him “to hold possession for him,” and to “cut where he pleased and build where he pleased.” There was no understanding between them as to the terms upon which he Avas to hold possession of the land for him, nor the time that he was to hold it.

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Bluebook (online)
102 F. 376, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-lansburgh-circtdwv-1900.