Parrish v. Pancake

215 S.E.2d 659, 158 W. Va. 842, 1975 W. Va. LEXIS 284
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1975
Docket13500
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 215 S.E.2d 659 (Parrish v. Pancake) 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
Parrish v. Pancake, 215 S.E.2d 659, 158 W. Va. 842, 1975 W. Va. LEXIS 284 (W. Va. 1975).

Opinion

Neely, Justice:

This appeal was granted in order to determine whether valid delivery of a deed occurred in a transaction allegedly conveying to the grantee a perpetual right of way across the property of the grantor. The Circuit Court of Mineral County found that, although the delivery of the deed was invalid as a matter of law, there existed an intention on the part of the plaintiff-grantor to convey an easement for life to the defendant-grantee and, therefore, the circuit court reformed the instrument to conform to its findings. As this Court finds that the delivery of the deed was valid and that there were no patent ambiguities in the written instrument which would warrant judicial construction, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed.

On March 12, 1969, one of the appellees, Lorin R. Car-nell, conveyed a permanent easement for a right of way *844 to the defendant below and appellant, Lucy Pancake, her heirs and assigns, forever. 1 The easement consisted *845 of a fourteen foot right of way for all types of travel over certain real estate owned by Lorin R. Carnell in fee simple and located on the west side of U. S. Route 50 in Mineral County, West Virginia. The easement was to be a privilege appurtenant to Lucy Pancake’s land to provide a means of entrance and exit to and from her land. The deed contained a description of the right of way by *846 metes and bounds which was prepared by a licensed surveyor. Lorin R. Carnell executed the deed; however, it was not executed by his wife, appellee Katherine L. Carnell, who was named as a grantor in the deed but whose sole interest in the real estate was an inchoate dower interest. It is this failure of execution by Mrs. Carnell upon which the circuit court relied in holding that the delivery of the deed was invalid. The deed in question was acknowledged April 7, 1969, and recorded in the Office of the Clerk of the County Court of Mineral County, West Virginia, on May 2, 1969.

Seven months later appellees Lorin R. Carnell and Katherine L. Carnell, conveyed to appellees Harold W. Parrish and Aliene R. Parrish for fifty-five thousand dollars ($55,000) all the real estate which they owned lying on the westerly side of U. S. Route 50 in Mineral County. The land conveyed by the Carnells to the Par-rishes was subject to the easement; however, the deed from the Carnells to the Parrishes did not mention the easement nor did it except or reverse the easement from the conveyance. Approximately two years after execution of the deed from the Carnells to the Parrishes, the Carnells and Parrishes together instituted this civil action against Lucy Pancake to have the deed conveying the easement from Lorin Carnell to Lucy Pancake declared void.

In a pretrial order the Circuit Court of Mineral County held that because of the missing signature of Kather *847 ine L. Carnell the deed granting the easement was incomplete on delivery and, therefore, parol evidence concerning its effect and intent would be admissible. The case was referred to a commissioner of the circuit court who found that (1) the consideration for the granting of the easement was a forbearance by Pancake to demand payment for timber which had been inadvertently cut from her land by Carnell; (2) Carnell did intend to grant a right of way to Pancake; (3) there was no evidence of fraud, deceit, or mistake in the transaction; and (4) the recordation of the deed of Pancake five months before the purchase by the Parrishes served as constructive notice of the right of way and, therefore, the Parrishes were bound by the instrument.

The circuit court overruled the commissioner’s findings and held that the circumstantial evidence showed no intent on the part of Lorin Carnell to convey a permanent right of way, and further held that the deed has not been validly delivered. The circuit court apparently based its conclusion on testimony by Lorin Carnell that he did not intend for the deed to become effective because he knew that his wife would refuse to sign it. Furthermore, the circuit court relied on evidence that the wife’s name was in the granting clause, that a line was provided at the end of the deed for her signature, and that the acknowledgment was originally written to include her as a party to the deed, although Donald C. Hott, Pancake’s attorney, struck her name from the acknowledgment clause when he finally signed it as a notary.

I

The correct rule for this Court’s evaluation of evidence in a case originally heard by a commissioner is set forth in syllabus point 3 of Fanti v. Welsh, 152 W. Va. 233, 161 S.E.2d 501 (1968) which says:

“Where questions of fact are referred to and passed upon by a commissioner, and the findings of the commissioner are overruled and disaf-firmed by the circuit court, the appellate court *848 must determine for itself, from the facts and circumstances disclosed by the record, whether it will sustain the conclusion of the commissioner or that of the circuit court.”

The findings of the commissioner in chancery, on questions of fact, should generally be sustained, unless plainly not warranted by any reasonable view of the evidence, Snyder v. Lane, 141 W. Va. 195, 89 S.E.2d 607 (1955). In the case at bar this Court finds that the clear weight of the evidence sustains the commissioner’s conclusion that there was an intent on the part of Lorin Carnell to convey an easement to Lucy Pancake, and that there was valid consideration in the forbearance by Pancake to collect the fair market value of timber cut by Lorin Carnell from her property. The testimony of Lucy Pancake, Alma Becker, her daughter, Frank Pancake, her brother-in-law, Donald C. Hott, her attorney, and Larry Kitzmiller, a licensed surveyor, sustained the appellant’s contention that Lorin Carnell agreed to convey the easement in return for the timber. The weight of the evidence also shows that Lucy Pancake relied upon this agreement and incurred the expense of having the easement surveyed and expended additional monies in purchasing an easement over the property of one Vaughn Amtower in order to connect the easement across the Carnells’ land with the public highway, and that Mr. Carnell signed the deed in question knowing that it conveyed the easement to which the parties had agreed. The only evidence supporting the appellees’ allegation of non-delivery is Lorin Carnell’s testimony that he forgot his glasses the day that he signed the deed and that, consequently, he did not read the instrument and did not intend the deed to become effective because his wife would be unwilling to sign it.

II

The threshold issue concerns the effect of multiple grantors when less than all sign the deed. To resolve that issue requires reckoning with two confusing and at first blush, apparently contradictory holdings of this Court. In Adams v. Medsker, 25 W. Va. 127 (1884) one *849

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 S.E.2d 659, 158 W. Va. 842, 1975 W. Va. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parrish-v-pancake-wva-1975.