Patton v. Quarrier

18 W. Va. 447, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 50
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 W. Va. 447 (Patton v. Quarrier) 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
Patton v. Quarrier, 18 W. Va. 447, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 50 (W. Va. 1881).

Opinion

PattoN, Judge,

announced the opinion of the court:

On the 11th day of June, 1879, Ellen N. Rand and Noyes Rand conveyed to N. Ellen Patton, wife of O. A. Patton, to her sole and separate use a house and lot in the town of Charleston, West Yirginia; at the same time Patton and wife executed a deed of trust upon said house and lot to William A. Quarrier, trustee, to secure the balance of purchase-money — a portion, $600.00, having been paid in cash— represented by two notes of $800.00 each, payable in one and two years to the order of Ellen N. Rand. Before the sale of the house and lot to Mrs. Patton Mrs. Rand had executed a deed of trust to William A. Quarrier, trustee, upon the same property to secure the payment to J. Z. McChesney of a debt, which amounted as of the 24th day of August, 1880, to [449]*449the sum of $799,75, the debt due by Mrs. Rand to McChes-ney -and the first bond due by Mrs. Patton to Mrs. Rand not having been paid, William A. Quarrier on the 24th day of August, 1880, advertised the said house and lot, to be sold on the 23d day of October, 1880. On the 18th day of October, Patton and wife obtained an injunction to the sale of the property. This injunction was subsequently dissolved, and a motion was afterwards made to reinstate the injunction, which was refused.

' From the orders dissolving said injunction and refusing to reinstate the same, an appeal and supersedeas was allowed to this court.

There are three grounds alleged in the bill for relief. The first ground is, that when the complainant went to examine the lot, the day preceding the purchase, it was represented to him, that the fence then enclosing the said lot marked its boundaries, and that the fence then standing across the rear end of the lot was on the line ; that this representation was made by Noyes Rand, who was acting as the agent of Ellen N. Rand in the transaction, that subsequently this fence was moved in-feet and a portion of the land taken possession of by one Couch. It is sufficient to observe, that this allegation is denied in the answer; and no proof whatever is offered in support of it.

The second ground is, that there is other property liable to the satisfaction of the debt secured in the McChesney deed of trust, which should be sold before the property of the complainant. This is also denied in the answer, and no proof is offered in support of the allegation.

The third ground is, “ that when they purchased the said lot and house, they were informed by the said Noyes Rand, agent, &e., with whom the negotiation was carried on by complainant Patton, and believed, that no alley was provided for through and over the premises purchased by them as aforesaid, but your orators now are informed and charge, that the defendant Ellen N. Rand sold to divers persons, to-wit: D. C. Kline, Conch, Kenney, Ryan and other defendants named herein several lots adjoining the property purchased by complainants with the distinct agreement, that an alley for their convenience no léss than for the use of the public should be [450]*450provided for and opened over, in and through the lot subsequently purchased by complainants, who had been informed and believed, that no such rights had been purchased by the said defendants oyer and through the lot purchased by complainants.

“ Complainants allege, that they have been informed by the defendants or some of. them, that they purchased these lots by a map and plat, which distinctly provided for an alley of the width of twenty feet to be left open for the use and benefit of themselves and the public, and they inform complainants, that they are entitled to the said alley-way, and that they will insist upon the same, when they desire to use the same, orators say, that the map or plat, by which they purchased the said house and lot did not provide for such an alley or any alley or pass-way of any character whatsoever, but that they bought the land including the ground, where a portion of the defendants. claim they are entitled to such alley and pass-way as agreed upon between themselves and the defendant, Rand, before the purchase of complainants was made. Orators slate, that to open the said alley and pass-way as claimed by the defendant would be to them an irreparable injury and wrong; that it would be unjust and a fraud upon their rights as owners of the said house and lot; that it would compel the filling up of the well, which on account of its great depth could not be replaced upon the said premises without a very heavy outlay, to wit, $300.00; that it would require the tearing away of the rear portion of the residence of the complainants and the removal of the entire house many feet from its present location at a cost of a large sum of money, to wit, not less than $600.00, and would subject complainants to great inconvenience and annoyance, and destroy the said property in value to a very great amount, at the same time exposing them to a thoroughfare of the public in such proximity, as to render the house an unfit and in every way an undesirable place to live and reduce the value to one half of the amount agreed by complainants to pay for the same.”

I have given the third ground of relief stated in the bill in the language of the bill itself. The parties named in the bill as purchasers of lots adjoining the property purchased by Mrs. Patton and as claiming the right to the alley and pass-[451]*451way are made parties to the bill and were served with process, but did not appear and answer; and the bill was taken as confessed as to them. Ellen N. Rand, J. Z. McChesney and Noyes Rand answered the bill. Noyes Rand in his answer says :

“This respondent further says that in making sales of lots fronting Morris street, as this lot sold to complainants fronts, respondent provided for an alley in the rear of each lot twenty-one feet wide, except the Noyes lot, so that wagons and carts could be turned around, and it was never contemplated that the alley should run entirely through the property, because respondent expected to own and occupy this property sold the complainants, and did not desire an alley through, but only up to the side lines thereof on either side, coming in from Lee street on the north and Quarrier street on the south, and respondent says that no one save the complainants themselves has any right whatever to open an alley through the said property, and they will not have such right till the same is paid for ; and the very fact, as the bill alleges, that such an alley would destroy the well upon the property and ‘require the tearing away of the rear portion of the residence, and the removal of the entire house many feet from its present location, at a cost of a large sum of money/ &c., which in truth and in fact would be the effect, shows very plainly that no one could have contemplated the opening of such an alley, and respondent positively denies that any purchaser of any of the adjacent lots has any right under his deed or any map or from any source whatever to an alley through the lot sold by his mother, Mrs. Ellen N. Band, to the complainant, R. Ellen Patton.”

It appears from the evidence, that Ellen N. Rand sold to different persons several lots contiguous to the lot purchased by the complainant, R. Ellen Patton. Some of these lots, if not all of them, were purchased a number of years before the purchase of the Patton lot. Anna J. Ryan, the purchaser of one of these lots, states, that her deed was admitted to record in 1872.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 W. Va. 447, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-quarrier-wva-1881.