Pocahontas Coal & Coke Co. v. Bower

163 S.E. 421, 111 W. Va. 712, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 74
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1932
Docket7096
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 163 S.E. 421 (Pocahontas Coal & Coke Co. v. Bower) 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
Pocahontas Coal & Coke Co. v. Bower, 163 S.E. 421, 111 W. Va. 712, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 74 (W. Va. 1932).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

This is a suit to cancel certain deeds as clouds on plaintiff’s title. The circuit court, though expressing an opinion that the lines and corners contended for by the plaintiff are correct, dismissed the bill, without prejudice, because it was of opinion that there is presented an issue of fact depending upon conflicting testimony; that such issues are properly determinable only in an action of ejectment; that the plaintiff, not alleging and proving possession, cannot maintain this chancery suit; and that Chapter 36 of the Acts of the Legislature of 1929 (Code 1931, 51-2-2) authorizing suits in equity to remove clouds without requiring allegation or proof of actual possession, is unconstitutional and void.

Defendant Wiley Bower made no appearance to the bill.

Of the several tracts of land which enter into the consideration of this case, the most northerly is the Wiley Phillips patent of 75 acres which lies in an elongated and irregular shape on both sides of Guyandot Eiver, the general course of which at this point is from east to west; contiguous to the southern boundary of said tract is a tract of 76 acres known as School Section No. 113, which extends, generally speaking, in a long narrow strip east and west; adjoining said school section on the south is School Section No. 266 containing about 400 acres. Through -mesne conveyances plaintiff claims title in fee to the 76 acre tract under a deed therefor made by Wiley Phillips and wife to Clark and others, trustees, July 27, 1886. Fifteen acres of the southwestern portion of the said patent tract, adjoining School Section No. 113 on the *714 north, was conveyed by Wiley Phillips and wife to G. W. Day & Company, May 20, 1887. In 1890 this was conveyed to defendants R. L. Bower and Wiley Bower. Plaintiff also owns School Section No. 266.

In 1929 the defendants exchanged deeds between themselves partitioning the said 15 acre parcel, with ontside boundaries as claimed by them. They claim about 35 acres instead of 15. The lower portion of their claim, that part which was assigned to R. L. Bower in the partition, is asserted by the plaintiff to lie almost entirely within School Section No. 113, and a small part in School Section No. 266. The northern portion, assigned to Wiley Bower, is asserted by plaintiff to overlap in small measure the said School Section No. 113. It is for the purpose of cancelling the said partition deeds as clouds upon its title that the plaintiff has instituted this suit.

The beginning corner and the first two calls of the patent are as follows: "Beginning at two wild cherry trees, a walnut and six buckeyes on the bank of said fork at the lower end of the bottom below Joe’s branch Thence S. 20 E. 48 poles to two sugar toes and beech on the foot of a hill S. 65 E. 98 poles to- three magnolias on a hill side above said branch * * *. ’ ’ The said School Section No. 113 has the same beginning corner, and the last two lines of the said school section are the same as the first two lines of the patent, reversed. In the said deed from Wiley Phillips and wife to Day & Company, May 20, 1887, the beginning corner and the first two lines of the 15 acre tract are as follows: "Beginning on two wild cherries a walnut and six buckeyes on the bank of said river, at the lower end of the bottom below the mouth of Joe’s Branch (South side of said Guyandot River) S. 20 E. 48 poles to a sugar tree and birch on the foot of hill S. 65 E. 98 poles to' three Magnolias on a hill above said branch * *

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the said two lines not only form the southwestern boundary of the 15 acre parcel, but that said lines to the full extent of the first one and to the extent of the length of the second are coincident with the first two lines of the patent and the last two lines of *715 School Section No. 133; that with the lines thus defined there can be no question that the Bower 15-acre parcel lies entirely without School Section No. 113.

The location of the above mentioned beginning corner of the several tracts is definite. To sustain their above stated contention, the defendants, instead of running their first line S. 23 B. 48 poles to a sugar and beech as called for in their said deed from G. W. Day and others (being two sugars and a beech in the patent), ran the said line S. 26° 50" W. 45-6/10 poles to two beeches and a sugar, and their second line, instead of running S. 65 E. 98 poles as called for in their said deed, they ran S. 47° 52" E. 131-8/10 poles. It will be noted that the first line now claimed varies from the first line of the. deed and the patent about 46°, and that the second varies about 12°. When the surveyor who ran the lines for the defendants was asked on cross-examination why he did not run the first line on the original bearing, he answered: ‘ ‘ I was governed by a report of a surveyor prior to my work, of that bearing going to this beech and sugars. ’ ’ When asked who was that surveyor, he said: “I don’t know him. * * * I was only furnished the paper. ’ ’ When interrogated as to why he did not run that line on the original bearing, he said: “I was only asked by Mr. Bowers to run these outside lines as shown on the map. ’ ’ By employing the two lines as thus run, the defendants are enabled to account for the entire 35 acres which they claim, though in so doing they overlap a large portion of School Section No. 113 and a small portion of School Section No. 266.

The defendant’s justification for running these two lines in the manner indicated is, first, that in 1884, and again about 1894, Wiley Phillips pointed out these two lines and the corners to which they run as the proper boundaries on the southwest of the Wiley Phillips patent, and, second that the defendants and their predecessors have been in possession of the said land, as bounded on the southwest by the two lines claimed by defendants, for about forty years. Whatever Wiley Phillips may have pointed out and said with reference to those lines and the comers to which they run, the rights of the parties can in no wise be affected thereby in the face *716 of bis above mentioned deed of May 20, 1887, to G. W. Day & Company for tbe 15 acre tract. He therein definitely defined these lines. His inconsistent statements either prior to or subsequent to the execution of that deed cannot of course overthrow his solemn instrument.

Now as to possession. There is evidence on behalf of defendants of their use and occupancy of the land up to the two southwest lines as claimed by them; that it was partly cleared and crops grown thereon; that they fenced it along a portion of said lines and maintained said fences for many years. But giving this testimony a consideration most favorable to the contention of the defendants, we are unable to perceive on what basis they can successfully assert that they had uninterrupted possession for the period of ten years necessary to ripen a claim based on such possession.

Wiley Bower did not occupy the land himself at all. Robert L. Bower testifies that he did not live on this land which is now claimed by defendants but that he lived just above it on Guyandot River at the mouth of Long Branch; and says further with reference to the land in dispute: “I cleared it, I reckon, in 1894 and cultivated it until the time I left in 1903.” Defendants do not undertake to show that they have been in possession subsequent to 1904.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.E. 421, 111 W. Va. 712, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pocahontas-coal-coke-co-v-bower-wva-1932.