Prickett v. Frum

132 S.E. 501, 101 W. Va. 217, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 167
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1926
DocketNo. 5321.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 501 (Prickett v. Frum) 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
Prickett v. Frum, 132 S.E. 501, 101 W. Va. 217, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 167 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

*219 Lively, Judge :

On a directed verdict ■ judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff below, Ida M. Prickett, against Cornelius B. Frum, defendant below, by which she recovered possession in fee simple from defendant a small tract of land containing 4 acres and 95 rods lying in "Winfield District of Marion County, adjoining the lands of J. M. Holmes and others. The judgment was entered March 24, 1924, and Frum prosecutes error.

Plaintiff obtained title to the tract from H. C. DeShields and wife by deed dated October 27, 1909, and connected her title by various deeds with a grant of 400 acres from the Commonwealth of Virginia to Jacob Prickett, Jr., dated June 27, 1796. Defendant says that the chain of title thus sought to be established is not complete because it was not shown by competent evidence that the deeds conveying to one Richard Prickett, a son of Jacob Prickett, Jr., the tract of land of which Jacob Prickett, Jr. died seized, were in fact made by the other heirs of Jacob Prickett, Jr. It appears that Richard Prickett obtained deeds for the land from Jonah and Jacob Prickett, Jacob P. Cumpton.and others (heirs of Sarah Curnp-ton nee Prickett), Peter Dragoo and others, "William Wyatt and wife, Abraham Prickett and wife and deeds from others conveying to him all their interest in the real estate of Jacob Prickett, Jr., deceased, which deeds were duly recorded prior to the year 1852. Were these "grantors of Richard Prickett all of the heirs of Jacob, Jr. ? To prove that they were, plaintiff introduced J. M. Prickett, a great grandson of Jacob, and a grandson of Richard, who stated that they were all the heirs of Jacob Jr., basing that assertion upon information obtained by him from the records of the Prickett people, the family papers, and from what had been told him by the “old people”. He says he had prepared a genealogy of the Prickett family, working at it over a period of four or five years prior to the date of the trial. The objection to his testimony is that he was incompetent and that his evidence was hearsay. While it is admitted that evidence of pedigree is an exception to the hearsay rule (see 2 Wigmore Evidence Sec. 1486), the criticism is that the witness did not have proper sources of information, and produced no records of the family history. He *220 relied mainly on a writing which had been prepared by a deceased uncle. "VVe think the evidence was admissible, that the witness was competent to testify, and that his evidence ‘based on family understanding and tradition is prima facie trustworthy. No effort was made to controvert this testimony.

It further appears from plaintiff’s chain of title, that DeShields obtained his deed for the land in controversy from Marshall J. Prickett and Ida M. Prickett, his wife (plaintiff), by deed of general warranty dated April 15, 1908, by which the grantors conveyed 41 acres by metes' and bounds lying in Winfield District adjoining the lands of J. 0. Hartley and others, excepting therefrom the Pittsburgh vein of coal thereunder; and also all of the coal underlying another tract of 76 acres and 10 poles described by metes and bounds, lying in said district; and all of the coal under a 16-acre tract, being the balance of a 92-acre tract then charged on the land books to Marshall J. Prickett and adjoining the 76 acres and 10 perches; and also the 4 acres and 95 rods, more or less (the land in controversy), by metes and bounds, adjoining the lands of J. M. Holmes and others. Then, on October 27, 1909, DeShields deeded back the same lands, excepting some coal sold under the 76 acres and 10 perches tract, to Ida M. Prickett (plaintiff), by metes and bounds of each tract, describing the 4 acre and 95 rods tract as a part of the land conveyed to Mary J. Brock by Josiah W. Prickett. The deed from Josiah W. Prickett to Mary J. Brock was executed April 12, 1886, and conveys to her 47 acres by metes and bounds. On September 17, 1887, Mary J. Brock conveyed to Marshall J. Prickett a part of this 47-acre tract, by metes and bounds, containing 4 acres and 95 rods, more or less, reserving the coal formerly sold. This is the land in controversy. Defendant Frum claims title to this 4 acre and 95 rods tract in this way: Marshall J. Prickett and his wife Ida M. (plaintiff), on August 20, 1904, executed a deed of trust to Hayden, Trustee, on the 76 acre and 10 perches tract, describing it, and on a 16-acre tract on which Marshall and Ida then lived, which is described as being “the residue of all the real estate now owned by the said Marshall J. Prickett and wife in Winfield District, the same being the residue of the ninety-two (92) *221 acres now charged on the Land Books of Marion County to the said Marshall J. Priekett, the two tracts -herein conveyed making a total acreage of 92 acres.” The trustee sold the land conveyed to him, and Cornelius B. Frum (defendant) became the purchaser. A deed was made to him on April 11, 1908, for the land sold, which described the 76 acres and 10 perches by metes and bounds; and described the 16 acres as follows: ‘ ‘ Sixteen acres more or less, on which the said Marshall J. Priekett now resides, the same being the residue of the 92 acres now charged on the land books of Marion County, West Virginia, to the said Marshall J. Priekett, the two tracts of land herein conveyed making a total of 92 acres; excepting and reserving all the coal in and underlying said last named parcel of land,” &e. Defendant claims that this deed to him based on the deed to the trustee from Priekett includes the 4 acre and 95 rods tract in controversy, wherefore he has title to it. The trial court held that defendant’s deed did not embrace the land in controversy. There is no map or survey of the 16 acres. The description locates it in Winfield District, in Marion County, as the residue of a tract of 92 acres. The 92 acres is that which was then charged on the land books to Marshall J. Priekett, and this 16 acres added to the 76 acres and 10 perches makes the stated total of 92 acres. The deed conveys 92 acres; and that acreage is satisfied by the exclusion of the land in controversy; and it is clearly shown that the land in controversy was separated from the 16 acres on which Priekett then resided, by a county road. It will be observed that the land in controversy was deeded to Marshall J. Priekett in 1887 by. Mary J. Brock as a separate tract, by metes and bounds. Marshall J. Priekett did not live on the disputed tract when he executed the trust deed nor when the trustee’s deed was made to defendant Frum. Nor was the disputed tract charged to him on the land boobs at that time. It appeared on the land books as “4 acres and .95 poles” in the years 1888, 1889 and 1890; but thereafter up to 1897, there were two tracts assessed to Marshall J. Priekett, one of 51 acres, being a residue of a tract of 109.97 acres, and a 41-acre tract deeded to him by T. T. Priekett; and thereafter these two tracts appear to have been consolidated and were *222 charged to Marshall J. Prickett as 92 acres. Construing these two deeds (the trust deed and the trustee’s deed to defendant, in the light of these facts, the circuit court was justified in holding that the disputed tract was not a part of nor intended to be a part of the 16-acre tract on which Marshall J. Prickett then resided. Frum purchased 92 acres at the trustee’s sale, and he got that full acreage.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.E. 501, 101 W. Va. 217, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prickett-v-frum-wva-1926.