Roy v. Bennett

89 S.E.2d 843, 141 W. Va. 260, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 44
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1955
Docket10725
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 89 S.E.2d 843 (Roy v. Bennett) 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
Roy v. Bennett, 89 S.E.2d 843, 141 W. Va. 260, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 44 (W. Va. 1955).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

On this appeal the defendants, Truman Bennett, Bur-ley Woods, and Elmer Woods, assail as erroneous a decree rendered against them by the Circuit Court of Randolph County on August 25, 1954, upon a bill of review filed .by the plaintiffs, Jack D. Roy and Elta Roy, to correct error of record in a former decree entered on July 14, 1952, in a suit in equity instituted by them in that court in June, 1950, against the defendants and James Woods, who died during the pendency of this suit and whose heirs are the defendants Burley Woods and Elmer Woods.

In their verified original bill of complaint, filed at June Rules, 1950, the plaintiffs, as owners of a tract of land containing about nine acres, in Randolph County, West Virginia, which is a part of a larger tract of land owned by the defendants whose grantee conveyed the *262 nine acre tract to the plaintiffs, seek an injunction to restrain and inhibit the defendants from preventing the plaintiffs from using a private road through the land of the defendants leading from a public road to the land of the plaintiffs, to require the defendants to remove all obstructions placed by them upon and across such private road, and to restrain and inhibit the defendants from interfering with and moving an external line of the tract of land owned by the plaintiffs.

To the original bill of complaint the defendants filed their verified answer in which' they deny the material allegations of the original bill of complaint. Though the answer alleges that the plaintiffs, without the consent of the defendants, have moved and destroyed a portion of a fence constructed by the defendants. upon the boundary between their land and the land of the plaintiffs in an effort to encroach upon and unlawfully use the land of the defendants to their damage and detriment, the answer does not pray for injunctive relief against the plaintiffs. The prayer is that the defendants be awarded damages for the injuries sustained by them, that the suit be dismissed, that the defendants recover their costs, and that they be granted general relief.

The case was heard upon the original bill of complaint, process executed upon the defendants, the answer of the defendants, former decrees, and the report of surveyors previously appointed by the court; and by decree, entered in vacation on January 11, 1952, the regular judge of the court adopted the report of the surveyors which fixed and designated the boundary of the tract of land of the plaintiffs and stated that a garage of the plaintiffs extended over the line and upon the land of the defendants for a distance of approximately two feet; found the boundary as reported by the surveyors to' be correct; directed the plaintiffs, within a reasonable time, to remove the garage from the. land of defendants; and awarded costs against the plaintiffs.

Upon motion of the plaintiffs, by decree entered on *263 March 5, 1952, the court cancelled and set aside the decree entered in vacation on January 11,1952, and directed that the cause proceed to final hearing.

On July 14, 1952, the circuit court, the regular judge sitting, entered a decree which recited that the cause came on to be finally heard upon the bill of complaint, upon process duly executed upon the defendants, upon their joint and several answer, upon the decrees formerly entered, upon the evidence introduced by both the plaintiffs and the defendants at the bar of the court, upon the report of the surveyors, and upon the submission of the cause for final decision, and contained these provisions:

“And it further appearing to the Court that the road in question extending from the State road through the Defendants’ lands to the lands of the Plaintiffs’ is a private road and that the said Plaintiffs have failed to disclose in the hearings of this cause that they had ever acquired a right-of-way over said private road by either grant, implication or prescription or by adverse possession in the statutory period of use and adverse to the permissive use of same by the said Defendants. And it further appearing to the Court that the Plaintiffs have failed to disclose that they acquired a right-of-way from their predecessors in title or that the said private road is a way of necessity as the only means of ingress and egress to and from their lands and that the evidence disclosed another road of travel that is accessible to the Plaintiff’s lands that extends through said lands and is in use by the traveling public in general.

“Whereupon the Court is of the opinion and doth disallow an injunction to the Plaintiffs in this cause as the evidence will not warrant same.”

The decree also adopted the boundary between the land of the plaintiffs and the land of the defendants as determined by the surveyors and set forth in their report; provided that the parties should locate their respective fences in accordance with the boundary as so determined; *264 required the plaintiffs to remove their .garage from the lands of the defendants within thirty days from the entry of the decree; inhibited, restrained and enjoined the plaintiffs from trespassing upon the land of the defendants and from using a road which extended through the land of the defendants to the land of the plaintiffs which was declared to be a private road for the exclusive use of the defendants; and awarded costs against the plaintiffs.

On December 5, 1952, the plaintiffs presented their bill of review, duly verified, against the defendants, Truman Bennett, Burley Woods and Elmer Woods, to correct error in law appearing from the record, together with the original record, which included the pleadings, other papers filed, and the former decrees entered in the cause, as an exhibit with the bill of review. The evidence submitted by the parties, upon which the findings of fact set forth in the final decree of July 14, 1952 were made and that decree was based, was not transcribed and was not made a part of the record.

The bill of review specifies as error in law appearing upon the record the action of the court (1) in entering the decree of July 14, 1952, because the case had not been fully developed by the plaintiffs whose evidence did not relate to the merits and was offered only in support of their application for an injunction; (2) in confirming the report of the surveyors without passing upon the exceptions filed by the plaintiffs to the report; (3) in holding that the plaintiffs did not have a way of necessity from their land through the land of the defendants; (4) in awarding the defendants an injunction against the plaintiffs; and (5) in changing the location of the road which extended from the land of the plaintiffs through the land of the defendants to the public highway.

The prayer of the bill of review is that the defendants Truman Bennett, Burley Woods and Elmer Woods be made defendants to the bill of review; that process be issued against them; that they be required to answer *265

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mullins v. Green
115 S.E.2d 320 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1960)
State ex rel. Cecil v. Knapp
105 S.E.2d 569 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1958)
State v. Knapp
105 S.E.2d 569 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1958)
Maxwell v. Stalnaker
96 S.E.2d 907 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 S.E.2d 843, 141 W. Va. 260, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-bennett-wva-1955.