State v. Altizer Coal Land Co.

128 S.E. 286, 98 W. Va. 563, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 83
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1925
DocketNo. 5093.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 128 S.E. 286 (State v. Altizer Coal Land Co.) 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
State v. Altizer Coal Land Co., 128 S.E. 286, 98 W. Va. 563, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 83 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinions

MEREDITH, PRESIDENT:

The State of West Virginia, by bill filed in the Logan County Circuit Court at June, 1919, rules, seeks to sell for the benefit of the school fund 16 tracts of land alleged to have been omitted from the land boobs for more than five years. By 'petition and answer the Altizer Coal Land Company, under §17, ch. 105, Barnes’ Code, 1923, asserts the right as former owners thereof to redeem a tract of 66 acres, being *565 tract No. 14 in plaintiff’s bill. Tbe Dingess Rum Coal Company in an answer filed claims that the title thereto is transferred to and vested in it, basing its ease upon possession and payment of taxes under sec. 3, of article XIII of the State Constitution. The real contest as now waged is between the two coal companies. The circuit court sustained the claim of the Dingess Rum Coal Company and the Altizer Coal Land Company alone appeals.

In its petition the Altizer Coal Land Company deraigns the title to tract No. 14 from the commonwealth of Virginia to the petitioner, admits that it is forfeited to the state for failure of 'the former owners to have the land charged on the land books for more than five successive years since 1869, but asserts its right to redeem by paying all of the taxes charged and chargeable against the property.

The Dingess. Rum Coal Company denies that the Altizer Coal Land Company has any right in the property or any right of redemption thereof. It avers that by deed dated June 1, 1909, recorded in the Logan County Clerk’s office, James L. Caldwell and wife conveyed.said tract 14 to it and that it caused said tract to be entered upon the land books of Logan County for the years 19lb and 1911 as part of a tract of 301.2 acres. It avers that the deed described a certain-boundary of land by metes and bounds, as containing 301.24 acres, and that as so entered on the land books as above stated, defendant, the Dingess Rum Coal Company paid the taxes assessed thereon for the years 1910 and 1911; that for the year 1912 and subsequent years the tract of 301.2 acres was consolidated on the land books with other contiguous tracts, and that the taxes assessed thereon have been regularly paid to and including the year 1918. It alleges that the taxes for the year 1919 will be paid when due. It avers that it has had actual possession of the 66 acres from the date of the Caldwell deed to the present time; that the 301.2 acres formed a part of a large boundary of land owned and claimed by it, the Dingess Rum Coal Company; that during the whole of the time from 1909 to the present time it has had actual residence, cultivation and enclosure of ■divers and sundry parts thereof and sheh possession has been *566 contiiruoiis, actual, exclusive and notorious under the claim of ownership; and it has taken the benefit of the forfeiture, if any, of said 66 acres of land and whatever title may have once vested in the State of West Virginia by forfeiture or otherwise is now vested in said company, and it pyays that the court may so decree, and that the prayers of the State’s bill and of the petition of the Altizer Coal Land Company be denied.

The proof in this case consists of a stipulation and a supplemental stipulation of facts- By them the Altizer Coal Land Company’s deraignment of title to the 66 acres, and the forfeiture thereof for non-assessment, as set out in its petition is conceded. The contest is as to the Dingess Rum Coal Company ’s right to the tract under the constitutional provision, sec. 3, article XIII. That section reads:

“All title to lands in this state heretofore forfeited, or treated as forfeited, waste and unappropriated, or escheated to the State of Virginia, or this State, or purchased by either of said States at sales made for the non-payment of taxes and become irredeemable, or hereafter forfeited, or treated as forfeited, or escheated to this State, or purchased by it and become irredeemable, not redeemed or released or otherwise disposed of, vested and remaining in this State, shall be, and is hereby transferred to, and vested in any person (other than those for whose default the same may have been forfeited or returned delinquent, their heirs or devisees), for so much thereof as such person has, or shall have had actual continuous possession of, under color or claim of title for ten years, and who, or those under whom he claims, shall have paid the State taxes thereon for any five years during such possession; or if there be no s.uch person, then to' any person (other than those for whose default the same may have been forfeited, or returned delinquent, their heirs or de-visees), for so much of said land as such person shall have title or claim to, regularly derived, mediately or immediately from, or under a grant from the Commonwealth of Virginia or this State, not forfeited, which but for the title forfeiture, would be valid, and who, or those under whom he claims has, or shall *567 Rave paid all State taxes charged or chargeable thereon for five successive years, after the year 1865, or from the date of the grant, if it shall have issued since that year; or if there be no such person, as aforesaid, then to any person (other than those for whose default the same may have been forfeited, or returned delinquent, their heirs or devisees), for so much of said land as such person shall have had claim to and actual continuous possession of, under color of title, for any five siiccessive years after the year 1865, and have paid all State taxes charged or chargeable thereon for said period.-”

The question is: has the company properly taken advantage of the above quoted provision? It says it has had claim to and actual continuous possession of the 66 acres under color of title, and has paid the taxes thereon for five successive years. Its contentions on all of these points are disputed by the Altizer Coal Land Company.

In the discussion it will be impossible to keep separate at all times the several elements which are necessary to constitute a transferring and vesting of the title under the constitution, but as the nature of the Dingess Rum Coal Company’s possession constitutes perhaps the chief object of attack, we will address ourselves first to that matter. The stipulated facts show that by deed dated June 1, 1909, J. L. Caldwell and wife conveyed to the Dingess Rum Coal Company a tract of land recited as containing 301.24 acres, and that under the belief that the acreage set out in .the deed was correct that company had the tract so charged on the land books. - The facts further show, however, that Caldwell’s surveyor ascertained the tract of 66 acres “school lands” belonging to the State, whereupon, at Caldwell’s instance, the boundaries of the tract conveyed to the Dingess Ruin Coal Company were so described in the deed of June 1, 1909, as to include therein' the said 66 acres as well as the 301.24 acres, and that in fact the actual acreage was 382.53 acres. The recital of the acreage in the deed remained 301.24 acres.

It appears that from 1905 to the present time the Dingess Rum Coal Company has owned a large compact body of land situate on certain tributaries of Guyandotite River, *568 composed of many adjoining and coterminous parcels, conveyed to it at different times by various deeds, wbicli compact boundary adjoins the tract described in the Caldwell deed as 301.24 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.E. 286, 98 W. Va. 563, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-altizer-coal-land-co-wva-1925.