State v. Scott

113 S.E. 907, 91 W. Va. 513, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 148
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 S.E. 907 (State v. Scott) 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. Scott, 113 S.E. 907, 91 W. Va. 513, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 148 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

MeRedith-, Judge:

The City of Beckley, and. the Board, of Education of the District of Town, appeal* from the. decree of the Circuit Court of- Raleigh- County, Special- Judge; A. P. Farley, presiding, of date, December 20, 1921. The controversy arises in a proceeding instituted by the Sta.te of West Virginia to sell for the benefit of the school fund two tracts of land in Raleigh County, one of 150 acres, the other of two acres. A demurrer to the bill having been sustained as to the 150 acres, and the plaintiff failing to amend, the- bill was dismissed as to that tract, and we are concerned with the two acres only. Prom the description which appears in the bill, and the map filed with th.e record, we are enabled to identify this- two acre- tract as a triangular piece of land, approximately equilateral, which lies- in- th.e northwest corner of a rectangular plot of land known as Beckley City Park, the [515]*515base of tbe triangle extending along the northwest line of the Part a distance of 597.5 feet.

This two-acre tract, is divided into two parts equal in area. One portion is known as Parcel No. 1 and is a rectangle, within the triangle and' lies along its base. Appellant, Board of Education, claims legal title to Parcel No. 1. The City of Beckley claims the right of redemption, along with certain heirs of Alfred Beckley, in the residue of the two acres. Scott and the heirs of Alfred Beckley rely upon the forfeiture alleged in the bill, and their consequent right of redemption in the two acres. In particular, Scott claims to be the grantee of. an equitable one-half interest in the two-acre tract, by virtue of a contract entered into between the Beck-ley heirs and himself in 1908, and to be the reversioner in a conveyance made .by him of the same interest to the Christian Women’s Board of. Missions, predecessor in title of the Board of Education..

The basis of. the proceeding, as set forth in the bill, lies in the fact, that the two tracts, title, to which became vested in Alfred Beckley in Í836, and after his death in, his heirs, were dropped from the land bopks hi 1878, and “have remained off th.e said- land books, up to the present time ’ ’ and that the. taxes for that period, are unpaid and the land unredeemed. The defendants named in the bill, insofar as. the two acres are affected, are T. K. Scott and 1.3 persons, all except Scott being heirs of- Alfred Beckley, deceased. Eleven of these heirs and T. K. Scott joined in an answer to the bill, admitting the allegations, as to title and forfeiture, and averred, their willingness to redeem.

On September 16, 1911, the court referred the cause to M. L. Painter, who as special commissioner was ordered to, ascertain the location of the lands, the year or years in which they were forfeited and the holder of the legal title at the time, the amount of taxes due thereon, the nature and priority of any liens and encumbrances, whether or not any person claimed the lands under Article 13, section 3, of the State Constitution, and the names of any persons interested in any judgments or liens against the property.

[516]*516Painter submitted his report August 27, 1912, and the court, by decree entered September 2, 1912, confirmed it. This order, following the commissioner’s report, fixed the amount of taxes due the State at $29.10, decreed the forfeiture of title to the State for the non-payment thereof, established the right of redemption in the thirteen heirs of Alfred Beckley named in the bill, and adjudged that unless redeemed within 30 days from the rising of the court, the lands should be sold by a special commissioner appointed for the purpose.

On October 21, 1912, before the sale authorized by the decree, the Christian Women’s Board of Missions, a corporation of the State of Indiana filed a petition in the cause naming as parties defendant the plaintiff and defendants in the forfeiture proceeding, in which, in addition to reciting the institution of the cause, and the various steps taken therein, it alleged that it was not made a party to the suit, though it was in actual possession of the premises, and that by virtue of successive deeds from the Beaver Coal Company to the Beckley Seminary, dated December 20, 1901, and by the Beckley Seminary to the petitioner, dated November 25, 1907, the petitioner was the sole owner of a certain one-acre tract, described by metes and bounds, which one-acre tract, it alleged, was a part of the two acres described in the original bill. The petition further averred that the petitioner and its predecessors in title had been in actual, continuous, hostile, open, notorious, adverse and peaceable possession of said one acre of land under the aforesaid deeds, from December 20, 1901, to the date of the petition, clearing the lands and erecting buildings thereon. The petitioner further averred that since the date of the deed from the Beckley Saminary, it acquired from one, T. K. Scott, and continued to own an equitable one-half interest in the two acres, “including the one (1) acre of land which lies within the boundaries of the said two (2) acres of land and outside of the boundaries of the one (1) acre of land described in and conveyed to your petitioner and complainant by said Beckley Seminary, a corporation, as aforesaid and that it is [517]*517actually now occupying all of said two acres and at all times has been so occupying and using all of said two (2) acres-at tbe time of and since the institution of the above entitled suit.” Further recitals of the petition alleged that the petitioner and its predecessor in title, the Beekley Seminary, had used the lands only for educational, literary and scientific purposes, and that under the laws of the State of West Virginia, the property was therefore exempt from taxation, and that prior to the year 1901 all taxes from and including the year 1878 had been duly paid by the former owners thereof. The petition specifically denied that the land was left off the land books for the years 1902-1911, denied the forfeiture of title to the State, and denied the right of the several Beekley heirs to redeem the one-acre tract, and the right of the special commissioner to sell any portion or all of the two acres, all taxes due thereon having been paid; and concludes with a prayer that the petitioner be made a party to the suit, that the decree based upon the report of the commissioner, Painter, be set aside, the commissioner enjoined from selling under said decree, and that the petitioner be allowed to support the averments of the petition by proper proof.

On October 21, 1912, the court ordered that the Christian Women’s Board of Missions be made a party defendant and that any action under the decree of September 2, 1912, be restrained until the further order of the court.

The cause slept until August 23, 1920, when the Board of Education filed its petition adopting the allegations of the former petition of the Board of Missions, its grantor under a deed dated October 8, 1917, and averred specially the actual possession and occupancy of Parcel No.. 1. The prayer of the petition was that the Board of Education be declared the true owner of Parcel No. 1 and that the restraining order of October 21, 1912, be made perpetual.

To this petition T. K. Scott and the Beekley heirs filed their joint demurrer and answer, reaffirming, the forfeiture of title as alleged in. the original bill. They admitted the deed of December 20, 1901, from the Beaver Coal Company [518]*518to the Beckley Seminary, but averred 'that it was void, 'because of the absence of any ’right or color of title in the 'grantor.

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Related

State v. Davis
83 S.E.2d 114 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1954)
Bank of Quinwood v. Becker
194 S.E. 849 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.E. 907, 91 W. Va. 513, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-scott-wva-1922.