Stephens v. RALEIGH COUNTY BD. OF ED.

257 S.E.2d 175, 163 W. Va. 434
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1979
Docket14292, 14424
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 257 S.E.2d 175 (Stephens v. RALEIGH COUNTY BD. OF ED.) 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
Stephens v. RALEIGH COUNTY BD. OF ED., 257 S.E.2d 175, 163 W. Va. 434 (W. Va. 1979).

Opinion

257 S.E.2d 175 (1979)

Letha D. STEPHENS et al.
v.
The RALEIGH COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION.
Donald H. AKERS et al.
v.
The BOARD OF EDUCATION OF the COUNTY OF WAYNE, etc., et al.

Nos. 14292, 14424.

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.

July 16, 1979.

*176 Carl L. Harris, Gordon Billheimer, Billheimer & Harris, Montgomery, for Stephens et al.

James W. St. Clair, Marshall & St. Clair, Huntington, for Fred Powell.

C. Elton Byron, Sparacino, Byron & Abrams, Beckley, for Raleigh County Board of Education et al.

Kenneth H. Fisher, Huntington, for Donald H. Akers, et al.

McGRAW, Justice:

These appeals, presenting the same issue for resolution, have been consolidated for decision. We are called upon to construe a statute which provides in general terms for the means by which a county board of education *177 may dispose of property. Our specific concern is with a provision which gives the grantor of the property (or his heirs or assigns) the right to repurchase that property if it is located in a rural community.[1]

The sole issue here presented concerns the definition of the term "rural community" as used in the statute. In each of the cases below, proceedings were initiated in circuit court to establish the right to repurchase after that right had been denied at public sale. Both cases were tried before the respective circuit courts, sitting without a jury.[2]

The Stephens case involves a three acre tract in Raleigh County which was originally conveyed to the Raleigh County Board of Education in August of 1956. Proceedings were initiated in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County by Letha Stephens and Shirley Kessler, wife and daughter of the original grantor, after the right to repurchase had been denied them at a public sale in June, 1976. In their petition, Ms. Stephens and her daughter sought an injunction restraining the Raleigh County Board of Education from conveying the property to any person other than themselves, and a writ of mandamus requiring the Board to execute a proper deed conveying the property to them.

The tract involved is not within the incorporated limits of any municipality, but lies outside the City of Beckley, about one mile from the city limits of Mabscott and within one mile of at least one residential subdivision. The area is served by rural mail delivery and has been zoned by the Raleigh County Commission as residential. The immediate vicinity contains two farms and a number of residences built in recent years. At the time of the public sale in 1976, it appears that there was no substantial commercial development in the area. The price paid by the Board in 1956 was $5,000.00. At the public auction in June, 1976 a high bid of $42,500.00 was accepted by the Board of Education.

Upon this evidence, the Circuit Court of Raleigh County, Berkley Lilly, Judge, ruled that the petitioners had not met their burden of proof in establishing the existence of a rural community and denied the relief sought.[3] The ruling of the court was *178 premised upon a definition of "rural" as connoting a sparsely populated area with a large percentage of the land being left in its natural state or devoted to some aspect of farming or agriculture.[4] It is from this ruling that Letha Stephens and Shirley Kessler appeal.

The Akers case involves a tract originally acquired by the Ceredo District Board of Education, predecessor of the Wayne County Board of Education in September of 1925.[5] Proceedings in the Circuit Court of Wayne County were commenced by Ada Belle Akers and Donald H. Akers, daughter and grandson of the original grantors, after Donald H. Akers was denied the right to repurchase the tract at a public sale in March of 1977. The petitioners there sought a decree establishing their rights in the property, and such further relief as the court deem just and proper. Upon its own motion the court below made Mr. Fred Powell, the high bidder at the public sale, a defendant in the action and required that he answer the petition.

At trial, evidence was submitted which showed the subject tract to consist of slightly more than one and one-half acres in Wayne County. The tract is not within the city limits of any municipality, but lies within two to three miles of the nearest incorporated town, that being Kenova. The tract lies approximately one and one-half miles from a residential subdivision known as Pine Hills. While some of the area adjacent to the tract is used for farming and agricultural purposes, there are four large industrial plants within one-quarter to one-half mile of the tract, and there has been rather extensive residential development throughout the area. The price originally paid for the property in 1925 was $1,500.00. At the public sale in March of 1977 a high bid of $16,500.00 was made by appellant Fred Powell and was accepted by the Wayne County Board of Education.

Based upon this evidence and "personal knowledge" of the area involved, the court below, C. W. Ferguson, Judge, granted the relief sought by Ada Belle Akers and Donald H. Akers. An order was issued enjoining the Wayne County Board of Education from conveying the property to Mr. Powell, and further requiring that the Board execute a deed conveying the property to the petitioners. The court specifically stated that it was inescapable that the area was considered by all persons to be rural, and that the ruling was premised upon a finding of fact. It is from this ruling that Fred Powell, the high bidder at the public sale and the defendant below, has appealed.

In each of these cases, the respective circuit courts apparently used as a basis for their decision the character of the immediate area in which the property was located. While this is a factor to be considered along with others, it is not dispositive of the issue. The statutory language clearly indicates that it is the character of the entire community in which the property is located that will control the right to repurchase. The Court accepts the definition of Judge Lilly in the Stephens case of "rural" as connoting a sparsely populated area with a large percentage of the land being left in its natural state or devoted to some aspects of farming *179 or agriculture, and we will elaborate thereon. However, neither circuit court based their decision on the dominant character of the community as a whole. Therefore, each case is reversed and remanded for further proceedings and additional evidence in accord with the standards defined herein in order that a proper record may be made and a proper order entered — consistent with this opinion.

I.

In defining the term "rural community," we look to the purpose of the statute and the intent of the Legislature. We profit from this Court's opinion in the case of Carper v. Cook, 39 W.Va. 346, 19 S.E. 379 (1894), decided much closer than we to the time of enactment of the original repurchase statute. In that case, the Court, considering the language and purpose of the statute then in effect,[6] termed the provision "a concession of the law to those living in farming communities, that a small portion of the farm may not be taken for school purposes, and then be allowed to pass into the hands of a stranger, to the damage of the residue of the land."[7]

Carper indicates that the thrust of the statute was a protection of farm interests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 S.E.2d 175, 163 W. Va. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-raleigh-county-bd-of-ed-wva-1979.